New poets of Native nations

Book - 2018

"New Poets of Native Nations gathers poets of diverse ages, styles, languages, and tribal affiliations to present the extraordinary range and power of new Native poetry. Heid E. Erdrich has selected twenty-one poets whose first books were published after the year 2000 to highlight the exciting works coming up after Joy Harjo and Sherman Alexie. Collected here are poems of great breadth--long narratives, political outcries, experimental works, and traditional lyrics--and the result is an essential anthology of some of the best poets writing now."--Back cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press [2018]
Language
English
Item Description
"A landmark anthology celebrating twenty-one native poets first published in the twenty-first century"--Page 4 of cover.
Physical Description
xvi, 284 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781555978099
  • Introduction Twenty-One Poets for the Twenty-First Century
  • Tacey M. Atsitty
  • Anasazi
  • Nightsong
  • Downpour
  • Paper Water
  • Elegy for Yucca Fruit Woman
  • Hole through the Rock
  • Layli Long Soldier
  • 38
  • Whereas I Did Not Desire in Childhood
  • Whereas Resolution's an Act
  • Obligations 1.
  • Obligations 2.
  • Tommy Pico
  • From IRL
  • From Nature Poem
  • From Junk
  • Margaret Noodin
  • Waawiindamojig / The Promisers
  • Okanan / Bones
  • Winiiam Aagimeke / William Making Snowshoes
  • Agoozimakakiig Idiwag / What the Peepers Say
  • Jiikimaadizi / A Joyful Life
  • Mazinbii'amawaan / Sending Messages
  • Laura Da'
  • A Mighty Pulverizing Machine
  • The Haskell Marching Band
  • Passive Voice
  • Quarter Strain
  • Gwen Nell Westerman
  • Owotanna Sececa
  • Linear Process
  • Genetic Code
  • Quantum Theory
  • Dakota Homecoming
  • Theory Doesn't Live Here
  • Undivided Interest
  • Jennifer Elise Foerster
  • Leaving Tulsa
  • Pottery Lessons I
  • Birthmark
  • Chimera
  • Blood Moon Triptych
  • Canyon
  • Natalie Diaz
  • Dome Riddle
  • Other Small Thundering
  • American Arithmetic
  • The First Water Is the Body
  • Trevino L. Brings Plenty
  • For the Sake of Beauty
  • The Sound of It
  • Part Gravel, Part Water, All Indian
  • Blizzard South Dakota
  • Northeast Portland
  • Not Just Anybody Can Have One
  • Red-ish Brown-ish
  • Plasmic Kiln
  • Song Syntax Cycle
  • dg nanouk okpik
  • Warming
  • Her/My Arctic Corpse Whale
  • The Weight of the Arch Distributes the Girth of the Other
  • A Year Dot
  • Dog Moon Night at Noatak
  • She Travels
  • Julian Talamantez Brolaski
  • Blackwater Stole My Pronoun
  • In the Cut
  • What Do They Know of Suffering, Who Eat of Pineapples Yearround
  • As the Owl Augurs
  • Stonewall to Standing Rock
  • Horse Vision
  • The Bear and the Salmon
  • When It Rains It Pours
  • The Bear Was Born
  • Sy Hoahwah
  • Anchor-Screws of Culture
  • Toward Mount Scott
  • Ever Since I Can Remember
  • What Is Left
  • Before We Are Eaten
  • Glitter
  • Hinterlands
  • Hillbilly Leviathan
  • Craig Santos Perez
  • From Lisiensan Ga'lago
  • From The Legends of Juan Malo [a Malologue]
  • Ginen the Micronesian Kingfisher [I Sihek]
  • Ginen Tidelands [Latte Stone Park] [Hagåtña, Guåhan]
  • (First Trimester)
  • (Papa and Wakea)
  • (I Tinituhon)
  • Gordon Henry, Jr.
  • Simple Four Part Directions for Making Indian Lit
  • How Soon
  • Dear Sonny:
  • Among the Almost Decolonized
  • The Mute Scribe Recalls Some Talking Circle
  • Brandy Nalani McDougall
  • The Petroglyphs at Olowalu
  • On Cooking Captain Cook
  • Pele'aihonua
  • Papatuanuku
  • This Island on Which I Love You
  • Genesis
  • M. L. Smoker
  • Casualties
  • Crosscurrent
  • Equilibrium
  • We are the ones
  • Heart Butte, Montana
  • LeAnne Howe
  • A Duck's Tune
  • Finders Keepers: Aboriginal Responses to European Colonization
  • Ballast
  • Catafalque
  • Catafalque II
  • The Rope Seethes
  • Cedar Sigo
  • Now I'm a Woman
  • Thrones
  • Green Rainbow Song
  • Things to Do in Suquamish
  • Taken Care Of
  • Aquarelle
  • Light Unhuried, Unchained
  • Double Vision
  • Karenne Wood
  • Amoroleck's Words
  • My Standard Response
  • In Memory of Shame
  • Abracadabra, an Abcedarian
  • Bartolomé de las Casas, 1542
  • The Poet I Wish I Was
  • Eric Gansworth
  • Speaking through Our Nations' Teeth
  • It Goes Something Like This
  • Repatriating Ourselves
  • Snagging the Eye from Curtis
  • A Half-Life of Cardio-Pulmonary Function
  • ... Bee
  • Janet McAdams
  • The Hands of the Taino
  • Leaving the Old Gods
  • Ghazal of Body
  • From "The Collectors"
  • Tiger on the Shoulder
  • Hunters, Gatherers
  • Earthling
  • Author Notes
  • Editor's Acknowledgments
  • Permissions
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Indigenous storytelling and poetry have flourished for millennia in the Americas, yet few U.S. residents can name a single native poet. Editor Erdrich (Curator of Ephemera at the New Museum for Archaic Media, 2017) recenters this issue by narrowing the focus of this masterfully curated collection to Twenty-One Poets for the Twenty-First Century, as her generous, elucidating introduction explains. Several names, such as Layli Long Soldier, Craig Santos Perez, and Natalie Diaz, will stand out for fans of contemporary poetry. Jennifer Elise Foerster paints tactile and visionary images (the sky a belt of blue and white beadwork). Others, like dg okpik, draw on unusual experiences (She and I make a bladder bag to draw water from the ice trench). Even the contributor bios take a different approach, forgoing long lists of achievements and awards; instead, each poet recounts his or her lineage, relationship to a native tongue (if any), writers they regard as mentors, and other native poets they recommend. In this way, Erdrich extends the scope of the collection. An immensely important anthology that belongs in every library.--Báez, Diego Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Erdrich (Curator of Ephemera at the New Museum for Archaic Media), an Ojibwe writer and scholar, goes some way toward rectifying a noticeable dearth of anthologies of contemporary Native poets with this essential volume. To do this, Erdrich selected 21 writers of varying backgrounds and statures who published their first collections in the 21st century, which she describes as "an era of witness, of coming into voice, an era of change and of political and cultural resurgence." Given that there are 573 recognized Native nations across America, the volume is far from comprehensive, yet it demonstrates the remarkable breadth of formal styles and substantive concerns among even this small cohort of Native writers. Several of the poets here have garnered recognition in wider literary circles, including Cedar Sigo, Layli Long Soldier, and Tommy Pico, and others-such as dg nanouk okpik, Brandy Nalani McDougall, and Eric Gansworth-deserve greater attention. Through this first anthology of Native poets since 1988, Erdrich offers readers a path into a "brilliantly lit dimension" that has long been obscured by colonialism in the worlds of academia and cultural production. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved