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Footpaths and Bridges: Voices from the Native American Women Playwrights Archive

Footpaths and Bridges: Voices from the Native American Women Playwrights Archive
Creators: Rebecca Ann Howard, Shirley Annette Huston-findley
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $75.00



New (11) Used (4) from $75.00

Sales Rank: 2034302

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 306
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0472116134
Dewey Decimal Number: 812.54080897
EAN: 9780472116133
ASIN: 0472116134

Publication Date: March 19, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

"Long overdue, this powerful collection allows Native American women to speak in their own voices---in a wide range of writing styles and covering a broad array of themes."
---Kathy A. Perkins, University of Illinois

Footpaths and Bridges celebrates the vitality and diversity of Native American women, collecting plays by leading contemporary playwrights in forms ranging from realism to dramatic poetry, from a children's story to a musical, and from full-length plays to one-acts. The collection represents the best of a burgeoning theatrical movement, with work ranging from ETHNOSTRESS---a humorous take on art and identity politics---to the biographical musical Te Ata to a retelling of the Thanksgiving story from the Wampanoag perspective. The work of these award-winning playwrights is accompanied by critical commentary that illuminates Native American women's theater practices and perspectives, highlighting the issues of heritage, identity, and changing lifestyles that the plays imaginatively tackle.

Featuring work from a wide array of tribes and geographic regions, the collection affords the artist, scholar, and general reader access to previously unheard voices that communicate the complexity and the diversity of the Native American experience. The far-ranging genres and content of the plays suggest the many possibilities for communicating the past and the present, the personal and the political, and the stunning kaleidoscope of Native American life and art.

Shirley A. Huston-Findley is Associate Professor of Theatre at the College of Wooster.

Rebecca Howard is Instructor of Women's Studies at Miami University.

Photo: Set from production of JudyLee Oliva's Te Ata at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma, 2006. Set design by Robert Cothran; photo by Michael Bendure.

Plays in the collection include

  • ETHNOSTRESS: Women's Voices in Native American Theatre by Monique Mojica
  • Asivak's Creation Story by Jules Arita Koostachin with Jennifer Fell Hayes
  • Bring the Children Home by Marcie Rendon
  • The Girl Who Swam Forever by Marie Clements
  • Harvest Ceremony: Beyond the Thanksgiving Myth by Martha Kreipe de Montano with Jennifer Fell Hayes
  • Letters by Denise Mosley
  • Ola Nae Iwi (The Bones Live) by Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl
  • Strength of Indian Women by Vera Manuel
  • Te Ata by JudyLee Oliva
  • Winnetou's Snake Oil Show from Wigwam City by Spiderwoman Theater


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