Tiffany Midge(born July 2, 1965) is aNative Americanpoet, editor, and author,[1]who is aHunkpapa Lakotaenrolled member of theStanding Rock Sioux.[2]

Tiffany Midge
Born(1965-07-02)July 2, 1965(age 59)
OccupationPoet
Author
Educator
LanguageEnglish
NationalityStanding Rock Sioux Tribe
CitizenshipAmerican
EducationUniversity of Idaho
Years active1995–present
Website
tiffanymidge.wixsite/website

Early life and education

edit

Midge was born to mother Alita Rose and father Herman Lloyd.[3]Midge's mother worked as a civil servant for King County and her father was a teacher.[4]Midge's mother was Lakota Sioux and grew up on a reservation in eastern Montana.[3]Midge's father was raised on a farm in Montana. His family was from Germany, but were originally from Russia near the Valga River.[5]

Midge grew up in the Pacific Northwest. For part of her childhood she lived inSnoqualmie ValleyinWashington (state).[4]She has an older half-sister named Julie.[5]

In 2008, Midge received an MFA in creative writing from theUniversity of Idaho.[6][7]

Career

edit

Midge's poetry is noted for its depiction of a self divided by differing identities, and for a strong streak of humor.[8]: 157 

In 2002, Finnish composerSeppo Pohjolacommissioned Midge's work into a performance calledCedarsfor a choral ensemble that was produced at Red Eagle Soaring Native Youth Theater in Seattle.[2][9]In 2015,Cedarswas produced by the Mirage Theatre Company atLa MaMain New York City.[10][11]The work is a mixture of poetry and prose set to music. The newer version incorporates work by many Native American writers who in addition to Midge include Alex Jacobs, Arthur Tulee, Deborah A. Miranda, Evan Pritchard, Gail Tremblay, Joseph Bruchac, Martha Brice, Molly McGlennen, and William Michael Paul.[11]

Midge was a humor columnist forIndian Country Media Network'sIndian Country Today.[12]

In 2019, Midge published a memoir calledBury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese'sfromUniversity of Nebraska Press.[3][13]Cleveland Review of Bookssaid the novel's "embrace of grief allows for an expansive range of humor that includes satire, dry wit, Twitter, and inside jokes not here for white consumption."[14]

Midge's poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction has appeared in McSweeney's, The Toast Butter Blog, Waxwing, Moss, Okey-Pankey, Mud City, Apex, The Rumpus, Yellow Medicine Review, The Raven Chronicles, North American Review and World Literature Today, and has been widely anthologized.

Teaching

edit

Midge was a professor atNorthwest Indian College,where she taught writing and composition.

In Spring 2019, she was the Simons Public Humanities fellow forUniversity of KansasHall Center for the Humanities.[15][16]

Honors and awards

edit

Personal life

edit

Midge lives in Moscow, Idaho, which she refers to as Nez Perce country, as well as Seattle, Washington.[4]

Selected works and publications

edit

Books

edit
  • Midge, Tiffany (retold by); Warren, Vic (additional text & book design by); Magnuson, Diana (illustrations by) (1995).Animal Lore & Legend--Buffalo: American Indian Legends.New York: Scholastic.ISBN978-0-590-22489-5.OCLC160081734.
  • Midge, Tiffany (1996).Outlaws, Renegades and Saints: Diary of a Mixed-Up Halfbreed.Greenfield Center, NY: Greenfield Review Press.ISBN978-0-912-67893-1.OCLC35233419.
  • Midge, Tiffany (Summer 2001). "Sweetheart".Phati'tude.1(2 (Indian Summer)). The Intercultural Alliance of Artists & Scholars, Inc.: 62.ISBN978-1-453-71992-3.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2005).Guiding the Stars to Their Campfire, Driving the Salmon to Their Beds: Poems.Everett, WA: Gazoobi Tales.ISBN978-0-967-93644-4.OCLC64202269.
  • Midge, Tiffany (April 2008).The Fertility Circus(Thesis/dissertation).Moscow, ID: University of Idaho.OCLC311595612.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2016).The Woman Who Married a Bear: Poems.Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.ISBN978-0-826-35652-9.OCLC911920673.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2019).Bury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese's.Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.ISBN978-1-496-21803-2.OCLC1112608655.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2019).HORNS.Spokane, WA: Scablands Books.– forthcoming

Anthologies

edit
  • Midge, Tiffany (1996)."Beets".In Trafzer, Clifford E. (ed.).Blue Dawn, Red Earth: New Native American Storytellers.New York: Anchor Books. pp.267–278.ISBN978-0-385-47952-3.OCLC32893633.
  • Midge, Tiffany (1997). "Written in blood (Lakota)". In Harjo, Joy; Bird, Gloria (eds.).Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writing of North America.New York: W.W. Norton & Co. p. 212.ISBN978-0-393-31828-9.OCLC40309378.
  • Midge, Tiffany (Summer 1997). "Fishing at Sandy Point".Studies in American Indian Literatures (SAIL).9(2). University of Nebraska Press: 57–58.ISSN0730-3238.JSTOR20739397.OCLC5542768723.
  • Midge, Tiffany (1998). "A Half-Breed's Dream Vacation". In Gillan, Maria M.; Gillan, Jennifer (eds.).Growing Up Ethnic in America: Contemporary Fiction About Learning to Be American.New York: Viking. pp. 68–75.ISBN978-1-101-64020-3.OCLC607386833.
  • Midge, Tiffany (1998). Bender, Sheila; Tobin, Philip (eds.). "The Seattle Sister Cities Poetry Anthologies".The Poem & the World: An International Anthology.4.Seattle, WA: The Poem & the World.ISBN978-0-963-61247-2.OCLC49421582.
  • Paul-Martin, Michael; Belmore, Florene, eds. (1998).A Shade of Spring: An Anthology of Native Writers.Toronto: 7th Generation Books.ISBN978-1-896-92304-8.OCLC976545620.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2003). "The Woman Who Married a Bear; Sweetheart; Baskets; First Snow of '96; Promises of Winter; The Night Horse; Chateau Ste. Michelle's". In Akiwenzie-Damm, Kateri (ed.).Without Reservation: Indigenous Erotica.Wiarton, Ont.: Kegedonce Press. pp. 37, 43, 66–69, 165.ISBN978-1-877-28397-0.OCLC51838032.
  • Midge, Tiffany (November–December 2005). "Portrait of a Backwoods Wife with an Axe to Grind".The North American Review.290(6). University of Northern Iowa: 19.ISSN0029-2397.JSTOR25127468.OCLC99695727.
  • Midge, Tiffany (November–December 2009). "A Postcolonial Irony".The North American Review.294(6). University of Northern Iowa: 24.ISSN0029-2397.JSTOR40792604.OCLC649200138.
  • Midge, Tiffany (Fall 2010). "(Dis)Beliefs Suspended".The North American Review.295(4). University of Northern Iowa: 24.ISSN0029-2397.JSTOR23055035.OCLC5543819552.
  • Midge, Tiffany (Fall 2015). "Ranches with Wolves".The North American Review.300(4). University of Northern Iowa: 6.ISSN0029-2397.JSTOR44601147.OCLC7973268464.
  • Midge, Tiffany (2018). "Horns". In Shields, Sharma (ed.).Lilac City Fairy Tales, v. 4: Towers & Dungeons.Spokane, WA: Scablands Books.ISBN978-0-990-75257-8.OCLC1033619956.

Other work

edit

References

edit
  1. ^"Interview with Workshop Leader Tiffany Midge".Montana Book Festival. 8 September 2019.
  2. ^ab"Tiffany Midge - Team Poet".Department of English.University of Idaho. Archived fromthe originalon 8 January 2014.
  3. ^abcMidge, Tiffany (2019).Bury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese's.Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.ISBN978-1-496-21803-2.OCLC1112608655.
  4. ^abcMidge, Tiffany (13 April 2015)."Snapshots, a prose poem by Tiffany Midge (Me, as a Child Poetry Series)".Silver Birch Press.
  5. ^abMidge, Tiffany (1996)."Beets".In Trafzer, Clifford E. (ed.).Blue Dawn, Red Earth: New Native American Storytellers.New York: Anchor Books. pp.267–278.ISBN978-0-385-47952-3.OCLC32893633.
  6. ^Midge, Tiffany (April 2008).The Fertility Circus(Thesis/dissertation).Moscow, ID: University of Idaho.OCLC311595612.
  7. ^"Alumna Tiffany Midge Wins Kenyon Review Earthworks Prize for Indigenous Poetry".University of Idaho.2013.
  8. ^Wilson, Norma C. (2005). "Chapter 6 - America's indigenous poetry". In Porter, Joy; Roemer, Kenneth M. (eds.).The Cambridge Companion to Native American Literature.Cambridge University Press. pp.145–160.doi:10.1017/CCOL0521822831.007.ISBN978-0-521-82283-1.OCLC470047746.Midge entertains with her wit and humor, but also reminds readers of the horrors of contemporary life, which are not spiders or the ghosts of Indians murdered in the late nineteenth century, but rather a hollow consumerism.
  9. ^"Cedars: Excerpts from the Premiere - Seattle, Washington (2002)".Mirage Theatre Company.2015.
  10. ^"Cedars".Mirage Theatre Company.2015.
  11. ^ab"CEDARS Features Texts by Ten Native American Writers at La MaMa, Now thru 2/1".BroadwayWorld.22 January 2015.
  12. ^Pratt, Stacy (10 October 2019)."I'd Rather Make Jokes: Stacy Pratt talks to Tiffany Midge".Anomaly Features Supplement to the Online Journal of Literature and Art– via Medium.
  13. ^Friesen, Peter (12 September 2019)."Tiffany Midge thumbs her nose at America, with wit and wisdom".Missoulian.
  14. ^"Ball Pit Blues: On Tiffany Midge's" Bury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese's "".Cleveland Review of Books.Retrieved2021-12-21.
  15. ^"Simons Public Humanities Fellowship".The Hall Center for the Humanities.University of Kansas. 2019.Retrieved15 October2019.
  16. ^"Simons Public Humanities Fellow 2019: Tiffany Midge"(PDF).Communiqué.The Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas. Spring 2019. p. 15.
  17. ^Carr, Tara (10 March 2017)."National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum honors prominent performers and artists at 2017 Western Heritage Awards®"(Press release).National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
  18. ^Bauer, Jennifer K. (27 April 2016)."Moscow's poet laureate to read from new collection".Inland 360.Moscow-Pullman Daily News.
  19. ^"Tiffany Midge Wins Kenyon Review Earthworks Prize for Indigenous Poetry".The Kenyon Review.5 February 2013.
  20. ^Strom, Karen M.(1994)."First Book Awards for Poetry from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas".Hanksville.

Further reading

edit
edit