User Login
Forgot your password? Click Here.
Playlist
What are playlists? Click Here.



Part Blackfoot, part Gros Ventre Indian, Welch finds his subject matter in his Indian heritage and his plots in the human emotions and trials common to all humans. Here, Welch discusses his background, his sources, his vision, and his personal way of particularizing the universal. (50 minutes)



 
                

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1994



Part of the Series : Native American Novelists
     


For additional digital leasing and purchase options
contact a media consultant at 800-257-5126 ext 3502 or sales@films.com.

Only available in the US and Canada.




Leslie M. Silko
View Video Clip
The works of Leslie Marmon Silko are strongly rooted in her own matrilineal tribal background. Like all writing of lasting value, they use particular experiences and places to reveal universal truths. Here, Silko discusses her own background and the ...(more details)
 
Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Yellow Wallpaper
View Video Clip
Touted as one of the first major feminist writers, Charlotte Perkins Gilman spent her life fighting to liberate women from the yoke of domesticity. This is a stunning BBC dramatization of Gilman's autobiographical account of a woman driven to madness...(more details)
 
The Stories of Maxine Hong Kingston
View Video Clip
When Maxine Hong Kingston was growing up in California, she listened to her parents' stories and memories of their native China. In her highly acclaimed memoirs, The Woman Warrior and China Men, she linked those tales of tradition to the story of her...(more details)
 
N. Scott Momaday
View Video Clip
N. Scott Momaday is the most widely published and read of the Native American writers, and the recipient of the most valued awards and prizes for both his poetry and his prose. A Ph.D. in English literature, he has combined his study of Western liter...(more details)
 
Gerald Vizenor
View Video Clip
His life, like his work, was a long time taking root in a place and a culture. Drawing on his Ojibwa heritage, the bitter effects of his father's murder when he was himself still a baby, his intermittent formal education, and his need to reconcile th...(more details)
 


See additional titles in American Literature