Reporting Indigenous Women's Resilience at Wounded Knee through the Journalism of Susette Bright Eyes La Flesche
-
Published:2024-01
Issue:1
Volume:139
Page:16-31
-
ISSN:0030-8129
-
Container-title:PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:PMLA Publ. Mod. Lang.
Author:
Taylor Michael P.,Purse Ballard Rebecca
Abstract
AbstractThis essay recovers the newspaper writings of the Omaha journalist Susette Bright Eyes La Flesche as the first Indigenous woman to publish about the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre. Her eyewitness accounts challenge mainstream histories of the massacre that focus largely on frontier violence and Indigenous death by rewriting Wounded Knee as a place of Indigenous resilience and of an Indigenous community bound together by the rights and responsibilities of kinship. By prioritizing the stories of surviving Indigenous women and girls, Bright Eyes's reporting speaks to and becomes a precedent for ongoing acts and discourses of Indigenous activism, feminism, resurgence, and self-determination.
Publisher
Modern Language Association (MLA)