📚 Study Material: Literature and the City - Native American Spaces
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🌍 Introduction: Understanding Native American Spaces
This study material explores the profound and multifaceted relationship between Native American peoples and their spaces, as depicted in literature. It delves into how spatial practices, historical events, and cultural perceptions have shaped Native American identity and literary expression. We will examine various categories of spaces—ancestral, colonized, liminal, and reclaimed—to understand the dynamic interplay between land, culture, and narrative.
1. 🏞️ Native American Peoples and Their Spatial Practices
Native American communities have historically engaged in diverse spatial practices, reflecting their unique cultural adaptations and relationships with the land. These practices are fundamental to understanding their worldview and literary representations.
- Nomadic: Characterized by continuous movement, often following seasonal resources or migration routes. While nomadic, these groups were still tied to specific, understood territories.
- Semi-Nomadic: Involves seasonal travel but with periods of settlement in specific regions. This often allowed for seasonal agriculture or resource gathering in particular areas.
- Settled Life: Communities that established permanent residences, typically agrarian societies like the Pueblo Indians, who developed sophisticated farming techniques and permanent structures.
2. 🗺️ Categories of Native American Spaces
Native American experiences with space can be broadly categorized into four interconnected types:
- Ancestral Spaces: Lands deeply connected to heritage, spirituality, and origin stories.
- Colonized Spaces: Territories subjected to external control, displacement, and systemic oppression.
- Liminality and Hybridity: "In-between" spaces reflecting cultural blending and adaptation.
- Reclaiming of Spaces: Efforts to reassert Indigenous control, narrative, and presence over land and culture.
3. 🌳 Ancestral Spaces: Roots and Relationality
Ancestral spaces are foundational to Native American identity, imbued with deep cultural and spiritual significance.
- The Oral Tradition: Space is not merely physical but is actively created and given meaning through performance.
- ✅ Methods: Chants, songs, and storytelling cycles.
- ✅ Landmarks: A specific landmark can evoke an entire story or historical event, serving as a tangible link to narratives.
- Relationality: A core distinction from Western views.
- 📚 Concept: Unlike the Western perception of land as "property" to be owned, Native literature views space as a relative, an active character with agency.
- 💡 Insight: The land is not a passive backdrop but an active participant in life and narrative.
- Emergence and Origin: Many tribal literatures feature "Emergence Myths."
- ✅ Narrative: These myths describe peoples' journeys through different subterranean or spiritual worlds before arriving at their current physical locations, establishing a profound, sacred connection to the land.
- Memory of Place (Lieux de Mémoire):
- 📚 Definition (Pierre Nora): Sites of memory are material or symbolic entities (monuments, events, symbols) that become crystallization points for a community’s collective memory and identity.
- ✅ Example: The historical site of Wounded Knee serves as a poignant and powerful example of such a site, embodying collective trauma and resilience.
4. 🚧 Colonized Spaces: Trauma and Resistance
Colonized spaces represent a period of profound disruption, systemic oppression, and forced relocation.
- The Reservation ("The Res"): A complex entity often depicted as a site of both trauma and, paradoxically, cultural protection.
- ⚠️ Confinement: While a mechanism of confinement, it also served to preserve Native culture and community.
- 🚫 Denied Rights: Historically, Native Americans on reservations were denied fundamental rights: freedom of speech, assembly, religion, property ownership, and trial by jury.
- 🚨 Control & Punishment: U.S. Indian Agents controlled entry/exit and funding, often punishing non-compliance through food deprivation or physical torture.
- 🏫 Boarding Schools: Children were forcibly removed and sent to boarding schools, aiming for assimilation.
- ⛪ Cultural Eradication: After the 1870s, Christian extremists often took over agent roles, actively working to eradicate Native cultural practices.
- 📈 Shift: The Wheeler-Howard Act (Indian Reorganization Act of 1934) promoted tribal reorganization and self-government, marking a shift towards greater autonomy.
- The Border: Native spaces are frequently bisected by international or state borders.
- ✅ Tension: This creates tension for "nations within a nation" and fuels ongoing struggles for sovereignty.
- Relocation and Displacement:
- 1️⃣ Indian Removal Act (1830): Extinguished Native land rights east of the Mississippi, forcing the displacement of the Five Civilized Tribes (e.g., Trail of Tears) to "Indian Country" (Oklahoma Territory).
- 2️⃣ Further Relocations: By 1840, over thirty tribes were relocated west of the Mississippi by the BIA and U.S. military.
- 3️⃣ Legislative Basis: Acts like the Indian Appropriation Act (1851), Homestead Act (1862), and Railroads Act (1862) established the legal framework for creating reservations and enforcing relocation.
- 4️⃣ Urban Relocation Programs (1950s): Moved Native people into white urban centers, extending the "diasporic" experience and continuing the legacy of westward expansion.
5. 🌉 Liminal and Hybrid Spaces: Navigating "In-Between"
Contemporary Native literature frequently explores the experience of being "in-between" worlds—navigating traditional Native life and modern capitalist society.
- The Urban Indian: A significant theme where Native literature takes place in cities.
- 📚 Redefining Space: Authors like Tommy Orange (e.g., There There) redefine "Native space" as something that can exist and thrive in an urban environment, not just rural landscapes. This challenges traditional notions of Native identity being solely tied to rural or reservation lands.
- The Frontier vs. The Homeland:
- 💡 Contrast: While Western literature often views the frontier as a space to be conquered, Native literature views that same space as a desecrated home, emphasizing loss, historical trauma, and enduring connection.
6. 🔄 Reclaiming Spaces: Sovereignty and Healing
Reclaiming spaces is a central and powerful narrative in modern Native American literature and scholarship.
- Literary Sovereignty:
- 📚 Concept (Craig Womack): The idea that Native literature should be judged and understood within its own distinct cultural and spatial context, rather than through the dominant lens of the Western literary canon.
- The Return / Homing Plot:
- ✅ Narrative Trope: Many narratives feature a protagonist returning to their ancestral home.
- ✅ Purpose: This return is often depicted as a journey of healing, reconciliation, and reconnection with cultural roots and identity.
- Intellectual Sovereignty:
- ✅ Manifestation: Writing in Indigenous languages or incorporating tribal structures, narratives, and epistemologies into Western literary genres (like the novel).
- 💡 Impact: This reclaims the "space" of the book itself, asserting Indigenous voices and perspectives within the broader literary world.
7. 🌟 Native American Renaissance
This powerful movement exemplifies the reclaiming of spaces and voices, featuring distinguished authors who have redefined Native American literary and spatial identities.
- Key Authors:
- N. Scott Momaday
- Louise Erdrich
- Sherman Alexie
- Simon J. Ortiz
- Joy Harjo
- Leslie Marmon Silko
💡 Conclusion: Spatial Identity and Resilience
The study of Native American spaces reveals a complex interplay between deeply rooted ancestral connections, the profound disruptions caused by colonization, and the ongoing resilience and redefinition of identity. From sacred narratives embedded in ancestral lands to the traumatic experiences of reservations and forced relocations, Native American spatial practices are central to their cultural and literary heritage. The emergence of liminal and urban narratives, alongside powerful movements for literary and intellectual sovereignty, underscores a continuous effort to reclaim and reinterpret spaces, asserting Native presence and perspective within both traditional and contemporary contexts. This comprehensive understanding highlights the dynamic and enduring relationship between Native American peoples and their diverse environments.








