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Revision as of 08:28, 16 November 2012
Beth E. Brant (Indian: Degonwadonti) (* 1941 Melvindale, Michigan, other source say in the Tyendinaga reservation in Ontario) is a Mohawk writer.
Life
Beth Brant is the daughter of a white mother (Scots-Irish) and a Mohawk father. She grew up with her father’s family, on the Bay of Quinte Mohawk in Ontario. Most of her life she stayed in the border region of Ontario, Canada and Michigan, USA.
She married at 17, and gave birth to three daughters. After she divorced her violent, alcoholic husband, she got a job to support her family through daily life. She didn’t finish her education. At the age of 33, she came out as a lesbian. In 1981 she began to write and publish anthologies on Native literature. Between 1989 and 1990 she lectured at the University of British Columbia, and in 1993 at the University of Toronto. She works temporarily as teacher for creative writing and lives in Detroit, MI.
Brant characterizes herself as a lesbian mother and grandmother, a Taurus, ascendant Scorpio, a dropout and a woman of the working class.
In 1984 and 1986 she was awarded the Creative Writing Award of the Michigan Council for the Arts, in 1991 the National Endowment for the Arts and 1992 the Canada Council Award in Creative Writing.
Work
In her narratives, she broaches the issues that link her nationality and her homosexuality, like her experiences with racism and sexism, and takes the white immigrants of America into responsibility.
- Mohawk Trail, 1985, ISBN 0-932379-02-8
- A Gathering of Spirit, anthology of North American Indian women, 1988, ISBN 0-932379-55-9
- Food & Spirits, narratives, 1991, ISBN 0-932379-93-1
- Writing as Witness, Essay 1994, ISBN 0-88961-200-5
- I'll Sing `til the Day I Die, talks with Tyendinaga presbyters, 1995, ISBN 0-9698064-2-6
External links
- 1941 births
- 20th-century Native Americans
- Living people
- American people of Scotch-Irish descent
- American poets
- Canadian people of Ulster-Scottish descent
- Canadian poets
- First Nations writers
- Lesbian writers
- Lesbian Native Americans
- Canadian Mohawk people
- Native American writers
- Two-Spirit people
- American Mohawk people
- LGBT writers from Canada
- LGBT writers from the United States