Gertrude Bonnin on Sexual Morality
Gertrude Bonnin on Sexual Morality
Author(s): Tadeusz Lewandowski Subject(s): Social Sciences, Language and Literature Studies, Education, Foreign languages learning, Essay|Book Review |Scientific Life, Theoretical Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Studies of Literature, Comparative Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Cognitive linguistics, Polish Literature, Higher Education , Cultural Essay, Societal Essay, Philology, Translation Studies
Published by: Нов български университет
Keywords: Gertrude Bonnin; Zitkála-Šá; Native American; Sarah Deer; sexual morality; settler colonialism
Summary/Abstract: This paper examines attitudes to sexual morality held by the Yankton Dakota author and activist Gertrude Bonnin (1876–1938), better known by her penname Zitkála-Šá (Red Bird in Lakota). Bonnin’s concerns encompass several themes: the victimization of Indian women, disintegration of Native courtship rituals, sexual threats posed by peyote use, and the predatory nature of Euro-American men. This critique as a whole — in which a ‘white invasion,’ in her words, leads to a corruption of Native sexuality — sometimes produces inconsistencies, particularly regarding Bonnin’s statements on the alleged sexual perils of peyote. Her investigations into the Oklahoma guardianship scandals of the 1920s, however, strongly buttress recent research by Sarah Deer (2015), whose study, The Beginning and End of Rape: Confronting Sexual Violence in Native America, highlights the tragic aspects of Native-white sexual relations under United States settler-colonialism.
Journal: English Studies at NBU
- Issue Year: 7/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 5-20
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English