Read Poems by an Indigenous Writer


Native American Literature

  • American Native Press Archives Tribal Writers Digital Library New
    The works of Native poets, fiction, and prose writers; featuring works of writers who are not ordinarily anthologized, and works which out of print or originally appeared in ephemeral sources and periodicals.
  • American Indians in Children's Literature
    Critical discussion and resources on American Indians in children's books, public school curricula, and popular culture.
  • Circle of Stories
    Explores Native American storytelling and storytellers through documentary film, photography, art, and music.
  • Storytellers: Native American Authors Online New
    This "Native Wiki" site contains information on Native American poets and novelists, including contemporary Abenaki, Anishinaabe, Blackfeet, Cherokee, Choctaw, Iroquois, Lakota / Dakota, Muscogee / Creek, Navajo, Osage, and Pueblo writers.
  • Native American Authors
    From the Internet Public Library. Information on contemporary Native American authors with bibliographies of their published works, biographical information, and links to online resources including interviews, online texts, and tribal websites.
  • Sherman Alexie New
    The National Book Award winner's official website, which includes his biography, essays, and articles.
  • Indigenous People's Literature
    Indian.org's literature collection, including traditional stories from various tribes.
  • Writing Tricksters: Mythic Gambols in American Ethnic Literature (e-book) New
    Jeanne Rosier Smith celebrates the Native American trickster and traces its influences in American ethnic literatures. Her thesis is that the trickster figure is a unique American phenomenon that "combines tradition and change and makes an ideal agent for a politically engaged, visionary art" found in multicultural literatures.
  • The Story of Dancing Cloud and She Who Sees All
    A children's story inspired by Native American folktales; by my sister, Elisheva Herrera. Included in the excellent spirituality site for children, Children of the New Earth: Indigo Children.

History

  • Indians/Native Americans
    Links to American history resources relating to Native Americans; from the National Archives Library Information Center (ALIC).
  • Chaco Canyon
    About Chacoan/Anasazi culture, the great kivas, and the inspiration behind the poem "Kiva at Chaco Canyon." For more photos and info also check out the Chaco Culture National Historical Park page.
  • The Hexagon, the Solstice and the Kiva New
    Chris Hardaker discusses his studies on the geometric design types found in the Chaco Canyon kivas and asserts there exists a remarkable coincidence between design and astronomy.
  • Code Talkers New
    Page by Harrison Lapahie Jr., son of Harrison Lapahie, a World War II Navajo Code Talker. Features the original code, the Navajo Marine Hymn, and links to other Code Talker sites.
  • First Nations Tribal Collection of the Southern Oregon Digital Archives New
    Documents, books, and articles relating to the indigenous peoples of southwestern Oregon and northern California, including the Coos, Hupa, Karuk, Klamath, Modoc, Takelma, Shasta, Siuslaw, Cow Creek Band of Umpqua, Yahooskin, and Yurok nations.
  • First People
    An educational site on the first people of Turtle Island, or the Americas and Canada. Thank you to First People for their generous offering of beautiful Native American images and clip art, which are included on this website.

News & Current Events

  • Indian Country Today New
    A nation-wide American Indian news service owned and operated by the Oneida Nation. With coverage of current events, analysis, and commentary on American Indian issues.
  • Reznet: Reporting from Native America New
    Reznet, an online newspaper for Native America employs 30 Native American college students nationwide, most graduates of the Freedom Forum's American Indian Journalism Institute, as reporters, editors, photographers, copy editors, and multimedia journalists to cover their tribal communities or colleges. Articles, multimedia, blogs, arts, film, music, culture, and current issues affecting the Native American community.
  • NativeWeb
    Resources for Indigenous Cultures around the World
  • A Guide to Native American Studies Programs in the United States and Canada
    From the Association for the Study of American Indian Literatures.
  • Where Was the Maya Civilization in Mel Gibson's Apocalypto? New
    Gerardo Aldana, Professor of Ancient Mesoamerica, Department of Chicano Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, asserts that "To the many scholars around the country who are familiar with the intricate and complex legacy of the Maya, Mel Gibson's new film is an affront and embarrassment to that history."

Art

  • Native American Images
    Illustrations from rare books, pamphlets, journals, pulp magazines, newspapers, and ephemera from the Bancroft Library.
  • The Edward S. Curtis Collection: Photographs of Native Americans
    The early 20th-century photographer embarked on "The North American Indian Project," a thirty-year effort he described as a goal "to form a comprehensive and permanent record of all the important tribes of the United States and Alaska that still retain to a considerable degree their customs and traditions." From the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Reading Room.
  • Kiowa Drawings - National Anthropological Archives New
    Digital collection includes works of art on buffalo hide and contemporary works on paper. Historically important are those by Kiowa men who were imprisoned at Fort Marion in the 1870s and those by "The Kiowa Five," a group of artists who studied at the University of Oklahoma in the twentieth century.
  • Agayuliyararput - Our Way of Making Prayer: Yuk'ik Masks New
    Agayuliyararput is the first exhibition of Native Alaskan Yup'ik material presented from a Yup'ik perspective. The Web exhibit highlights 27 Yup'ik objects from the National Museum of Natural History collection.

Native American Languages

Culture, Myth, & Folklore

Links updated on March 1, 2008