"Asserting that regional, national, and international discourses and ideologies created and constrained Southern Renaissance representations of 'Indian-ness,' Trefzer argues that Andrew Lytle, Caroline Gordon, William Faulkner, and Eudora Welty were spurred by archaeological discoveries of Native artifacts and by anxieties about modern life to use 'the Indian signifier' to critique American nationalism, expansionism, and materialism. Recommended."—CHOICE|"Disturbing Indians is an example of truly ambitious criticism, an exciting and important contribution to a field likely to see similar projects and greater disciplinary consolidation in the years to come."—Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association"Describing this study as a postcolonial reconsideration of the Renaissance South, as well as a foray into New American and Southern Studies and a deconstructionist analysis, Trefzer draws an exhilarating new map of the critical and theoretical terrain under investigation, breaking new ground again and again."—Eric Gary Anderson, author of American Indian Literature and the Southwest: Contexts and Dispositions