Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Arbiter, November 7, Students Of Boise State University Nov 2005

Arbiter, November 7, Students Of Boise State University

Student Newspapers

No abstract provided.


Arbiter, October 31, Students Of Boise State University Oct 2005

Arbiter, October 31, Students Of Boise State University

Student Newspapers

No abstract provided.


Arbiter, October 27, Students Of Boise State University Oct 2005

Arbiter, October 27, Students Of Boise State University

Student Newspapers

No abstract provided.


Arbiter, March 31, Students Of Boise State University Mar 2005

Arbiter, March 31, Students Of Boise State University

Student Newspapers

No abstract provided.


Arbiter, March 17, Students Of Boise State University Mar 2005

Arbiter, March 17, Students Of Boise State University

Student Newspapers

No abstract provided.


Louis Owens, Linda Lizut Helstern Jan 2005

Louis Owens, Linda Lizut Helstern

Western Writers Series Digital Editions

“'I prefer infinitions to definitions,’” Alex Yazzie, the cross-dressing Navajo anthropologist in Louis Owens’ Bone Game, declares (46). So did Louis Owens. In his life, in his death, and above all in his writing, Louis Owens (1948-2002), novelist, essayist, literary and cultural critic, crossed boundaries and refused definitions. Born in Lompoc, California, Owens came to understand the arid landscape of the west through the lens of his early childhood in the Yazoo bottoms of Mississippi. He was a Native mixedblood who acknowledged not only his multi-tribal heritage, Choctaw on his father's side and Cherokee on his mother’s, but the …