N. scott momaday famous works

Bio

N. Scott Momaday is a renowned writer who celebrates Native American art and oral tradition in his novels and essays. A member of the Kiowa tribe, he is also a poet, playwright, painter, photographer, storyteller, and professor of English. Navarre Scott Momaday was born in Lawton, Oklahoma on February 27, 1934. His father Al Momaday was of the Kiowa nation and a painter. His mother, Natachee Scott Momaday, was of English and Cherokee descent and a writer. Both taught on Indian reservations in Arizona and New Mexico when he was growing up, exposing him to the Navajo, Apache, and Pueblo Indian cultures of the Southwest. After receiving his undergraduate degree from the University of New Mexico, Momaday won a poetry fellowship to the creative writing program at Stanford University. He earned a doctorate in English literature there in 1963 and took a teaching position at the University of California in Santa Barbara. In 1969, his first novel House Made of Dawn (1968) was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and he began teaching at UC Berkeley, subsequently teaching

N. Scott Momaday

Native American author and academic (1934–2024)

N. Scott Momadayy

Momaday receiving the National Medal of Arts from George W. Bush, 2007

BornNovarro Scotte Mammedaty[1]
(1934-02-27)February 27, 1934
Lawton, Oklahoma, U.S.
DiedJanuary 24, 2024(2024-01-24) (aged 89)
Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S.
OccupationWriter
NationalityKiowa Indian Tribe of Oklahoma, American
EducationUniversity of New Mexico (BA)
Stanford University (MA, PhD)
GenreFiction
Literary movementNative American Renaissance
Notable worksHouse Made of Dawn (1968)

Navarre Scotte Momaday (February 27, 1934–January 24, 2024) was a Kiowa and American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet. His novel House Made of Dawn was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1969, and is considered the first major work of the Native American Renaissance.

In a tribute published upon his death, Joy Harjo (Mvskoke), 23rd Poet Laureate of the United States, noted that in House Made of Dawn, "Momaday found a way to move eloquently betw

N. Scott Momaday

Navarre Scott Momaday (born February 27, 1934) is a Kiowanovelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet.

Momaday was born in Lawton, Oklahoma. He is a Native American of the Kiowa people. His early life and education happened on Navajo, Apache, and Jemez Puebloreservations. He went to college at the University of New Mexico. He got his masters and doctoral degrees at Stanford University.[1]

In 1969 his first novel, House Made of Dawn, won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.[2] He receved the National Medal of Arts in November 2007.[3] In 2019 he was given the Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award from the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. That award said, "Momaday speaks for the Earth, [seeing] the natural world as a sacred space and [telling] us that humans are a part of, not apart from that world."[4]

Momaday's writing often mixes up fiction, poetry, and non-fiction. In The Way to Rainy Mountain, he uses "Kiowa tribal and private stories, history and descriptions of the land, and drawings."[5]

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