Ramona

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Broadview Press, Mar 28, 2008 - Fiction - 450 pages

Ramona has often been compared to Uncle Tom’s Cabin for its influence on American social policy, and this is the only edition available that presents this important novel in its full historical context. A huge popular and critical success when it was first published in 1884, Ramona is set among the California Spanish missions and tells the story of the young mixed-blood heroine, Ramona, and her Native American lover Alessandro, as they flee from the brutal violence of white settlers.

This Broadview edition re-examines the novel’s legacy by placing it alongside public speeches, letters, and newspaper articles that promoted what was ultimately a damaging campaign by reformers to “assimilate” Native American peoples. Selections from Jackson’s non-fiction writings call into question the link between assimilationist policies and the story told in Ramona; also included are the writings and testimonies of some of Jackson’s Native American contemporaries, as well as a selection of travel essays and images that helped to create “the Ramona myth.”

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
7
Foreword
9
Introduction
15
A Brief Chronology
32
A Note on the Text
34
RAMONA
35
Public Opinion on Allotment and Assimilation
373
Selected Indian NonFiction by Helen Hunt Jackson
385
Women in Indian Reform
392
Contemporary Native American Voices
400
Contemporary Reviews ofand Responses to Ramona
425
A Portfolio of Ramona Cultural Images
439
Works Cited and Recommended Reading
446
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Siobhan Senier is Associate Professor of English at the University of New Hampshire.

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