id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_kfci3b5kjre3xp3asdxl47rcxa Colleen O'Brien "All the Land Had Changed": Territorial Expansion and the Native American Past in Pauline Hopkins's Winona 2014.0 23 .pdf application/pdf 10253 532 57 "All the Land Had Changed": Territorial Expansion and the Native American Past in Pauline Hopkins's Winona Paul Outka argues, the laws of slavery rendered African Americans powerless by naturalizing the identity of the enslaved into the landscape and treating them as chattels, the For Hopkins, the story of the Indian-pipes plant is implicitly connected to land the implicit meanings of nature and civilization, both as they are defined by her Senecaidentified sibling duo and by the coercive forces of Indian removal, slavery, or imperialism. The third section argues that, while Winona critiques the way that dominant cultural forces naturalize the exploitation of the earth and of specific groups of people, it also The trope of the Indian-pipes conveys an argument about the individual's relationship to the natural world that places Hopkins in dialogue with a set of issues raised ./cache/work_kfci3b5kjre3xp3asdxl47rcxa.pdf ./txt/work_kfci3b5kjre3xp3asdxl47rcxa.txt