Zitkala-Sa - Penguin Books India ZitkalaSa (1876-1938) was editor of American Indian Magazine and founder of the National Council of American Indians, the tribal advocacy group that she led until her death.Books http://www.penguinbooksindia.com/Authors/Zitkala-Sa.aspx
Extractions: Forgot Password Browse Subject Anthology Autobiography, Biography, Memoir Children Cinema ... Visual Books CHILDREN'S CORNER Activity Anthology Classics Comics ... Non-Fiction BUSINESS CLASS Economy General Reference Self help/ DIY PENGUIN CLASSICS Black Classics Modern Classics Puffin Classics more Author Lounge: Zitkala-Sa Zitkala-Sa (1876-1938) was editor of American Indian Magazine and founder of the National Council of American Indians, the tribal advocacy group that she led until her death.
Pennsylvania Digital Library Field Value Title American Indian Stories Creator ZitkalaSa, 1876-1938 Subject Zitkala-Sa, 1876-1938 Yankton women Biography Yankton Indians Social http://padl.pitt.edu/index.php/record/view/259
Timeline ZitkalaSa (1876-1938), Impressions of an Indian Childhood (1900about 1870s-1880s) Mary Austin (1868-1934), The Land of Little Rain (1903) Edwin S. Porter (1869-1941), The Great http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/time502.html
American Indian Quotations — Infoplease.com writer, filmmaker, poet (Spokane and Coeur d'Alene) interview, READ Magazine Gertrude Bonnin ZitkalaSa (1876–1938) http://www.infoplease.com/spot/aihmquotes.html
Extractions: All I try to do is portray Indians as we are, in creative ways. With imagination and poetry. I think a lot of Native American literature is stuck in one idea: sort of spiritual, environmentalist Indians. And I want to portray everyday lives. I think by doing that, by portraying the ordinary lives of Indians, perhaps people learn something new. Paula Gunn Allen poet, novelist, and critic (Laguna, Sioux, and Lebanese) Humor is widely used by Indians to deal with life. Indian gatherings are marked by laughter and jokes, many directed at the horrors of history, at the continuing impact of colonization, and at the biting knowledge that living as an exile in one's own land necessitates. . . . Certainly the time frame we presently inhabit has much that is shabby and tricky to offer; and much that needs to be treated with laughter and ironic humor.
Images Of Zitkala-Sa K sebier had met ZitkalaSa (1876-1938) in New York in the last years of the nineteenth century. Zitkala-Sa was becoming well-known as a performer, writer, musician, and more http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/zitkalasaimages.html
Extractions: In Keiley's portrait of her, he presents Zitkala-Sa as a dreamy, unfocused representative of Indian womanhood. Among the several portraits Keiley took of Zitkala-Sa are four photographs of her in Chinese dress; these represent Keiley's view of her as an exotic "type" without regard to her individual identity or her Lakota origins.
Liz Wolf's Den - 2009 and the sweet breathing of flowers. If this is Paganism, then at present, at least, I am a Pagan. Gertrude Simmons Bonnin ZitkalaSa (1876-1938) Dakota Sioux http://lizwolf.com/
Product Specifications Sioux writer and activist ZitkalaSa (1876-1938) was born in the year of the infamous Battle of Little Big Hornher people’s last victory over the invasion forces that would http://www.clearlightbooks.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=0142437093