%0 Book %T When did Indians become straight? Kinship, the history of sexuality, and native sovereignty %A Rifkin, Mark %D 2011 %I Oxford Univ. Press %C Oxford [u.a.] %@ 9780199755455 %G English %F 640675654 %O Mark Rifkin %O Formerly CIP Uk. - Bibliography: p. 381-409. - Includes index %X Introduction -- Reproducing the Indian: racial birth and native geopolitics in Narrative of the life of Mrs. Mary Jemison and Last of the Mohicans -- Adoption nation: Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Hendrick Aupaumut, and the boundaries of familial feeling -- Romancing kinship: Indian education, the allotment program, and Zitkala-sa's American Indian stories -- Allotment subjectivities and the administration of culture: Ella Deloria, Pine Ridge, and the Indian Reorganization Act -- Finding "our" history: gender, sexuality, and the space of peoplehood in Stone Butch Blues and Mohawk trail -- Tradition and the contemporary queer: sexuality, nationality, and history in Drowning in fire %L 810.9/352997 %K American literature %K White authors %K History and criticism %K Indian authors %K Indians in literature %K Homosexuality in literature %K Heterosexuality in literature %K Self-determination, National, in literature %K Imperialism in literature %K Indians of North America %K Kinship %K Ethnic identity %K Government relations %K American literatureWhite authorsHistory and criticism %K American literatureIndian authorsHistory and criticism %K Indians of North AmericaKinship %K Indians of North AmericaEthnic identity %K Indians of North AmericaGovernment relations %9 Text %9 Fiktionale Darstellung