Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2 Multiracial Identity and the Southwest
2.1 “Core and Confluence”: The Geo-Cultural Context of Mixedblood Writing
2.2 From “Halfbreed” to “Crossblood”
2.3 Southwestern Authors and Artists of Mixed Heritage: An Overview
Chapter 3: Identity Negotiation in Southwestern Mixedblood Poetry: A Complementary Scope
Chapter 4: “Blood Trails,” Hidden Histories
4.1 The Beginning of Mixed Heritage Fictional Biographies: From Memoir to Postcolonial Storytelling
4.2 Laguna Pueblo Postcolonial Life-Writing andThe Followers: Southwestern Mixed Heritage Autobiographies
Chapter 5: Multiracial Identity and its Narrative Formulation
5.1 Four Decades of Mixed-Race Writing: Altering Visions in Selected Prose Texts
5.2 A Psychological Insight into Blended Heritage Identity Construction
5.3 Cultural Identity Formulation in Multiracial Narratives
5.4 Narrative Identity: From Object to Subject
5.5 Nanabush’s “Pandora's Box of Possibilities”: Humor in Contemporary Multiracial Writing
Chapter 6: Some Interesting Cognitive Patterns
6.1 Grave Concerns and Nightwalkers
6.2 Sharpening Sights
6.3 “Restore me!”
6.4“Indigenous Shapes of Water” in Mixedblood Writing
Chapter 7: Conclusion
Bibliography
8.1 Primary Sources
8.2 Secondary Sources