In this Book

Our Fire Survives the Storm: A Cherokee Literary History, Citizenship and Sovereignty Edition

Book
2025
summary

The twentieth-anniversary edition of the path-clearing study of Cherokee writing in English, with an emphatic refocus on voices from the three Cherokee tribal nations


This Citizenship and Sovereignty Edition of Our Fire Survives the Storm is a thoroughly updated, nationhood-focused, twentieth-anniversary revision of Daniel Heath Justice’s influential study of Cherokee writing in English. Through politically astute and historically grounded readings of diverse texts by citizens of the Cherokee Nation, United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, and Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, Justice connects Cherokee literature to Indigenous sovereignty, nationhood, and collective futurity.

 

Guided by a reparative vision that directly contends with the outdated literary legacies of the book’s first edition, this revision confronts the ongoing harms of unsubstantiated and false Cherokee heritage claims on literary studies, replacing readings of primary texts by unverified claimants with those of Cherokee citizen writers. As Justice addresses issues of accountability, he engages with the past two decades of Indigenous scholarship, fully updating terminology, concepts, and scholarly resources. He expands and deepens the intellectual and historical context for Cherokee literary production introduced in the first edition, and he discusses Cherokee writing and community in the mid-twentieth century, the Cherokee Freedmen’s long struggle for justice, and the future of Cherokee nationhood.

 

Highlighting the work of authors who illustrate the transformative collective discourses of what it means to be Cherokee, Justice examines the richness of Cherokee literary expression through motifs of roots, removal, and nationhood in traditional stories, speeches, legal and governance documents, memoirs, short stories, novels, and plays. An invitation to reflective criticism, this new edition of Our Fire Survives the Storm is grounded in the belief that Indigenous nationhood is a necessary ethical response to the violence of the settler imaginary.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page

Series Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Contents

Accountability and Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xvi

A Note on Terminology, Revisited

pp. xvii-xxvi

Editorial Principles and Changes to the Text

pp. xxvii-xxxii

Introduction: Cherokee Literary Studies, Citizenship, and Sovereignty

pp. 1-34

Part I: Roots

pp. 35-52

1. Peace, War, and Peoplehood: Grounding Cherokee Literatures

pp. 53-82

Part II: Removals

pp. 83-95

2. The Trail Where We Cried: Cherokee Dispossession and Defiance

pp. 97-147

3. “A Mighty Pulverizing Engine”: Cherokee Nationhood through and beyond Allotment

pp. 149-239

Part III: Rekindling

pp. 241-278

4. Cherokee Literary Futures and Futurities

pp. 279-298

Afterword: The Work Stories Do in the World

pp. 299-322

Notes

pp. 323-374

Bibliography

pp. 375-392

Index

pp. 393-398

About the Author

pp. 399
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