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Tell Your Senators to Pass VAWA

The waning days of Women’s History Month brought violence against women to the forefront. While March 2021 reminded us all to celebrate the trailblazing, indelible contributions of generations of American women, the news cycle also forced us to confront the misogyny ingrained in gender-bias. On March 16, six of the eight victims killed by a white male shooter in Atlanta massage parlors were Asian Americans. The murderer claimed he committed his horrific acts because he blamed the women for his sexual frustrations. These senseless murders were echoed in racially motivated assaults across our nation. Sadly, there’s a tragic connection between the violence committed against Asian American and Native American women, because they, unlike other racial groups, are more likely to be sexually assaulted by men from a different ethnic group.

The Political Arrays of American Indian Literary History

274 pages Review by Ryan Winn Native literature is inherently political, often requiring an understanding of both national and tribally specific opining. This is not to say that all Native writing has a unified, or even a defined political agenda. In fact, as James H. Cox notes in his recent book, The Political Arrays of American Indian Literary History, Native texts resist predictive classification. Cox considers the assertions and observations made by and about Native texts as the “political arrays” of American Indian literature. Exploring letters, novels, reviews, articles, and paratexts collectively as “literature,” Cox recognizes that Native writing and ideas span the political spectrum, thereby defying umbrella classifications. In so doing, he challenges readers to reconsider any reductive textual comparisons in favor of recognizing the nuances within the complexities of Native authors and their literary output.

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