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Black Hawk’s Life Black Hawk’s Life
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Black Elk Speaks Black Elk Speaks
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William Apess’s Eulogy on King Philip William Apess’s Eulogy on King Philip
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The Elegiac Poetry of Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, John Rollin Ridge, and Others The Elegiac Poetry of Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, John Rollin Ridge, and Others
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines a variety of written expressions that may be read in the context of elegy and are attributed to Native American authors. It begins by considering Black Hawk's autobiography Life, published in 1833 by John Barton Patterson. Life was long read as elegiac in the Western sense, mourning what was irrevocably gone, and Black Hawk's narration is more nearly elegiac in the Native American sense; it is not Western mourning but indigenous “melancholic mourning” of a particularly creative kind. The chapter also analyzes Black Elk Speaks (1932), Reverend William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip (1836), and the elegiac poetry of Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, John Rollin Ridge, and others.
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