Post by Okwes on Jun 2, 2008 10:16:25 GMT -5
Paula Gunn Allen passed away Friday evening in her home in Fort Bragg,
California. She was with family and friends. She asked for corn songs and
offerings to help with her transition. Details about memorial services will
be forthcoming. Please keep her and the family in your thoughts and prayers.
------------
Paula Gunn Allen, Laguna Pueblo/Sioux poet, novelist & scholar
Paula Gunn Allen, Laguna, Sioux and Lebanese, is a poet, novelist and
critic. She was born in 1939 in Cubero, New Mexico, the middle of 5
children, having 2 older sisters and 2 younger brothers. She grew up on the
Laguna Pueblo, beneath Mt. Taylor. Her early education was at St. Vincent's
Academy in Albuquerque, followed by mission school in the pueblo town of San
Fidel after 7th grade. She began her college education at Colorado's Womans
College, but interrupted her education to marry. She had two children (1 son
and 1 daughter) and was divorced a few years later. She then obtained her
B.A. in 1966 and M.F.A. in 1968 at the University of Oregon. Her second
marriage produced twin sons, one of whom died as an infant. This marriage
also ended in divorce. While completing her doctorate, she taught at DeAnza
Community College and the University of New Mexico. She obtained her Ph.D.
at the University of New Mexico in 1976.
Paula spent a post-doctoral year at UCLA, and then moved to the University
of California at Berkeley, where she held a postdoctoral fellowship from the
Ford Foundation and the National Research Council to study the oral
tradition elements in Native American literature. She has also been an
Associate Fellow at the Stanford Humanities Institute. She has taught at
Fort Lewis College, Durango, CO, the College of San Mateo, San Diego State
University, San Francisco State University, where she was the director of
the Native American Studies Program, the University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque, and the University of California at Berkeley, where she was
Professor of Native American / Ethnic Studies. She retired from her position
as Professor of English/Creative Writing/American Indian Studies at the
University of California at Los Angeles in 1999. Her son, Eugene John, died
in 2001 at the age of 42.
Awards
Paula was awarded a 2007 Lannan Foundation Fellowship, awarded to stimulate
the creation of literature written originally in the English language and to
develop a wider audience for contemporary prose and poetry.
Paula received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writer's
Circle of the Americas in 2001. In 2004 she received a Pulitzer Prize
nomination for her book ?Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur,
Diplomat.? Paula was named a CAS Alumni Fellow by the University of Oregon.
Paula Gunn Allen received the American Book Award from the Before Columbus
Foundation in 1990 for Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and
Contemporary Writing. She also received the Susan Koppelman Award from the
Popular and American Culture Associations and the Hubbell Prize for Lifetime
Achievement in American Literary Studies from the Modern Language
Association in 1999.
In 1981 she was a postdoctoral fellow in American Indian Studies at the
University of California at Los Angeles and received a postdoctoral
fellowship grant from the Ford Foundation-National Research Council in 1984.
In 1978, Paula received a writing fellowship from the National Endowment for
the Arts.
Writing available online
Which way's up, Doc? in the little magazine
Borrachitarme Voy in the little magazine
Anagram
Hoop Dancer
Taking a Visitor to See the Ruins
Books by Paula Gunn Allen
Poetry
Life Is a Fatal Disease: Collected Poems 1962-1995, West End Press.
Star Child, Blue Cloud Quarterly Press.
Skins and Bones: Poems, 1979-1987, West End Press.
Wyrds, Taurean Horn Press.
Shadow Country (Native American Series), Amer Indian Studies Center.
A cannon between my knees, Strawberry Press.
Coyote's Daylight Trip, La Confluencia.
Blind Lion, Thorp Springs Press.
Prose and Compilations
Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur, Diplomat, Harper San
Francisco.
Outfoxing Coyote, That Painted Horse Press.
Off the Reservation: Reflections on Boundary-Busting Border-Crossing Loose
Canons, Beacon Press.
The Woman Who Owned the Shadows, (a novel) Aunt Lute Books.
Columbus & Beyond: Views from Native Americans, Southwest Parks & Monuments.
The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions, with
a New Preface, Beacon Press.
Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and Contemporary Writing by
Native American Women, Fawcett Books
Women in American Indian Mythology, Abc-Clio.
Grandmothers of the Light: A Medicine Woman's Sourcebook, Beacon Press.
As Long As the Rivers Flow: The Stories of Nine Native Americans, with
Patricia Clark Smith, Scholastic Trade.
Voice of the Turtle: American Indian Literature 1900-1970, Ballantine Books.
Song of the Turtle: American Indian Fiction 1974-1994, Ballantine Books.
Gossips, Gorgons & Crones: The Fates of the Earth, Jane Caputi, Introduction
by Paula Gunn Allen, Bear & Co.
Studies in American Indian Literature: Critical Essays and Course Designs,
Modern Language Association of America.
Song of the Sky: Versions of Native American Songs and Poems, Brian Swann,
Barry O'Connell (Editors), Four Zoas Night House. Forward by Paula Gunn
Allen.
From the Center: A Folio of Native American Art and Poetry, (Editor),
Strawberry Hill Press.
Sipapu: A Cultural Perspective, Dissertation, University of New Mexico
Press.
Anthologies
Eating Fire, Tasting Blood: Breaking the Great Silence of the American
Indian Holocaust, MariJo Moore (Editor), Thunder's Mouth Pr.
Genocide of the Mind, Marijo Moore (Editor), Thunder's Mouth Press.
Speak to Me Words: Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry, Janice
Gould and Dean Rader (Editors), Univ. Arizona Press.
Hozho: Walking In Beauty, co-editor (with Carolyn Dunn Anderson),
Contemporary Books/McGraw-Hill, 2001
Natives and Academics: Researching and Writing about American Indians, Devon
A. Mihesuah (Editor), University of Nebraska Press.
Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writing of
North America, Joy Harjo and Gloria Bird (Editors), W.W. Norton.
The Ethnic Canon: Histories, Institutions, and Interventions, David
Palumbo-Liu (Editor), Univ of Minnesota Press.
Smoke Rising: The Native North American Literary Companion, Janet Witalec,
Visible Ink Press.
My Lover Is a Woman: Contemporary Lesbian Love Poems, Leslea Newman
(Editor), Ballantine Books.
Coming to Light: American Women Poets in the Twentieth Century, Diane
Middlebrook (Editor), Univ of Michigan Press.
A Literary History of the American West, J. Golden Taylor, Thomas J. Lyon
(Editor), Texas Christian Univ Press.
The Desert Is No Lady: Southwestern Landscapes in Women's Writing and Art,
Vera Norwood & Janice Monk (Editors), University of Arizona Press.
Literature and the Visual Arts in Contemporary Society, Suzanne Ferguson,
Barbara Groseclose (Editors), Ohio State Univ Press.
A Circle of Nations: Voices and Visions of American Indians, John Gattuso
(Editor), Beyond Words Pubublishing Co.
Coyote was here: essays on contemporary Native American literary and
political mobilization, Bo Scholer (Editor), Aarhus, Denmark : Seklos.
Talking Leaves: Contemporary Native American Short Stories, Craig Lesley,
Katheryn Stavrakis (Editor) Dell Books
The Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Contemporary Native American
Literature, Geary Hobson (Editor), University of New Mexico Press
Earth Power Coming: Short Fiction in Native American Literature, Simon J.
Ortiz (Editor), Navajo Community College Press
That's What She Said: Contemporary Poetry and Fiction by Native American
Women, Rayna Green (Editor) Indiana University Press.
Songs from This Earth on Turtle's Back: An Anthology of Poetry by American
Indian Writers, Joseph Bruchac (Editor), Greenfield Review Press.
Wounds Beneath the Flesh, Maurice Kenny (Editor), White Pine Press.
Harper's Anthology of 20th Century Native American Poetry, Duane Niatum
(Editor), HarperCollins
All the Good Indians, in The 60s, without Apology, Sayers, Sohnya;
Stephanson, Anders; Aronowitz, Stanley; Jameson, Fredric (Editors),
University of Minnesota Press
Interviews with or Essays on Paula's Work
Radio Interview and Poetry Reading. October 26, 2007.
"Pocahontas' voice: a conversation with Paula Gunn Allen", An article from:
The Women's Review of Books by Joanne M. Braxton.
Other Words: American Indian Literature, Law, and Culture (American Indian
Literature and Critical Studies Series), Jace Weaver, Univ. Oklahoma Press.
That the People Might Live: Native American Literatures and Native American
Community, Jace Weaver, Oxford University Press.
Feminist Readings of Native American Literature: Coming to Voice, Kathleen
M. Donovan, University of Arizona Press.
"And Then, Twenty Years Later . . .": A Conversation with Paula Gunn Allen,
John Purdy, Studies in American Indian Literatures, 9, 5, 1997 Fall.
Native American Writers of the United States, (Dictionary of Literary
Biography, V. 175), Kenneth M. Roemer (Editor), Gale Research.
Women Reading Women Writing: Self-Invention in Paula Gunn Allen, Gloria
Anzaldua and Audre Lorde, Analouise Keating, Temple University Press, 1996.
Healing Through Traditional Stories and Storytelling in Contemporary Native
American Fiction, Ph.D. Dissertation, Jian Shi, Lehigh University.
Guerilla Ethnography, Ph.D. Dissertation, Renae Moore Bredin, University of
Arizona.
'A House of Difference': Constructions of the Lesbian Poet in Audre Lorde,
Adrienne Rich and Paula Gunn Allen, Ph.D. Dissertation, Sagari Dhairyam,
University of Illinois.
Through Landscape Toward Story/ Through Story Toward Landscape: A study of
Four Native American Women Poets, Ph.D. Dissertation, Nancy Helene Lang,
Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Theatre and Feminist Aesthetics, Karen Laughlin and Catherine Schuler
(Editors), Fairleigh dickinson University Press.
Critical Essays: Gay and Lesbian Writers of Color, Emmanuel S. Nelson
(Editor), Harrington Park Press.
Memory, Narrative, and Identity: New Essays in Ethnic American Literatures,
Amritjit Singh, Joseph T. Skerrett, Robert E. Hogan (Editors), Northeastern
Univ Press.
Lesbian Texts and Contexts, Karla Jay, Joanne Glasgow (Editors), New York
Univ Press.
"Listening to Native Americans: Making Peace with the Past for the Future",
John Barry Ryan, in Listening: Journal of Religion and Culture, Vol. 31,
No.1 Winter 1996, pp. 24-36.
Contemporary Lesbian Writers of the United States: A Bio-Bibliographical
Critical Sourcebook, Sandra Pollack and Denise Knight, Greenwood Press.
The Search for a Woman-Centered Spirituality, Annette Van d**e, New York
University Press.
Contemporary Literary Criticism, Deborah A. Stanley, Jeff Chapman, Pamela S.
Dear (Editors), Gale Research.
Native North American Literature: Biographical and Critical Information on
Native Writers and Orators from the United States and Canada, Janet Witalec,
Jeffery Chapman (Editor), Gale Research.
Winged Words: American Indian Writers Speak, Laura Coltelli, University of
Nebraska Press.
I Tell You Now: Autobiographical Essays by Native American Writers, Brian
Swann, Arnold Krupat, Brompton Books Corp.
American Indian Literatures: An Introduction, Bibliographic Review and
Selected Bibliography, A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff, Modern Language Association.
This is About Vision: Interviews with Southwestern Writers, J. F. Crawford,
William Balassi and Annie O. Eysturoy (Editors), University of New Mexico
Press.
Paula Gunn Allen, Elizabeth J. Hanson, Boise State University.
Lesbian Texts and Contexts: Radical Revisions, Karla Jay and Joanne Glasgow
(Editors), New York University Press.
Survival This Way: Interviews With American Indian Poets, Joseph Bruchac III
(Editor), (Sun Tracks Books, No 15) University of Arizona Press.
Native American Renaissance, Kenneth Lincoln, University of California
Press.
American Indian Women:Telling Their Lives, Gretchen M. Bataille and Kathleen
M. Sands (Editors), University of Nebraska Press.
Four Indian Poets, John R. Milton, University of South Dakota Press.
Women and Western American Literature, Helen Winter Stauffer & Susan J.
Rosowski (Editors), Whitston Publications.
"Paula Gunn Allen and Joy Harjo: Closing the Distance between Personal and
Mythic Space", James Ruppert, American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 1,
Spring, 1983
The Unison of Two Worlds: Paula Gunn Allen's The Sacred Hoop, Josh Buckner
See Also
Paula's Journal Publications
Hubbell Medal 1999 from the Modern Language Association
Voices in the Gaps profile on Paula
A biography and profile from Gale's Poet's Corner
Interview, photos and blog
Annotations on Paula's poem, Dear World on the Literature, Arts and Medicine
Database
Profile of Paula on glbtq.com by AnnLouise Keating
In a Native Voice, New DImensions Media'
Paula Gunn Allen Quotes
More Paula Gunn Allen quotes
A short biography from the Internet Public Library's Native American Authors
Project
California. She was with family and friends. She asked for corn songs and
offerings to help with her transition. Details about memorial services will
be forthcoming. Please keep her and the family in your thoughts and prayers.
------------
Paula Gunn Allen, Laguna Pueblo/Sioux poet, novelist & scholar
Paula Gunn Allen, Laguna, Sioux and Lebanese, is a poet, novelist and
critic. She was born in 1939 in Cubero, New Mexico, the middle of 5
children, having 2 older sisters and 2 younger brothers. She grew up on the
Laguna Pueblo, beneath Mt. Taylor. Her early education was at St. Vincent's
Academy in Albuquerque, followed by mission school in the pueblo town of San
Fidel after 7th grade. She began her college education at Colorado's Womans
College, but interrupted her education to marry. She had two children (1 son
and 1 daughter) and was divorced a few years later. She then obtained her
B.A. in 1966 and M.F.A. in 1968 at the University of Oregon. Her second
marriage produced twin sons, one of whom died as an infant. This marriage
also ended in divorce. While completing her doctorate, she taught at DeAnza
Community College and the University of New Mexico. She obtained her Ph.D.
at the University of New Mexico in 1976.
Paula spent a post-doctoral year at UCLA, and then moved to the University
of California at Berkeley, where she held a postdoctoral fellowship from the
Ford Foundation and the National Research Council to study the oral
tradition elements in Native American literature. She has also been an
Associate Fellow at the Stanford Humanities Institute. She has taught at
Fort Lewis College, Durango, CO, the College of San Mateo, San Diego State
University, San Francisco State University, where she was the director of
the Native American Studies Program, the University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque, and the University of California at Berkeley, where she was
Professor of Native American / Ethnic Studies. She retired from her position
as Professor of English/Creative Writing/American Indian Studies at the
University of California at Los Angeles in 1999. Her son, Eugene John, died
in 2001 at the age of 42.
Awards
Paula was awarded a 2007 Lannan Foundation Fellowship, awarded to stimulate
the creation of literature written originally in the English language and to
develop a wider audience for contemporary prose and poetry.
Paula received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writer's
Circle of the Americas in 2001. In 2004 she received a Pulitzer Prize
nomination for her book ?Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur,
Diplomat.? Paula was named a CAS Alumni Fellow by the University of Oregon.
Paula Gunn Allen received the American Book Award from the Before Columbus
Foundation in 1990 for Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and
Contemporary Writing. She also received the Susan Koppelman Award from the
Popular and American Culture Associations and the Hubbell Prize for Lifetime
Achievement in American Literary Studies from the Modern Language
Association in 1999.
In 1981 she was a postdoctoral fellow in American Indian Studies at the
University of California at Los Angeles and received a postdoctoral
fellowship grant from the Ford Foundation-National Research Council in 1984.
In 1978, Paula received a writing fellowship from the National Endowment for
the Arts.
Writing available online
Which way's up, Doc? in the little magazine
Borrachitarme Voy in the little magazine
Anagram
Hoop Dancer
Taking a Visitor to See the Ruins
Books by Paula Gunn Allen
Poetry
Life Is a Fatal Disease: Collected Poems 1962-1995, West End Press.
Star Child, Blue Cloud Quarterly Press.
Skins and Bones: Poems, 1979-1987, West End Press.
Wyrds, Taurean Horn Press.
Shadow Country (Native American Series), Amer Indian Studies Center.
A cannon between my knees, Strawberry Press.
Coyote's Daylight Trip, La Confluencia.
Blind Lion, Thorp Springs Press.
Prose and Compilations
Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur, Diplomat, Harper San
Francisco.
Outfoxing Coyote, That Painted Horse Press.
Off the Reservation: Reflections on Boundary-Busting Border-Crossing Loose
Canons, Beacon Press.
The Woman Who Owned the Shadows, (a novel) Aunt Lute Books.
Columbus & Beyond: Views from Native Americans, Southwest Parks & Monuments.
The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions, with
a New Preface, Beacon Press.
Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and Contemporary Writing by
Native American Women, Fawcett Books
Women in American Indian Mythology, Abc-Clio.
Grandmothers of the Light: A Medicine Woman's Sourcebook, Beacon Press.
As Long As the Rivers Flow: The Stories of Nine Native Americans, with
Patricia Clark Smith, Scholastic Trade.
Voice of the Turtle: American Indian Literature 1900-1970, Ballantine Books.
Song of the Turtle: American Indian Fiction 1974-1994, Ballantine Books.
Gossips, Gorgons & Crones: The Fates of the Earth, Jane Caputi, Introduction
by Paula Gunn Allen, Bear & Co.
Studies in American Indian Literature: Critical Essays and Course Designs,
Modern Language Association of America.
Song of the Sky: Versions of Native American Songs and Poems, Brian Swann,
Barry O'Connell (Editors), Four Zoas Night House. Forward by Paula Gunn
Allen.
From the Center: A Folio of Native American Art and Poetry, (Editor),
Strawberry Hill Press.
Sipapu: A Cultural Perspective, Dissertation, University of New Mexico
Press.
Anthologies
Eating Fire, Tasting Blood: Breaking the Great Silence of the American
Indian Holocaust, MariJo Moore (Editor), Thunder's Mouth Pr.
Genocide of the Mind, Marijo Moore (Editor), Thunder's Mouth Press.
Speak to Me Words: Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry, Janice
Gould and Dean Rader (Editors), Univ. Arizona Press.
Hozho: Walking In Beauty, co-editor (with Carolyn Dunn Anderson),
Contemporary Books/McGraw-Hill, 2001
Natives and Academics: Researching and Writing about American Indians, Devon
A. Mihesuah (Editor), University of Nebraska Press.
Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writing of
North America, Joy Harjo and Gloria Bird (Editors), W.W. Norton.
The Ethnic Canon: Histories, Institutions, and Interventions, David
Palumbo-Liu (Editor), Univ of Minnesota Press.
Smoke Rising: The Native North American Literary Companion, Janet Witalec,
Visible Ink Press.
My Lover Is a Woman: Contemporary Lesbian Love Poems, Leslea Newman
(Editor), Ballantine Books.
Coming to Light: American Women Poets in the Twentieth Century, Diane
Middlebrook (Editor), Univ of Michigan Press.
A Literary History of the American West, J. Golden Taylor, Thomas J. Lyon
(Editor), Texas Christian Univ Press.
The Desert Is No Lady: Southwestern Landscapes in Women's Writing and Art,
Vera Norwood & Janice Monk (Editors), University of Arizona Press.
Literature and the Visual Arts in Contemporary Society, Suzanne Ferguson,
Barbara Groseclose (Editors), Ohio State Univ Press.
A Circle of Nations: Voices and Visions of American Indians, John Gattuso
(Editor), Beyond Words Pubublishing Co.
Coyote was here: essays on contemporary Native American literary and
political mobilization, Bo Scholer (Editor), Aarhus, Denmark : Seklos.
Talking Leaves: Contemporary Native American Short Stories, Craig Lesley,
Katheryn Stavrakis (Editor) Dell Books
The Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Contemporary Native American
Literature, Geary Hobson (Editor), University of New Mexico Press
Earth Power Coming: Short Fiction in Native American Literature, Simon J.
Ortiz (Editor), Navajo Community College Press
That's What She Said: Contemporary Poetry and Fiction by Native American
Women, Rayna Green (Editor) Indiana University Press.
Songs from This Earth on Turtle's Back: An Anthology of Poetry by American
Indian Writers, Joseph Bruchac (Editor), Greenfield Review Press.
Wounds Beneath the Flesh, Maurice Kenny (Editor), White Pine Press.
Harper's Anthology of 20th Century Native American Poetry, Duane Niatum
(Editor), HarperCollins
All the Good Indians, in The 60s, without Apology, Sayers, Sohnya;
Stephanson, Anders; Aronowitz, Stanley; Jameson, Fredric (Editors),
University of Minnesota Press
Interviews with or Essays on Paula's Work
Radio Interview and Poetry Reading. October 26, 2007.
"Pocahontas' voice: a conversation with Paula Gunn Allen", An article from:
The Women's Review of Books by Joanne M. Braxton.
Other Words: American Indian Literature, Law, and Culture (American Indian
Literature and Critical Studies Series), Jace Weaver, Univ. Oklahoma Press.
That the People Might Live: Native American Literatures and Native American
Community, Jace Weaver, Oxford University Press.
Feminist Readings of Native American Literature: Coming to Voice, Kathleen
M. Donovan, University of Arizona Press.
"And Then, Twenty Years Later . . .": A Conversation with Paula Gunn Allen,
John Purdy, Studies in American Indian Literatures, 9, 5, 1997 Fall.
Native American Writers of the United States, (Dictionary of Literary
Biography, V. 175), Kenneth M. Roemer (Editor), Gale Research.
Women Reading Women Writing: Self-Invention in Paula Gunn Allen, Gloria
Anzaldua and Audre Lorde, Analouise Keating, Temple University Press, 1996.
Healing Through Traditional Stories and Storytelling in Contemporary Native
American Fiction, Ph.D. Dissertation, Jian Shi, Lehigh University.
Guerilla Ethnography, Ph.D. Dissertation, Renae Moore Bredin, University of
Arizona.
'A House of Difference': Constructions of the Lesbian Poet in Audre Lorde,
Adrienne Rich and Paula Gunn Allen, Ph.D. Dissertation, Sagari Dhairyam,
University of Illinois.
Through Landscape Toward Story/ Through Story Toward Landscape: A study of
Four Native American Women Poets, Ph.D. Dissertation, Nancy Helene Lang,
Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Theatre and Feminist Aesthetics, Karen Laughlin and Catherine Schuler
(Editors), Fairleigh dickinson University Press.
Critical Essays: Gay and Lesbian Writers of Color, Emmanuel S. Nelson
(Editor), Harrington Park Press.
Memory, Narrative, and Identity: New Essays in Ethnic American Literatures,
Amritjit Singh, Joseph T. Skerrett, Robert E. Hogan (Editors), Northeastern
Univ Press.
Lesbian Texts and Contexts, Karla Jay, Joanne Glasgow (Editors), New York
Univ Press.
"Listening to Native Americans: Making Peace with the Past for the Future",
John Barry Ryan, in Listening: Journal of Religion and Culture, Vol. 31,
No.1 Winter 1996, pp. 24-36.
Contemporary Lesbian Writers of the United States: A Bio-Bibliographical
Critical Sourcebook, Sandra Pollack and Denise Knight, Greenwood Press.
The Search for a Woman-Centered Spirituality, Annette Van d**e, New York
University Press.
Contemporary Literary Criticism, Deborah A. Stanley, Jeff Chapman, Pamela S.
Dear (Editors), Gale Research.
Native North American Literature: Biographical and Critical Information on
Native Writers and Orators from the United States and Canada, Janet Witalec,
Jeffery Chapman (Editor), Gale Research.
Winged Words: American Indian Writers Speak, Laura Coltelli, University of
Nebraska Press.
I Tell You Now: Autobiographical Essays by Native American Writers, Brian
Swann, Arnold Krupat, Brompton Books Corp.
American Indian Literatures: An Introduction, Bibliographic Review and
Selected Bibliography, A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff, Modern Language Association.
This is About Vision: Interviews with Southwestern Writers, J. F. Crawford,
William Balassi and Annie O. Eysturoy (Editors), University of New Mexico
Press.
Paula Gunn Allen, Elizabeth J. Hanson, Boise State University.
Lesbian Texts and Contexts: Radical Revisions, Karla Jay and Joanne Glasgow
(Editors), New York University Press.
Survival This Way: Interviews With American Indian Poets, Joseph Bruchac III
(Editor), (Sun Tracks Books, No 15) University of Arizona Press.
Native American Renaissance, Kenneth Lincoln, University of California
Press.
American Indian Women:Telling Their Lives, Gretchen M. Bataille and Kathleen
M. Sands (Editors), University of Nebraska Press.
Four Indian Poets, John R. Milton, University of South Dakota Press.
Women and Western American Literature, Helen Winter Stauffer & Susan J.
Rosowski (Editors), Whitston Publications.
"Paula Gunn Allen and Joy Harjo: Closing the Distance between Personal and
Mythic Space", James Ruppert, American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 1,
Spring, 1983
The Unison of Two Worlds: Paula Gunn Allen's The Sacred Hoop, Josh Buckner
See Also
Paula's Journal Publications
Hubbell Medal 1999 from the Modern Language Association
Voices in the Gaps profile on Paula
A biography and profile from Gale's Poet's Corner
Interview, photos and blog
Annotations on Paula's poem, Dear World on the Literature, Arts and Medicine
Database
Profile of Paula on glbtq.com by AnnLouise Keating
In a Native Voice, New DImensions Media'
Paula Gunn Allen Quotes
More Paula Gunn Allen quotes
A short biography from the Internet Public Library's Native American Authors
Project