Book Anatomy: Body Politics and the Materiality of Indigenous Book History
PAST PROGRAM

Book Anatomy: Body Politics and the Materiality of Indigenous Book History

Monday, June 17, 2024
5:00 pm
 - 6:15 pm
 (PT)

5:00 PM Pacific – Program

From a book’s “spine” to its “appendix,” bibliographers use a language of the body that reveals our intimate connection with books. Yet books do more than describe bodies—they embody a frontline of colonization in which Indigenous authors battle the public perception and reception of Indigenous peoples. Starting with John Rollin Ridge’s The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta (1854) as the first novel to be published in the newly formed state of California and the first novel published by a Native author, Amy Gore calls attention to the negotiations between books and bodies embedded within Indigenous literary history. Bringing Indigenous book history more firmly into conversations with mainstream narratives about the history of the book, her research claims books themselves as a source of embodied power for early Native American authors.

A virtual presentation by Amy Gore, author and assistant professor of English, North Dakota State University