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Louise Erdrich

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Louise Erdrich
Erdrich at the 2015 National Book Festival.
Erdrich at the 2015National Book Festival.
BornKaren Louise Erdrich
(1954-06-07)June 7, 1954(age 70)
Little Falls, Minnesota,U.S.
Occupation
NationalityTurtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians of North Dakota,[1]American
EducationDartmouth College(BA)
Johns Hopkins University(MA)
GenreNative American literature,children's books
Literary movementPostmodernism,Native American Renaissance
Notable works
Notable awards
Spouse
(m.1981;div.1996)
Children7
RelativesHeid E. Erdrich(sister)
Website
birchbarkbooks.com/blogs/birchbark

Karen Louise Erdrich(/ˈɜːrdrɪk/ER-drik;[2]born June 7, 1954)[3]is aNative Americanauthor of novels, poetry, and children's books featuring Native American characters and settings. She is an enrolled member of theTurtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians of North Dakota,a federally recognized tribe ofOjibwe people.[4][1]

Erdrich is widely acclaimed as one of the most significant writers of the second wave of theNative American Renaissance.She has written 28 books in all, including fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and children's books. In 2009, her novelThe Plague of Doveswas a finalist for thePulitzer Prize for Fictionand received anAnisfield-Wolf Book Award.[5]In November 2012, she received theNational Book Award for Fictionfor her novelThe Round House.[6]She is a 2013 recipient of theAlex Awards.She was awarded theLibrary of Congress Prize for American Fictionat theNational Book Festivalin September 2015.[7]In 2021, she was awarded thePulitzer Prize for Fictionfor her novelThe Night Watchman.[8]

She was married to authorMichael Dorrisand the two collaborated on a number of works. The couple separated in 1995 and then divorced in 1996; Dorris would also take his own life in 1997 as allegations that he sexually abused at least three of the daughters whom he raised with Erdrich were under investigation.[9][10][11]

She is also the owner of Birchbark Books, a smallindependent bookstoreinMinneapolisthat focuses on Native American literature and the Native community in the Twin Cities.[12]

Personal life

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Erdrich was born on June 7, 1954, inLittle Falls, Minnesota.She was the oldest of seven children born to Ralph Erdrich, a German-American, and Rita (née Gourneau), a Chippewa woman (of half Ojibwe and half French blood).[13]Both parents taught at a boarding school inWahpeton, North Dakota,set up by theBureau of Indian Affairs.Erdrich's maternal grandfather, Patrick Gourneau, served as tribal chairman for the federally recognized tribe ofTurtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indiansfor many years.[14]Though not raised in a reservation, she often visited relatives there.[15]She was raised "with all the accepted truths" of Catholicism.[15]

While Erdrich was a child, her father paid her a nickel for every story she wrote. Her sister Heidi became a poet and also lives in Minnesota; she publishes under the nameHeid E. Erdrich.[16]Another sister, Lise Erdrich, has written children's books and collections of fiction and essays.[17]

Erdrich attendedDartmouth Collegefrom 1972 to 1976.[18]She was a part of the first class of women admitted to the college and earned a B.A. in English. During her first year, Erdrich metMichael Dorris,ananthropologist,writer, and then-director of the new Native American Studies program. While attending Dorris' class, she began to look into her own ancestry, which inspired her to draw from it for her literary work, such as poems, short stories, and novels. During that time, she worked as a lifeguard, waitress, researcher for films,[19]and as an editor for the Boston Indian Council newspaperThe Circle.[15]

In 1978, Erdrich enrolled in a Master of Arts program atJohns Hopkins UniversityinBaltimore,Maryland. She earned the Master of Arts in the Writing Seminars in 1979.[18]Erdrich later published some of the poems and stories she wrote while in the M.A. program. She returned to Dartmouth as a writer-in-residence.[18]

After graduating from Dartmouth, Erdrich remained in contact with Michael Dorris. He attended one of her poetry readings, became impressed with her work, and developed an interest in working with her.[15]Although Erdrich and Dorris were on two different sides of the world, Erdrich in Boston and Dorris in New Zealand for field research, the two began to collaborate on short stories.

The pair's literary partnership led them to a romantic relationship. They married in 1981, and raised three children whom Dorris had adopted as a single parent (Reynold Abel, Madeline, and Sava[15]) and three biological children together (Persia, Pallas, and Aza Marion[20]). Reynold Abel suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome and in 1991, at age 23, he was killed when he was hit by a car.[21]In 1995, their son Sava accused Dorris of committing child abuse;[22]in 1997, after Dorris' death, his adopted daughter Madeline claimed that Dorris had sexually abused her and Erdrich had neglected to stop the abuse.[23]

Dorris and Erdrich separated in 1995,[9]and would divorce in 1996.[11]Dorris, who was accused of sexually abusing two of the biological daughters he had with Erdrich,[10]died by suicide in 1997. In his will, he omitted Erdrich and his adopted children Sava and Madeline;[23]Madeline accused Dorris of sexually abusing her as well.[9]

In 2001, at age 47, Erdrich gave birth to a daughter, Azure, fathered by a Native American man Erdrich declines to identify publicly.[24]She discusses her pregnancy with Azure, and Azure's father, in her 2003 non-fiction book,Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country.[25]She uses the name "Tobasonakwut" to refer to him.[26][27]He is described as a traditional healer and teacher, who is eighteen years Erdrich's senior and a married man.[26][25]In a number of publications, Tobasonakwut Kinew, who died in 2012, is referred to as Erdrich's partner and the father of Azure.[28]

When asked in an interview if writing is a lonely life for her, Erdrich replied, "Strangely, I think it is. I am surrounded by an abundance of family and friends and yet I am alone with the writing. And that is perfect." Erdrich lives inMinneapolis.[29]

Work

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In 1979, she wrote "The World's Greatest Fisherman",[30]a short story about June Kashpaw, a divorced Ojibwe woman whose death byhypothermiabrought her relatives home to a fictional North Dakota reservation for her funeral. She wrote this while "barricaded in the kitchen."[15]At her husband's urging, she submitted it to the Nelson Algren Short Fiction competition in 1982, for which it won the $5,000 prize,[15]and eventually it became the first chapter of her debut novel,Love Medicine,published byHolt, Rinehart, and Winstonin 1984.[29]

"When I found out about the prize I was living on a farm in New Hampshire near the college I'd attended," Erdrich told an interviewer. "I was nearly broke and driving a car with bald tires. My mother knitted my sweaters, and all else I bought at thrift stores... The recognition dazzled me. Later, I became friends withStuds TerkelandKay Boyle,the judges, toward whom I carry a lifelong gratitude. This prize made an immense difference in my life. "[31]

Love Medicinewon the 1984 National Book Critics Circle Award.[32]It is the only debut novel ever to receive that honor.[33]Erdrich later turnedLove Medicineinto a tetralogy that includesThe Beet Queen(1986),Tracks(1988), andThe Bingo Palace(1994). It has also been featured on the NationalAdvanced PlacementTest for Literature.[34]

In the early years of their marriage, Erdrich and Michael Dorris often collaborated on their work, saying they plotted the books together, "talk about them before any writing is done, and then we share almost every day, whatever it is we've written" but "the person whose name is on the books is the one who's done most of the primary writing.[19]"They got started with" domestic, romantic stuff "published under the shared pen name of" Milou North "(Michael + Louise + where they live).[15]

During the publication ofLove Medicine,Erdrich produced her first collection of poems,Jacklight(1984), which highlights the struggles between Native and non-Native cultures, as well as celebrating family, ties of kinship, autobiographical meditations, monologues, and love poetry. She incorporates elements of Ojibwe myths and legends.[18]Erdrich continues to write poems, which have been included in her collections.

Erdrich is best known as a novelist, and has published a dozen award-winning and best-selling novels.[18]She followedLove MedicinewithThe Beet Queen(1986), which continued her technique of usingmultiple narrators[35]and expanded the fictional reservation universe ofLove Medicineto include the nearby town of Argus, North Dakota. The action of the novel takes place mostly beforeWorld War II.Leslie Marmon Silkoaccused Erdrich'sThe Beet Queenof being more concerned withpostmoderntechnique than with the political struggles of Native peoples.[36]

Tracks(1988) goes back to the early 20th century at the formation of the reservation. It introduces thetricksterfigure of Nanapush, who owes a clear debt to Ojibwe figureNanabozho.[37]There are many studies of the trickster figure in Erdrich's novels.Tracksshows early clashes between traditional ways and theRoman Catholic Church.The Bingo Palace(1994), set in the 1980s, describes the effects of a casino and a factory on the reservation community.Tales of Burning Love(1997) finishes the story of Sister Leopolda, a recurring character from all the previous books, and introduces a new set of European-American people into the reservation universe.

The Antelope Wife(1998), Erdrich's first novel after her divorce from Dorris, was the first of her novels to be set outside the continuity of the previous books.[3]Erdrich heavily revised the book in 2009 and published the revision asThe Antelope Womanin 2016.[38]

She subsequently returned to the reservation and nearby towns. She has published five novels since 1998 dealing with events in that fictional area. Among these areThe Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse(2001) andThe Master Butchers Singing Club(2003). Both novels have geographic and character connections withThe Beet Queen.In 2009, Erdrich was aPulitzer Prizefinalist forThe Plague of Doves[39]and a National Book Award finalist forThe Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse.[40]The Plague of Dovesfocuses on the historical lynching of four Native people wrongly accused of murdering a White family, and the effect of this injustice on the following generations. Her Pulitzer Prize–winning novelThe Night Watchman[41](2020) concerns a campaign to defeat the 'termination bill' (introduced by SenatorArthur Vivian Watkins), and Erdrich acknowledged her sources and its inspiration being her maternal grandfather's life.[42]Her most recent novel,The Sentence,tells the fictional story of a haunting at Erdrich's Minneapolis bookstore, set against the backdrop of theCOVID-19 pandemic,George Floyd's murder,and theresulting protests.[43]

She also writes for younger audiences; she has a children's picture bookGrandmother's Pigeon,and her children's bookThe Birchbark House,was a National Book Award finalist.[44]She continued the series withThe Game of Silence,winner of the Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction,[45]The Porcupine Year,Chickadee,andMakoons.

Nonfiction and teaching

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In addition to fiction and poetry, Erdrich has published nonfiction.The Blue Jay's Dance(1995) is about her pregnancy and the birth of her third child.[46]Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country(2003) traces her travels in northern Minnesota and Ontario's lakes following the birth of her youngest daughter.[47]

Influence and style

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Her heritage from both parents is influential in her life and prominent in her work.[48]Although many of Erdrich's works explore her Native American heritage, her novelThe Master Butchers Singing Club(2003) featured the European, specifically German, side of her ancestry. The novel includes stories of aWorld War Iveteran of the German Army and is set in a small North Dakota town.[49]The novel was a finalist for the National Book Award.

Erdrich's interwoven series of novels have drawn comparisons withWilliam Faulkner'sYoknapatawphanovels. Like Faulkner's, Erdrich's successive novels created multiple narratives in the same fictional area and combined the tapestry of local history with current themes and modern consciousness.[50]

Birchbark Books

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Erdrich's bookstore hosts literary readings and other events. Her new works are read here, and events celebrate the works and careers of other writers as well, particularly local Native writers. Erdrich and her staff consider Birchbark Books to be a "teaching bookstore".[51]In addition to books, the store sells Native art and traditional medicines, and Native American jewelry. Wiigwaas Press, a small nonprofit publisher founded by Erdrich and her sister, is affiliated with the store.[51]

Awards

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Bibliography

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abDavies, Dave (March 4, 2020)."Louise Erdrich On Her Personal Connection To Native Peoples' 'Fight For Survival'".NPR.RetrievedJuly 2,2024.
  2. ^"Louise Erdrich, author of LaRose, talks about her love of books".YouTube.April 27, 2016.Archivedfrom the original on November 18, 2021.RetrievedJune 25,2020.
  3. ^abStookey, Lorena Laura (1999).Louise Erdrich: A Critical Companion.Greenwood Publishing Group.ISBN978-0-313-03233-2.RetrievedNovember 7,2013.
  4. ^"Louise Erdrich: Voices From the Gaps: University of Minnesota".Voices.cla.umn.edu.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  5. ^ab"The Plague of Doves".Anisfield-Wolf Awards.2009.
  6. ^Kaufman, Leslie (November 14, 2012)."Novel About Racial Injustice Wins National Book Award".The New York Times.RetrievedNovember 15,2012.
  7. ^abAlexandra Alter (March 17, 2015)."Louise Erdrich Wins Library of Congress Award".The New York Times.RetrievedMarch 18,2015.
  8. ^"'The Night Watchman,' Malcolm X biography win arts Pulitzers ".ABC News.
  9. ^abcNew York Magazine.New York Media, LLC. June 16, 1997.RetrievedDecember 8,2012.
  10. ^abO'Reilly, Andrea (April 6, 2010).Encyclopedia of Motherhood.SAGE Publications. pp. 5–.ISBN978-1-4129-6846-1.RetrievedJuly 12,2024.
  11. ^abCarnes, Mark C. (May 12, 2005).American National Biography: Supplement 2: Supplement 2.Oxford University Press. pp. 149–.ISBN978-0-19-522202-9.RetrievedJuly 12,2024.
  12. ^"Birchbark Books & Native Arts | Welcome!".Birchbarkbooks.com.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  13. ^Tribune, Sarah T. Williams Star (February 4, 2008)."The Three Graces".Star Tribune.RetrievedDecember 29,2022.
  14. ^Gates, Henry Louis Jr.(2010)."Louise Erdrich".Faces of America.PBS.
  15. ^abcdefghijChavkin, Allan; Feyl, Nancy, eds. (1994).Conversations with Louise Edrich and Michael Dorris.Jackson, Mississippi: University of Mississippi. p. 155.ISBN0-87805-652-1.
  16. ^"Heid E. Erdrich".HeidErdrich.com.
  17. ^Vanguard, The Patriotic (December 2, 2021)."2021 Pulitzer prize winner Louise Erdrich".The Patriotic Vanguard.RetrievedDecember 29,2022.
  18. ^abcde"Louise Erdrich".Poetry Foundation. August 24, 2021.
  19. ^abcChavkin, Allan; Feyl, Nancy, eds. (1994).Conversations with Louise Edrich and Michael Dorris.Jackson, Mississippi: University of Mississippi. p. 94.ISBN0-87805-652-1.
  20. ^ab"Erdrich, Louise | Encyclopedia.com".www.encyclopedia.com.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  21. ^"Master Butchers Singing Club (Erdrich) - LitLovers".www.litlovers.com.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  22. ^Rawson, Josie (April 21, 1997)."A Broken Life".Salon.
  23. ^ab"Adopted daughter sues Michael Dorris estate, alleging sex abuse".AP NEWS.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  24. ^Gray, Paul (April 1, 2001)."A Woman With a Habit".Time.RetrievedMarch 5,2020.
  25. ^ab"'Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country' by Louise Erdrich ".old.post-gazette.com.RetrievedMarch 6,2020.
  26. ^abErdrich, Louise (2014).Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country.Harper Perennial. pp. 52, 57.ISBN978-0-06-230996-9.
  27. ^Knoeller, Christian (2012). "Landscape and Language in Erdrich's" Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country "".Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment.19(4): 645–660.doi:10.1093/isle/iss111.ISSN1076-0962.JSTOR44087160.
  28. ^A study guide for Louise Erdrich's "The Bingo Palace".Gale, Cengage Learning. 2012.ISBN978-1-4103-2049-0.
  29. ^abHalliday, Lisa (Winter 2010)."Louise Erdrich, The Art of Fiction".The Paris Review.Winter 2010 (208).
  30. ^Erdrich, Louise.""The World's Greatest Fisherman"".Encyclopedia Britannica.RetrievedOctober 4,2020.
  31. ^Crowder, Courtney (July 21, 2019)."A look back at winners of the Nelson Algren Short Story Award".Chicago Tribune.RetrievedJuly 21,2019.
  32. ^ab"Louise Erdrich: About the Author: HarperCollins Publishers".Harpercollins.com. March 24, 2010.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  33. ^Streitfeld, David (July 13, 1997).""Sad Story"".Washington Post.
  34. ^"AP Literature: Titles from Free Response Questions since 1971".Mseffie.com. May 13, 2013. Archived fromthe originalon November 30, 2014.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  35. ^Kakutani, Michiko (August 20, 1986)."Books of the Times".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  36. ^Susan Castillo"Postmodernism, Native American Literature, and the Real: The Silko-Erdrich Controversy" inNotes from the Periphery: Marginality in North American Literature and CultureNew York: Peter Lang, 1995. 179–190.
  37. ^Gross, Lawrence W. (Summer 2005)."The Trickster and World Maintenance: An Anishinaabe Reading of Louise Erdrich's Tracks".Studies in American Indian Literatures.17(2): 48–66.doi:10.1353/ail.2005.0070.ISSN1548-9590.S2CID161821098.Archived fromthe originalon April 23, 2008.
  38. ^"Antelope Woman by Louise Erdrich".Bookshop Santa Cruz.RetrievedJanuary 3,2023.
  39. ^"Finalist:The Plague of Doves,by Louise Erdrich (HarperCollins) ".www.pulitzer.org.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  40. ^"The Last Report on the Miracle at Little No Horse".National Book Foundation.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  41. ^"The 2021 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Fiction".www.pulitzer.org.RetrievedSeptember 22,2021.
  42. ^Louise, Erdrich."Louise Erdrich American author".Encyclopedia Britannica.RetrievedOctober 4,2020.
  43. ^Jones, Malcolm (November 9, 2021)."A New Novel by Louise Erdrich Haunted by Covid and George Floyd's Death".The New York Times.
  44. ^"The Birchbark House".National Book Foundation.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  45. ^O'Dell, Scott."Scott O'Dell".www.scottodell.com.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  46. ^"The Blue Jay's Dance: A Birth Year by Louise Erdrich".www.publishersweekly.com.n.d.RetrievedMay 13,2023.
  47. ^Department of English (2001)."About Louise Erdrich".University of Illinois.RetrievedMay 22,2016.
  48. ^"Louise Erdrich".Poetry Foundation. May 12, 2018.RetrievedMay 13,2018.
  49. ^Allen, Brooke (February 9, 2003)."Her Own Private North Dakota".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedNovember 6,2019.
  50. ^See, e.g., Powell's Books (book review),The Christian Science Monitor,August 2, 2004
  51. ^ab"Our Story | Birchbark Books & Native Arts | Minneapolis, MN".Birchbarkbooks.com.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  52. ^"Louise Erdrich - Artist".MacDowell.
  53. ^"Erdrich, Louise".Encyclopedia.com.2005.RetrievedJune 6,2019.
  54. ^"Louise Erdrich – John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation".Gf.org. Archived fromthe originalon August 19, 2014.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  55. ^"Bold Type: O. Henry Award Winners 1919–2000".Randomhouse.com.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  56. ^World Fantasy Convention (2010)."Award Winners and Nominees".Archived fromthe originalon December 1, 2010.RetrievedFebruary 4,2011.
  57. ^"Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas".Hanksville.org.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  58. ^Salahub, Jill (November 9, 2017)."Native American Heritage Month: Louise Erdrich".Colorado State University.RetrievedJune 6,2019.
  59. ^[1]ArchivedApril 13, 2015, at theWayback Machine
  60. ^"Author Louise Erdrich rejects UND honor over 'Sioux' nickname | Minnesota Public Radio News".Minnesota.publicradio.org. April 20, 2007.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  61. ^"Dartmouth 2009 Honorary Degree Recipient Louise Erdrich '76 (Doctor of Letters)".Dartmouth.edu. June 7, 2010. Archived fromthe originalon August 19, 2014.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  62. ^"Native American author Louise Erdrich '76 to give Dartmouth's 2009 Commencement address Sunday, June 14".Dartmouth.edu. June 7, 2010. Archived fromthe originalon December 3, 2014.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  63. ^"Kenyon Review for Literary Achievement".KenyonReview.org.
  64. ^"Louise Erdrich, The Round House – National Book Award Fiction Winner, The National Book Foundation".Nationalbook.org. October 24, 2012.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  65. ^"Dartmouth Alumna Louise Erdrich '76 Wins National Book Award | Dartmouth Now".Now.dartmouth.edu. November 15, 2012. Archived fromthe originalon August 19, 2014.RetrievedOctober 23,2013.
  66. ^"Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award".Office of Governor, State of North Dakota. 2016.RetrievedJune 6,2019.
  67. ^Cornwell, Lisa (August 17, 2014)."writer louise erdrich wins ohio peace prize".TwinCities.com.Associated Press.RetrievedAugust 18,2014.
  68. ^Hillel Italie (September 9, 2014)."erdrich wins lifetime achievement literary prize".Nashoba Publishing.Associated Press. Archived fromthe originalon September 11, 2014.RetrievedSeptember 11,2014.
  69. ^"National Book Critics Circle: award winners".National Book Critics Circle. 2018. Archived fromthe originalon April 27, 2019.RetrievedJune 6,2019.
  70. ^"The Night Watchman,by Louise Erdrich (Harper) ".The Pulizer Prizes.RetrievedJune 11,2021.
  71. ^"Pulitzer Prize: 2021 Winners List".The New York Times.June 11, 2021.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedJune 14,2021.
  72. ^"United States Artists awards Louise Erdrich 2022 Berresford Prize".ICT News.November 14, 2022.RetrievedDecember 29,2022.
  73. ^"Le prix Femina remis à Neige Sinno pour" Triste tigre ", récit d'un inceste".November 6, 2023.
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