“The
creative act amazes me. Whether it's poetry, whether it's music, it's an
amazing process, and it has something to do with bringing forth the old out
into the world to create and to bring forth that which will rejuvenate.”
– Joy Harjo
Harjo, whose roots trace to a number
of Native American cultures, was born in Oklahoma on this date in 1951 and thought
art would be her career path. But, after grad school at the University of New Mexico she fell in love with writing and music. Since the
mid-1970s, she has taught writing at half-a-dozen major universities and traveled the performance art circuit, playing alto saxophone with the band Poetic
Justice and doing poetry readings and solo musical performances.
Among
her written works are Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings,
the award-winning Crazy Brave, and many wonderful books of poetry including How
We Became Human: New and Selected Poems 1975–2000. She has edited literary journals, written several screenplays,
released 7 CDs and served as U.S.Poet Laureate, earning a basket of awards and Lifetime Achievement accolades.
“I am a member of the Muskogee
people, a poet, a musician, a dreamer of sorts, and a questioner,” she said. “It’s important as a writer to do my art well
and do it in a way that is powerful and beautiful and meaningful, so that my
work regenerates the people, certainly Indian people, and the earth and the
sun. And in that way we all continue
forever.”
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