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Rediscovering a 'Lost' Lakota Writer
Two Duke scholars have collected the writings
of "lost" author Zitkala-Sa, a Lakota woman who wrote
about Indian life in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
for publication in a Penguin Classics edition. Cathy N. Davidon,
Ruth F. DeVarney Professor of English and vice provost for Interdisciplinary
Studies at Duke, co-edited the edition with Ada Norris, a Duke
doctoral student in English who is writing her dissertation on
Zitkala-Sa.
Their book, Zitkala-Sa: American Indian Stories, Legends, and Other
Writings (Penguin Classics, 2003), gathers Zitkala-Sa's autobiographical
stories of Indian life, retold tales, poetry, and journalistic
writing, along with an extensive introduction, recommended reading,
and notes. "It's always strange for history to lose somebody
who was so influential and so promising," says Davidson. "She
devoted herself to great writing in the service of passionate activism." Zitkala-Sa
(Zit-KA-la Sha) is the first Native-American writer to be included
in the prestigious Penguin Classics series.
In the early twentieth century, stories by the Zitkala-Sa appeared
in the most prestigious magazines of the day. She continued to
be well-known--even notorious--as she shifted her focus from autobiographical
stories to full-time activism for the Indian cause. But as the
years passed, Zitkala-Sa faded from public attention. She was rediscovered
in the Seventies, and scholars have increasingly begun to reconstruct
her life and work.
Zitkala-Sa was born Gertrude Simmons on the Yankton Reservation
in 1876, the year of the Battle of Little Big Horn, and died in
1938. She lived through a period of major transition in white-Indian
relations, including aggression against Indians by the U.S. government
and, later, a massive assimilation policy. She was educated at
white boarding schools, an experience poignantly depicted in such
short stories as "The School Days of an Indian Girl," and
attended the New England Conservatory of Music. After her early
success in the literary world, she became the secretary-treasurer
of the first pan-Indian political organization and editor of its
American Indian Magazine, from which some of the pieces in the
book are drawn. She was also founder and president of the National
Council of American Indians.
Norris traveled to Utah to research the latter half of Zitkala-Sa's
life, when she turned from the Eastern literary establishment to
political activism in the West. Still, she remained a writer, says
Norris. "She kept writing short sketches, even as she switches
over to political work. I definitely approach her as a writer--a
writer deeply committed to a set of politics," she says.
Zitkala-Sa was also co-author of an opera, The Sun Dance, which
combines her writing, music, and activism in a work that celebrates
the Sun Dance ritual, an Indian celebration that had been repeatedly
quashed by the federal government. The opera was first performed
in Utah in 1913, and revived on Broadway in 1938.
Davidson says she first encountered Zitkala-Sa's stories in the
1970s, while going through old issues of the Atlantic Monthly for
another project. At first, she says, she thought the tales, mostly
fictionalized versions of Zitkala-Sa's experiences as a girl, were
written by a white person masquerading as an Indian. But the emotional
power, narrative voice, and perspective were very different from
the sentimental style typically adopted by whites who wrote about
Indian life at the time, says Davidson. "It was incredible
writing."
Davidson says she is especially pleased that Zitkala-Sa was chosen
as the first Native-American writer for the Penguin Classics series. "It
really is a stamp of a different kind of acceptance and approval," she
says. Says Norris, "This Penguin edition brings Zitkala-Sa
all the way into the mainstream."
www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/zitkalasaimages.html
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