"Joy Harjo is one of the more powerful voices among the second generation of the so-called Native American Renaissance, the movement that arose in the late 1960s with N. Scott Momaday, James Welch]], and Leslie Marmon Silko. Through these works, extraordinarily innovative in content but also in form, these Indian writers for the first time bore witness directly to their native world, interpreting it from within and freeing it from the portrayals by white writers that had been at best ambivalent, if not thoroughly distorted. The arduous, agonizing reconstruction of the tribal past, the dramatic confrontation with white civilization, the existential and artistic itinerary through present-day America, the shady liminal area inhabited by mixed-bloods-such are the major themes of a literary corpus that has now grown to considerable proportions, one that within a span of thirty years has been acclaimed by critics and readers alike for its vitality and its prodigious variety of voices and styles."
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Musicians from the United States20th-century poets from the United StatesNative AmericansPeople from TulsaWomen musicians
Original Language: English
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Sources
Laura Coltelli "The Transforming Power of Joy Harjo's Poetry" Introduction for The Spiral of Memory (1996)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Joy_Harjo
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Joy Harjo
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