New Poet Laureate Joy Harjo with maybe the most famous tattoo in American literature since Ishmael. |
Note—Long time readers of this little blog are probably
familiar with and thoroughly sick of my regular feigned despair at being passed over for being named U.S. Poet Laureate In fact there
are probably a thousand or more
American versifiers more accomplished, deserving, and distinguished not to
mention prolific, widely published, and honored. And in recent years the sages who make the
selection have made a point of seeking a wide range of voices often
representing ignored or marginalized communities. I can’t pretend to have any argument over
this year’s selection.
On
Wednesday Carla Hayden, the Librarian of the Congress announced the
selection of a new Poet Laureate
Consultant in Poetry to succeed Tracy
K. Smith. Native American scribe.
Hayden noted:
Joy Harjo has
championed the art of poetry – ‘soul talk’ as she calls it – for over four
decades,” Hayden said. “To her, poems are ‘carriers of dreams, knowledge and
wisdom,’ and through them she tells an American story of tradition and loss,
reckoning and myth-making. Her work powerfully connects us to the earth and the
spiritual world with direct, inventive lyricism that helps us reimagine who we
are.
Multi-talented Harjo has also
studied art; mastered the saxophone at
age 40 becoming a recording artist; penned juvenile fiction, memoirs, and plays; and has had a distinguished academic career. But her path to our nation’s greatest
achievement for a poet has been anything but smooth and straight.
Harjo
was born on May 9, 1951 as Joy Foster.
Her father Allen W. Foster was Muscogee—Creek—and her mother Wynema Baker Foster, had mixed ancestry—Cherokee, French, and Irish.
She was the oldest of four children. Her parents divorced due to her father’s drinking and emotional and physical abusive behavior when drunk. Her mother's second marriage was to a man who
disliked Indians was equally
abusive. The trauma rendered her nearly mute
and she struggled in school.
In
her teen years she found comfort, solace, and expression in art but
her stepfather kicked her out of the
family home when she was only 16.
Drifting in an out of the marginal
lifestyle of an impoverished Native
woman Joy found her way to Santa Fe,
New Mexico, and enrolled in the Institute of American Indian Arts.
At
age 19 she officially enrolled as a
member of the Muscogee Nation and
took her paternal grandmother’s last
name Harjo, a common name among Muscogee and related peoples.
In
Santa Fe Harjo met and married a
fellow IAIA student, Phil Wilmon. They had a son, Phil Dayn before the youthful marriage ended in divorce.
Harjo
moved on to the University of New Mexico,
enrolling as a pre-med student but
changing her major to art and then creative
writing, as she was inspired by Native
American writers. There she met Simon Ortiz of the Acoma Pueblo at poetry
readings. The established poet
became her mentor and eventually her
lover and together they had a daughter, Rainy Dawn.
Harjo in 1975.
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She
graduated in 1976 already noted as a promising and then earned her Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the prestigious University of Iowa.
Harjo
returned to the IAIA to teach in 1978 and ‘79 and again in ‘83 and ‘84. She has
also taught at Arizona State University
from, the University of Colorado
from 1985 to 1988, the University of
Arizona from 1988 to 1990, the University
of New Mexico from 1991 to 1995, American
Indian Studies Program at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
in 2013, and was appointed to the Chair
of Excellence in the Department of
English at the University of
Tennessee, Knoxville in 2016.
During
her final years of study and through her academic career, Harjo published
poetry and stories to growing acclaim beginning with The Last Song in 1975 and
including She Had Some Horses in 1983, Secrets from the Center of the
World in 1989, The Woman Who Fell From the Sky in 1994,
A
Map to the Next World in 2000, 1, How We Became Human New and Selected Poems:
1975–2001in 2004, Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings: Poems
in 2015, and An American Sunrise: Poems this year.
Along
the way Harjo reaped a slew of awards,
recognition, and fellowships including a listing in the Outstanding
Young Women in America and a National
Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in 1978; the Arizona Commission on the Arts Poetry
Fellowship in 1989; the American
Indian Distinguished Achievement in the Arts Award in 1990; the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America and the American Book Award from the Before
Columbus Foundation for In Mad
Love and War in 1991; the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at Green Mountain College in Poultney, Vermont in 1993; the Lifetime
Achievement Award from the Native
Writers Circle of The Americas in 1995; the New Mexico Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts in 1997; the
Oklahoma Book Award for Poetry for How We Became Human in
2003; the Eagle Spirit Achievement Award
in 2009; the John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation Fellowship in 2014; the Wallace Stevens Award in Poetry by the Academy of American Poets Board of Chancellors in 2015; and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from the Poetry Foundation in 2017. This list is neither complete nor exhaustive.
Harjo's 2012 memoirs.
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If
all of this seems like a smooth, steady climb to success and recognition, it
was not. Harjo’s personal life was
often chaotic. She was wracked with self-doubt and restless both creatively and spiritually
in addition to her poetry she continued to draw and create works of visual art that she often incorporated in readings and performances.
At
the age of 40 after hearing recordings of John
Coltrane Harjo picked up the saxophone. She brought that free form jazz spirit to music based on Native
American traditions, lore, and rhythms. She also sang.
Her five albums each received
honors and in 2009 she won the Native
American Music Award for best female
artist. She frequently tours
with her music group, the Arrow Dynamics
and incorporates music into her readings in which she speaks with a musical tone, creating a song in every
poem.
Harjo and her saxophone. Music infuses her work across art forms and genres.
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Harjo
has also used her poetry and creative spirit in social justice activism not only around Native American issues but women’s rights and equal justice in today’s hostile environment. Her web site includes insightful commentary on
the issues in her blog. Her activism for Native American rights and
feminism stems from her belief in unity and the lack of separation among human, animal, plant, sky, and earth. Harjo believes that we become most human when we understand
the connection among all living things—what
Unitarian Universalists like to call
the interdependent web of all existence.
She believes that colonialism led to
Native American women being oppressed
within their own communities, and she works to encourage more political equality between the sexes.
These
beliefs spring especially from an ever deepening understanding of her
Muscogee/Creek tradition but are not limited to it. Due to her long time residency in the
Southwest, many of her stories and poems are set there and reflect to stories
of the Hopi and other tribes/nations of that region as well as the broader
condition of native peoples throughout the Western
Hemisphere.
Now
to some samples of that work.
The cover of Harjo's upcoming collection to be published by W. W, Norton
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An
America Sunrise is
the title poem of her next collection which will be published later this year
by her long-time publisher W.W. Norton
reflects on and salutes a famous poem by Gwendolyn
Brooks, who was herself an early Poet Laureate, We Real Cool.
An American Sunrise
We were running
out of breath, as we ran out to meet ourselves. We
were surfacing
the edge of our ancestors’ fights, and ready to strike.
It was difficult
to lose days in the Indian bar if you were straight.
Easy if you
played pool and drank to remember to forget. We
made plans to be
professional — and did. And some of us could sing
so we drummed a
fire-lit pathway up to those starry stars. Sin
was invented by
the Christians, as was the Devil, we sang. We
were the
heathens, but needed to be saved from them — thin
chance. We knew
we were all related in this story, a little gin
will clarify the
dark and make us all feel like dancing. We
had something to
do with the origins of blues and jazz
I argued with a
Pueblo as I filled the jukebox with dimes in June,
forty years
later and we still want justice. We are still America. We
know the rumors
of our demise. We spit them out. They die
soon.
—Joy Harjo
Eagle Poem
To pray you open
your whole self
To sky, to
earth, to sun, to moon
To one whole
voice that is you.
And know there
is more
That you can’t
see, can’t hear;
Can’t know
except in moments
Steadily
growing, and in languages
That aren’t
always sound but other
Circles of
motion.
Like eagle that
Sunday morning
Over Salt River.
Circled in blue sky
In wind, swept
our hearts clean
With sacred
wings.
We see you, see
ourselves and know
That we must
take the utmost care
And kindness in
all things.
Breathe in,
knowing we are made of
All this, and
breathe, knowing
We are truly
blessed because we
Were born, and
die soon within a
True circle of
motion,
Like eagle
rounding out the morning
Inside us.
We pray that it
will be done
In beauty.
In beauty.
—Joy Harjo
How to Write a
Poem in Time of War
You can’t begin just anywhere. It’s a wreck.
Shrapnel and the eye
Of a
house, a row of houses. There’s a rat scrambling
From light with
fleshy trash in its mouth. A baby strapped to its mother’s back
Cut loose.
Soldiers crawl the city,
The river, the town, the village,
The bedroom, our kitchen. They eat everything.
Or burn it.
They kill what they cannot take. They rape. What they cannot
kill they take.
Rumors fall like rain.
Like bombs.
Like mother and father tears swallowed for restless peace.
Like
sunset slanting toward a moonless midnight.
Like a train blown free of its destination.
Like a seed fallen where
There is no chance of trees
or anyplace for birds to live.
No, start here.
Deer peer from the edge of the
woods.
We used to see woodpeckers
The size of the sun, redbirds, and were greeted
By chickadees with their good morning songs.
We’d started to cook outside slippery with dew and laughter,
ah those smoky sweet sunrises.
We tried to pretend war wasn’t going to happen.
Though they began building their houses all around us and
demanding
more.
They started teaching our children their god’s story,
A story in which we’d always be slaves.
No. Not here.
You can’t begin here.
This is memory shredded because it is impossible to hold by
words, even poetry.
These memories were left here with the trees:
The torn pocket of your daughter’s hand-sewn dress,
The sash, the lace.
The baby’s delicately beaded moccasin still connected to the
foot,
A young man’s note of promise to his beloved —
No! This is not
the best place to begin.
Everyone was asleep, despite the distant bombs. Terror had
become the familiar stranger.
Our beloved twin girls curled up in their nightgowns, next
to their father and me.
If we begin here, none of us will make it to the end
Of the poem.
Someone has to make it out alive, sang a grandfather to his
grandson,
His granddaughter, as he blew his most powerful song into
the hearts of the children.
There it would be hidden from the soldiers,
Who would take them miles, rivers, mountains from the navel
cord place
Of the origin story.
He knew one day, far day, the grandchildren would return,
generations later
Over slick highways
constructed over
old trails
Through walls of laws meant to hamper or destroy, over the
libraries of
The ancestors in the winds, born in stones.
His song brings us to his home place in these smoky hills.
Begin here.
—Joy Harjo
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