![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The s ries, taken as a whole, reflects historic changes th ough most of the twentieth century in su h instituions as tribal government, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, he locally o ned butcher shop, the Catholic Church (and its schools), and the family. Its pop lation of India s, whites, and mixed-bloods i ermingle in efiance of standard social science cat gories. Her fictionalized reservation community and town lie athwart the bound ries of the woodlands and the plains. Disrupting he boundaries between history and fiction, her novels reflect variety of literary c nve tions, i scribing revisionist histories of the ultural borderlands ea the geographical center of North America. The publication ofLove Medicine (1984), The Beet Queen (1986), and Tracks (1988) by Louise Erdrich are mi terventions in the writing f tribal histories. ![]()
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