Sabine N. Meyer is Professor of American Studies at the University of Bonn, Germany. She is the author of We Are What We Drink: The Temperance Battle in Minnesota.
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"One of the greatest benefits for readers is the way Meyer is drawing their awareness to Indigenous literary participation in legal discourses. Meyer provides concise comparative readings of highly complex novels against the backdrop of even more complex historical-legal realities, making Native Removal Writing a rich archive of knowledge for any American studies scholar, whether specializing in Indigenous literatures or not."--American Studies Journal "This book is a good introduction to lesser-known writings and would serve well as a foundational text for courses on Removal and on literature of the "southeastern" tribes, and could be a good accompaniment for studies of law and Indigenous nationhood/peoplehood."--Great Plains Quarterly "Sabine Meyer asks a crucial question: what would her literary-legal critical approach mean to Native audiences? It means insightful perspectives on Native writers' anti-colonialist confrontations of Removal, from the thick of the conflict in the nineteenth century up to our present moment. It means accountability, both for historical patterns that Native people today might want to correct and for Meyer's own scholarship in relation to Native communities. Most encouragingly, it means emboldened senses of agency and imagination."--Joshua B. Nelson, author of Progressive Traditions: Identity in Cherokee Literature and Culture "Native Removal Writing showcases cogent synthesis of legal history and literary theory. The author's inclusion of Afro-Native texts is an important, intersectional move. This is a book that readers new to the field can start with, but that experts will also learn from. It is admirably written and a contribution to indigenous law and literature."--David J. Carlson, author of Imagining Sovereignty: Self-Determination in American Indian Law and Literature "Native Removal Writing is bold and illuminating. Historically grounded and theoretically sophisticated, Meyer's revelatory readings show how Native writers continually renew the narrative of Removal in ways that speak to contemporary crises and reinforce ongoing practices of persistence and resurgence. It is a profound and generative contribution."--Beth Piatote, author of Domestic Subjects: Gender, Citizenship, and Law in Native American Literature