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Diné Reader: An Anthology of Navajo Literature [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 432 pages, height x width x depth: 226x149x25 mm, weight: 583 g, 32 black & white photos, 4 black & white illustrations, 2 black & white maps
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Mar-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Arizona Press
  • ISBN-10: 0816540993
  • ISBN-13: 9780816540990
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 28,70 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 432 pages, height x width x depth: 226x149x25 mm, weight: 583 g, 32 black & white photos, 4 black & white illustrations, 2 black & white maps
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Mar-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Arizona Press
  • ISBN-10: 0816540993
  • ISBN-13: 9780816540990
The Diné Reader: An Anthology of Navajo Literature is unprecedented. It showcases the breadth, depth, and diversity of Diné creative artists and their poetry, fiction, and nonfiction prose.This wide-ranging anthology brings together writers who offer perspectives that span generations and perspectives on life and Diné history. The collected works display a rich variety of and creativity in themes: home and history; contemporary concerns about identity, historical trauma, and loss of language; and economic and environmental inequalities.

The Diné Reader developed as a way to demonstrate both the power of Diné literary artistry and the persistence of the Navajo people. The volume opens with a foreword by poet Sherwin Bitsui, who offers insight into the importance of writing to the Navajo people. The editors then introduce the volume by detailing the literary history of the Diné people, establishing the context for the tremendous diversity of the works that follow, which includes free verse, sestinas, limericks, haiku, prose poems, creative nonfiction, mixed genres, and oral traditions reshaped into the written word.

This volume combines an array of literature with illuminating interviews, biographies, and photographs of the featured Diné writers and artists. A valuable resource to educators, literature enthusiasts, and beyond, this anthology is a much-needed showcase of Diné writers and their compelling work. The volume also includes a chronology of important dates in Diné history by Jennifer Nez Denetdale, as well as resources for teachers, students, and general readers by Michael Thompson. The Diné Reader is an exciting convergence of Navajo writers and artists with scholars and educators.

 

The Diné Reader: An Anthology of Navajo Literature is a comprehensive collection of creative works by Diné poets and writers. This anthology is the first of its kind.

Recenzijas

The DinÉ Reader: An Anthology of Navajo Literature is extraordinary. It is the beauty of DinÉ bizaad from Creation's horizon-K'É breath, heart, continuance-beyond measure. I advise it be read with and for Humility, Courage, Sustenance, Gratitudealways for the people, community, and land that is the source of Existence."" - Simon J. Ortiz""This collection is like sitting in a circle with those DinÉ writers and poets who have long inspired many of us, especially those of us who grew up writing and listening in the Southwest, in the territory influenced by four sacred mountains that bear symbolic and literal significance to all things and thoughts DinÉ. In the inspirational gathering in these pages, we can hear many voices and feel how the land rises up beneath to embrace us with knowledge and beauty, and how it continues across the horizon to meet the sky. These voices include crucial roots of American literature.

The publication of Blackhorse Mitchell's Miracle Hill made students at the Institute of American Indian Arts proud when it was published. It was a first. Grey Cohoe was also a student there and created art and writing with an intense focus and deliberate renderings based in his love of DinÉ bizaad. A few years later, into the seventies, Gloria Emerson and her knowledge of philosophy and arts shifted perceptions, grew fresh vision in times that were forcing the People away from themselves. Nia Francisco, Luci Tapahonso, Laura Tohe, Rex Lee Jim and many others made a distinct path through a beautiful and fracturing world to reach the forming world that would hold the children and grandchildren. And now we have the voices of those who emerged-from Sherwin Bitsui, Esther Belin, and Elizabeth Woody to Jake Skeets. This collection is essential to American literature and should be required for anyone studying American, First Nations, or world literature."" - Joy Harjo, U.S. Poet Laureate

""This is a riveting, powerfully moving collection. I feel a deep gratitude for the integrity and living truth of this community of DinÉ voice. To respectfully paraphrase Tina Deschenie, 'In the Best of Dreams,' these writers 'bring it all out in me.' My heart is full and inspired with the Word(s) of these DinÉ writers."" - InÉs HernĮndez-Avila, editor of Entre Guadalupe y Malinche: Tejanas in Literature and Art

Foreword xv
Sherwin Bitsui
Map of the Navajo Nation and Dinetah
xvii
Dine Directional Knowledge and Symbolic Associations xviii
Introduction 3(14)
Blackhorse Mitchell
17(11)
Reflections on Conversations with Blackhorse Mitchell
18(1)
I Do Have a Name, from Miracle Hill: The Story of a Navajo Boy
19(7)
The Drifting Lonely Seed, from Miracle Hill: The Story of a Navajo Boy
26(1)
Beauty of Navajoland
27(1)
Grey Cohoe
28(19)
The Promised Visit
29(9)
Awaken Me Redhouse-borne Again
38(9)
Gloria J. Emerson
47(5)
Interview
48(2)
Iron Track City
50(1)
Shapeshifting
50(1)
Grace's Hairnet
51(1)
Nia Francisco
52(14)
Interview
53(3)
tacheeh/sweat house
56(2)
Iridescent Child
58(3)
Ode to a drunk woman
61(2)
Naabeeho women with blue horses
63(1)
I hate elvis presley
64(2)
Tiana Bighorse
66(12)
Selections from Bighorse the Warrior
67(11)
Tina Deschenie
78(8)
Interview
79(2)
In the Best of Dreams
81(1)
You Bring Out the Dine in Me
82(2)
We Are Corn
84(1)
Near Crystal
85(1)
Luci Tapahonso
86(19)
Interview
87(2)
She Sits on the Bridge
89(1)
Hills Brothers Coffee
90(2)
In 1864
92(3)
Raisin Eyes
95(1)
This Is How They Were Placed for Us
96(3)
Naneeskaadi
99(2)
The Motion of Songs Rising
101(2)
The Canyon Was Serene
103(2)
Elizabeth Woody
105(5)
Interview
106(2)
Chinle Summer
108(1)
Rosette
109(1)
Wind's Movement
109(1)
Irene Nakai Hamilton
110(8)
Interview
111(2)
Story of a Cricket, Spring 1978
113(1)
Sunrise Flight into Acid Rain/Cancelled
113(2)
Summer Coup, 1973
115(1)
Dishwasher
116(2)
Laura Tohe
118(15)
Interview
119(3)
Our Tongues Slapped into Silence
122(1)
Joe Babes
123(2)
Easter Sunday
125(1)
Within Dinetah the People's Spirit Remains Strong
126(4)
Tsoodzil, Mountain to the South
130(1)
Deep in the Rock
131(1)
Niltsa Biaad/Female Rain
132(1)
Rex Lee Jim
133(12)
Interview
134(1)
Saad/Language/Voice
135(5)
To Haalj/Spring
140(3)
Na'azheeh/Hunting
143(1)
Three Short Poems
144(1)
Irvin Morris
145(17)
Selections from From the Glittering World
146(16)
Esther G. Belin
162(18)
Interview
163(1)
Euro-American Womanhood Ceremony
164(1)
Ruby's Answer
165(1)
Sustainability: A Romance in Four Scenes
166(2)
Backbone
168(1)
Emergence
169(4)
Morning Song
173(1)
I keep my language in my back pocket like a special handkerchief that I only display when I want to show my manners in a respectful way
174(1)
X+X+X+X-X-X-X
175(4)
Male + female divided
179(1)
Shonto Begay
180(9)
Interview
181(3)
Darkness at Noon: Solar Eclipse
184(1)
Navajo Power Plant
185(1)
Drawing Life: Delineating My World
186(3)
Della Frank
189(10)
Interview
190(2)
Shimasani My Grandmother
192(2)
The Summer I Was 13
194(2)
I Hate to See
196(3)
Roberta D. Joe
199(8)
Interview
200(2)
Emotional Illness
202(1)
Storm Pattern
203(2)
Sunset Woman's Ivy League Escape
205(1)
Coyote Shuffle Romance
206(1)
Hershman John
207(10)
Interview
208(2)
My Feminist Grandmother
210(1)
Storm Patterns
211(1)
The Dark World
212(3)
A Strong Male Rain
215(2)
Norla Chee
217(6)
Interview
218(1)
Good-bye Honey, Hello Silver and Dust
219(1)
Wagon Ride
220(1)
Far Ahead in the Past
220(1)
An Exhibit Tells the History of Dine Women Weaving
221(2)
Sherwin Bitsui
223(23)
Interview
224(1)
Asterisk
225(1)
The Northern Sun
226(3)
Chrysalis
229(4)
From Flood Song
233(13)
Dwayne Martine
246(6)
Interview
247(2)
Parsing
249(1)
Thought Knife
250(1)
Hweeldi
251(1)
Tacey Atsitty
252(7)
Interview
253(1)
Ach'ii"
254(3)
In Strips
257(1)
Calico Prints
258(1)
Venaya Yazzie
259(10)
Interview
260(2)
Gathering early dawn
262(1)
The Pine Nut Eaters
263(2)
No Espanol
265(2)
Grandma loves SOBE
267(2)
Orlando White
269(9)
Sentence
270(1)
The i is a Cricket
271(1)
Fill in the Blank
272(2)
Meditation
274(1)
Paper Milk
275(1)
n
276(1)
Dissociate
277(1)
Byron F. Aspaas
278(11)
Interview
279(2)
Interstate Badlands
281(8)
Jake Skeets
289(7)
Interview
290(2)
Let There Be Coal
292(1)
From Under His Cover
293(1)
Thieving Ceremony
294(1)
Blue Edge Cord
295(1)
Bojan Louis
296(13)
Interview
297(1)
Currents
298(4)
Nizhoni doo `a' ani' doo ate'el'i doo ayoo'o'oni (Beauty & Memory & Abuse & Love)
302(7)
Natanya Ann Pulley
309(11)
Interview
310(1)
In This Dream of Waking, a Weaver
311(9)
Danielle Geller
320(5)
Interview
321(1)
Blood; Quantum
322(3)
Rachel Heather Johnson
325(7)
Interview
326(1)
Apple
327(2)
Nowhere Place
329(1)
Hers Was a History of Grief
330(2)
Paige Buffington
332(6)
Interview
333(1)
At Mention of Moab
334(2)
Radio
336(2)
Manny Loley
338(10)
Interview
339(2)
Nilts4 Bika'
341(7)
Erik Bitsui
348(7)
Interview
349(2)
Marrying Welcome to Hell, a Hell-Made Match
351(1)
Eddie and Norman, Norman and Me, Me and Eddie
352(3)
Tatum Begay
355(8)
Interview
356(2)
Stories of a Healing Way
358(5)
Chronology of Important Dates in Dine Political and Literary History 363(8)
Jennifer Nez Denetdale
Resources for Teachers and Readers 371(16)
Michael Thompson
Acknowledgments 387(4)
Bibliography 391(10)
Credits 401(6)
About the Editors and Contributors 407
Esther G. Belin is a writer and multimedia artist.

Jeff Berglund is a professor of English at Northern Arizona University.

Connie A. Jacobs is professor emerita at San Juan College.

Anthony K. Webster is a linguistic anthropologist.