Home Literary Studies 29. Louise Erdrich, The Round House (2012)
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29. Louise Erdrich, The Round House (2012)

  • Birgit Däwes

Abstract

Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) novelist Louise Erdrich is one of the best-known, most successful, and most prolific American writers today: from her first novel, Love Medicine (1984), to her most recent The Round House (2012), her work features fourteen novels, three volumes of poetry, as well as a wide selection of non-fiction and children’s literature. This essay provides an introduction to the Native American novel and to Erdrich’s work in particular, situating The Round House within her larger narrative universe of the fictitious “Little No Horse” region in North Dakota. Set on an Ojibwe reservation, The Round House combines the genres of the crime novel and the novel of adolescence in order to foreground issues of Native American sovereignty, American Indian law, and a history of political and social injustice. The essay’s detailed analysis of the novel’s themes, characters, setting, structure, plotlines, and narrative techniques underlines the remarkable contribution of Native American authors to the genre of the American novel at large.

Abstract

Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) novelist Louise Erdrich is one of the best-known, most successful, and most prolific American writers today: from her first novel, Love Medicine (1984), to her most recent The Round House (2012), her work features fourteen novels, three volumes of poetry, as well as a wide selection of non-fiction and children’s literature. This essay provides an introduction to the Native American novel and to Erdrich’s work in particular, situating The Round House within her larger narrative universe of the fictitious “Little No Horse” region in North Dakota. Set on an Ojibwe reservation, The Round House combines the genres of the crime novel and the novel of adolescence in order to foreground issues of Native American sovereignty, American Indian law, and a history of political and social injustice. The essay’s detailed analysis of the novel’s themes, characters, setting, structure, plotlines, and narrative techniques underlines the remarkable contribution of Native American authors to the genre of the American novel at large.

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