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- Digital Price: $39.00 USD (All sales final)
- Studies in American Indian Literatures
- University of Nebraska Press
- issue
- Volume 26, Number 2, Summer 2014
- Introduction: Assessing and Advancing Tribalography
- From the Editor
- Contributor Biographies
- The Erotics of Sovereignty: Queer Native Writing in the Era of Self-Determination by Mark Rifkin (review)
- Cherokee Stories of the Turtle Island Liars’ Club by Christopher B. Teuton (review)
- Chair of Tears by Gerald Vizenor (review)
- If I Ever Get Out of Here by Eric Gansworth (review)
- Once Were Pacific: Māori Connections to Oceania by Alice Te Punga Somerville (review)
- Embodied Tribalography: Mound Building, Ball Games, and Native Endurance in the Southeast
- Making It Work: A Model of Tribalography as Methodology
- Tribal 2.0: Digital Natives, Political Players, and the Power of Stories
- “The Lord and the Center of the Farthest”: Ezol’s Journal as Tribalography in LeAnne Howe’s Miko Kings: An Indian Baseball Story
- Talking Tribalography: LeAnne Howe Models Emerging Worldliness in “The Story of America” and Miko Kings
- Expanding Tribal Identities and Sovereignty through LeAnne Howe’s “Tribalography”
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