Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
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Elizabeth
Cook-Lynn, a member of the Crow Creek Sioux tribe, was born in
1930 in Fort Thompson, South Dakota, and raised on the reservation. She came from a family with deep roots in the
cultural and political leadership of her people. He great-grandfather
Gabriel Renville was a native linguist
and help develop the first Dacotah
language dictionaries. Her father
and grandfather each sat on the Tribal
Council and her grandmother was
a bilingual writer for an early Christian
newspaper at Sisseton, South
Dakota.
Cook-Lynn studied English and journalism at South Dakota
State College graduating in 1954.
After teaching high school to
mostly Native American students in New Mexico and South Dakota she went on
to study at New Mexico State University
and at Black Hills State College then
went on to get her Master’s Degree in
Education from the University of
South Dakota in Education,
Psychology and Counseling in
1971. She was in a doctoral program at the University
of Nebraska in 1977-78 and was a National
Endowment for the Humanities fellow at Stanford
University in 1976.
She went on to a distinguished
academic career as Professor of English
and Native American Studies at Eastern
Washington University in Cheney
from 1971 until her retirement. She was named Professor Emerita in 1990.
Cook-Lynn was one of four founding
editors of Wicazo Sa Review (Red Pencil Review): A
Journal of Native American Studies and is a member of the Council of Editors of Learned Journals,
and of the Authors Guild. During
and since her academic career she published her own poetry and other literary
work leading her to serve as a writer-in-residence
at several institutions.
Her body of work includes the
semi-autobiographical Aurelia:
A Crow Creek Trilogy and From the River’s Edge about the
destruction of her People’s home by the flooding from the Missouri River Power Project. She
has also been an influential critic and
essayist whose work includes Anti-Indianism
in Modern America: A Voice from Tatekeya’s Earth and Why I
Can’t Read Wallace Stegner and Other Essays: A Tribal Voice. Her poetry
collections include I Remember the Fallen Trees, and Then the Badgers Said This.
For more than 45 years Cook-Lynn has
been an indispensable voice for Native Americans, tribal culture, feminism, and ecology.
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn's autobiographical novel.
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At Dawn,
Sitting in My Father’s House
I.
I
sit quietly
in the dawn; a small house in the Missouri breaks.
A coyote pads toward the timber, sleepless as I,
guilty and watchful. The birds are commenting on his
passing. Young Indian riders are here to take the old
man’s gelding to be used as a pick-up horse at the
community rodeo. I feel fine. The sun rises.
II.
I
see him
from the window; almost blind, he is on his hands and
knees gardening in the pale glow. A hawk, an early riser,
hoping for a careless rodent or blow snake, hangs in the
wind-
current just behind the house; a signal the world is
right with itself.
I
see him
from the days no longer new chopping at the hard-packed
earth, mindless of the dismal rain. I hold the seeds
cupped in my hands.
III.
The
sunrise nearly finished
the old man’s dog stays here waiting, waiting, whines
at the door, lonesome for the gentle man who lived here. I
get up and go outside and we take the small footpath to the
flat prairie above. We may pretend.
—Elizabeth
Cook-Lynn
A Native American family at Mt. Rushmore
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Mt. Rushmore
Owls hang in the night air
between the visages of Washington, Lincoln
The Rough Rider, and Jefferson; and coyotes
mourn the theft of sacred ground.
A cenotaph becomes the tourist temple
of the profane.
—Elizabeth
Cook-Lynn
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