LeAnne Howe

Title

LeAnne Howe

Birth Date

1951

Birthplace

Choctaw Nation

Primary Sources

Howe, L. (2014). Embodied tribalography: Mound building, ball games, and native endurance in the southeast. Studies in American Indian Literatures, 26(2), 75–93.
https://doi.org/10.5250/studamerindilite.26.2.0075

Howe, L., & Wilson, J. (2014). Life in a 21st century mound city. In R. Warrior (Ed.), The world of Indigenous North America (pp. 3–26). Routledge.

Howe, L., Markowitz, H., & Cummings, D.K. (Ed).(2013). Seeing red—Hollywood's pixeled skins: American Indians and film. MSU Press.

Howe, L. (1999). Tribalography: The power of Native stories. Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, XIV(1), 117-126.
https://journals.ku.edu/jdtc/article/view/3325

Secondary Sources

Squint, K.L. (2010). Choctawan aesthetics, spirituality, and gender relations: An interview with LeAnne Howe. MELUS: Multi-ethnic Literature of the US, 35(3), 211–224.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25750721

Trope, J. F. and Echo-Hawk.W.R. (2000) The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: Background and Legislative History. In Mihesuah, D. A. (Ed) Repatriation Reader: Who Owns American Indian Remains?, 123-168. University of Nebraska Press,

Extra Resources

LeAnne Howe: Embodied tribalography. The Centre for Indigenous Studies. May 6, 2014. YouTube. Accessed March 3 2023.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upeVQniQdyc

Citation

“LeAnne Howe,” Decoloniality, First Nations Thinkers and thought and practices from the Global South, accessed August 7, 2024, https://omeka.cloud.unimelb.edu.au/decoloniality-and-thinkers-from-the-global-south/items/show/544.

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