Our Osage Hills : Toward an Osage Ecology and Tribalography of the Early Twentieth Century
Our Osage Hills : Toward an Osage Ecology and Tribalography of the Early Twentieth Century
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Author(s): Mathews, John Joseph
Snyder, Michael
Snyder, Michael E.
ISBN No.: 9781611463019
Pages: 344
Year: 202007
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 192.54
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

An important contribution to our understanding of the writer, the era, and, most significantly, the place: the Osage hills of Oklahoma. Michael Snyder has uncovered lost gems of John Joseph Mathew's work and offers them in extraordinary bites, accompanied by his own interstitial essays that illuminate backstory and sociohistorical context. Coupled with his biography John Joseph Mathews: Life of an Osage Writer, this book affirms Snyder's place as a significant scholar of Mathews' work. John Joseph Mathews observed and immersed himself in the natural world, documenting, honoring, and defending it. In Our Osage Hills, Michael Snyder revisits Mathews's early lost writings, contributing his own valuable perspective and historical context. From where we stand now, we would do well to pay attention. Michael Snyder has done an excellent job of collecting and providing context for Mathews' pieces. This is an important book about an important literary figure.


Michael Snyder is to be praised for his profound literary archeological work in unearthing and contextualizing previously unknown writings by John Joseph Mathews. Snyder's short essays and commentaries punctuate Mathews's texts, reminding readers that Mathews was a nature-writer and philosopher as well as a chronicler of the Osages who is to be reckoned with. This monograph is an important contribution to the field of American Indian Studies because it brings attention to the writings of John Joseph Mathews. Alongside his fellow Indigenous intellectuals, McNickle and Deloria, all three represent the scholarly and literary achievements that create a deeper understanding of "tribalography," and the collective experiences of Indigenous peoples can be traced through their writings.


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