Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
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Elizabeth Cook-Lynn (born 1930) is a Crow Creek Lakota Sioux novelist, poet and academic, whose trenchant views on Native American politics, particularly tribal sovereignty, have caused controversy.
Cook-Lynn founded Wicazo Sa Review, a radical literary journal devoted to Native American writing and politics. She retired from her long academic career at Eastern Washington University in 2001.
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[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Fiction
- Aurelia : a Crow Creek trilogy (Niwot, CO: Colorado UP, 1999)
- From the river's edge (NY: Arcade, 1991).
[edit] Poetry
- I remember the fallen trees : new and selected poems (Cheney, WA: Eastern Washington UP, 1998).
[edit] Short stories
- The power of horses and other stories (NY: Arcade, 1990).
- Seek the house of relatives (Marvin, SD: Blue Cloud Quarterly Press, 1983).
- Then Badger said this (Ye Galleon, 1983).
[edit] Non-fiction
- Anti-Indianism in Modern America: A Voice from Tatekeya's Earth (Illinois UP 2001).
- Politics of Hallowed Ground : Wounded Knee and the Struggle for Indian Sovereignty (with Mario Gonzalez) (Illinois UP, 1999).
- Why I can't read Wallace Stegner and other essays : a tribal voice (Madison : University of Wisconsin Press, 1996).
[edit] See also
- List of writers from peoples indigenous to the Americas
- Native American Renaissance
- Native American Studies