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“What are we to do with the knowledge that Tayo was once a woman? That Ceremony held but abandoned considerable investments in Chicana identity, in urban life, and shades of acculturation? By outlining the trajectory of a composition process, drafts can be indicative of important variables in a finished work. The Angie drafts show that (despite Silko’s efforts to deflect it) considerable pressure can be brought to bear upon the choice of a male protagonist for the novel and upon the shallowness of its representation of human women, as well as upon the choice of a 1940s setting, and even on the rural setting and the novel’s form. Ceremony”

David L. Moore, Leslie Marmon Silko: Ceremony, Almanac of the Dead, Gardens in the Dunes
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Leslie Marmon Silko: Ceremony, Almanac of the Dead, Gardens in the Dunes (Bloomsbury Studies in Contemporary North American Fiction) Leslie Marmon Silko: Ceremony, Almanac of the Dead, Gardens in the Dunes by David L. Moore
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