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MEDITATIONS after the Bear Feast

The Poetic Dialogues of N. Scott Momaday and Yuri Vaella

MEDITATIONS after the Bear Feast( )
Author: Momaday, N. Sott
Momaday, N. Scott
Vaella, Yuri
Vashchenko, Alexander
Smith, Claude Clayton
Scarberry-Garcia, Susan
Wiget, Andrew
Romero, Nathan
Editor: Vashchenko, Alexander
Smith, Claude Clayton
Translator: Vashchenko, Alexander
Smith, Claude Clayton
Walter, James
Contribution by: Scarberry-Garcia, Susan
Wiget, Andrew
Romero, Nathan
ISBN:978-1-941830-38-3
Publication Date:Jun 2016
Publisher:Shanti Arts Publishing
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $19.95
Book Description:

This important engaging book records the first acquaintance of poets from American Indian and Native Siberian cultures as they come to recognize their similar cultures, life-ways, and reverence for the natural world. The poetic dialogues contain a mutual recognition of kinsmen across centuries of mutual isolation. Perhaps their chief value is the declaration of fundamental human values, expressing the authors' deepest aspirations as spokesmen for traditional cultures. As Alexander...
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Book Details
Pages:78
Detailed Subjects: Literary Criticism / Native American
Poetry / Native American
Poetry / Russian & Soviet
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.5 x 8.5 x 0.212 Inches
Author Biography
Momaday, N. Sott (Author)
Navarre Scott Momaday was born on February 27, 1934 in Lawton, Okla. to Kiowa parents who successfully bridged the gap between Native American and white ways, but remained true to their heritage. Momaday attended the University of New Mexico and earned an M.A and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1963. A member of the Gourd Dance Society of the Kiowa Tribe, Momaday has received a plethora of writing accolades, including the Academy of American Poets prize for The Bear and the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for fiction for House Made of Dawn. He also shared the Western Heritage Award with David Muench in 1974 for the nonfiction book Colorado: Summer/Fall/Winter/Spring, and he is the author of the film adaptation of Frank Water's novel, The Man Who Killed the Deer. His work, The Names is composed of tribal tales, boyhood memories, and family histories. Another book, The Way to Rainy Mountain, melds myth, history, and personal recollection into a Kiowa tribe narrative. Throughout his writings, Momaday celebrate his Kiowa Native American heritage in structure, theme, and subject matter, often dealing with the man-nature relationship as a central theme and sustaining the Indian oral tradition.

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