Margo Tamez

Margo Tamez
Born Austin, Texas
Occupation poet, historian, scholar, Indigenous rights
Nationality USA
Period 1980s-present
Notable works Naked Wanting, Raven Eye

Margo Tamez (born 28 January 1962 in Austin, Texas, USA) is a Lipan Apache author of the Hada'didla Nde' (“Lightning Storm People”), Konitsaii Nde'(“Big Water People”) and an enrolled member of the Lipan Apache Band of Texas.

A scholar, poet, and human rights defender, Tamez grew up in South Texas, the Lower Rio Grande Valley and along the Texas-Mexico border. Tamez's 2007 work, Raven Eye, is considered the first Apache-authored literary work which 'indigenized' the post-modern American poetry form known as the 'long poem', a poetry technique developed and taken to new depths by Norman Dubie. In Raven Eye, Tamez drew from Athabaskan and Nahua creation stories, oral tradition, and Lipan Apache genocide narratives in combination with autobiography. Raven Eye elevated Lipan Apache oral narrative structure of southern Texas to a literary aesthetic form. Her poetry is best known for stark and detailed examinations of gender violence, identity, non-recognition, genocide and spaces of abjection (walls, the camp, death march, exile). Her prose reflects the critical understanding of historical processes and on-going effects of historical erasure on Indigenous peoples, making crucial links between history and present forces (colonization, militarization) impacting Indigenous peoples from the region bifurcated by the U.S.-Mexico border who remained in traditional places but largely ignored by the state.[1]

Selected bibliography

Poetry and criticism

Anthologies

References

  1. Poetry Foundation. "Margo Tamez".

External links

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