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Carter2

Carter Revard. Courtesy NativeWiki.

Carter Revard
Born March 25, 1931 (1931-03-25) (age 94)
Pawhuska, Oklahoma, U.S.
Occupation Poet, linguist, medievalist
Literary movement Native American Literature, Free verse
Notable work(s) How the Songs Come Down

Carter Curtis Revard (born March 25, 1931)[1] is an American poet, writer, and academic. Part Osage on his father's side,[2] he is also known by his Osage name, Nom-Peh-Wah-The (Nompehwahthe).

Life[]

Revard was born in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Part Osage on his father's side, he was given his Osage name in 1952 in Pawhuska by his grandmother, Mrs. Josephine Jump. He grew up in the Buck Creek Valley 20 miles east of Pawhuska, working in the hay and harvest fields, training greyhounds, and graduating as did his 6 brothers and sisters from Buck Creek School (1 room, 8 grades), where he and his twin sister did the janitoring in their 8th grade year.

He graduated from Bartlesville College High, winning a radio quiz scholarship to the University of Tulsa, where he took a B.A. in 1952. He earned a second B.A. from Oxford University with the help of a Rhodes Scholarship and support from Professor Franklin Eikenberry of the University of Tulsa, who also helped him go on to a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1959.

Upon receiving his degree, Revard taught at Amherst College. Since 1961 he has taught at Washington University in St. Louis ,and as a Visiting Professor at the University of Tulsa and University of Oklahoma. His scholarly work has been in medieval English literature [manuscripts, patrons, social contexts], linguistics, and American Indian literature.

2 collections of his poems have been published by Point Riders Press in Oklahoma: Ponca War Dancers (1980) and Cowboys and Indians Christmas Shopping (1992). More recently, An Eagle Nation and Family Matters, Tribal Affairs have been published by the University of Arizona Press.

File:Carter1.jpg

Among the organizations to which Carter belongs are the Modern Language Association, the American Indian Center of St. Louis, where he was a board member in 1980-81 and 1984, secretary, 1986-90, and president, 1990--, the Association for Studies in American Indian Literature, the River Styx Literary Organization, the Association of American Rhodes Scholars, the University of Tulsa Board of Visitors, the St. Louis Gourd Dancers and Phi Beta Kappa.

Recognition[]

Revard is the 2005 Lifetime Achievement Award winner from the Native Writers' Circle of the Americas. The Spring 2003 issue of the journal SAIL (Studies in American Indian Literatures) was devoted to Carter's work. In 2000, Carter was named Writer of the Year - Autobiography for Family Matters, Tribal Affairs by the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers. In 2002, he was a Finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award in the Non-Fiction category for Winning the Dust Bowl. In 1994 Carter's book Eagle Nation was the winner of the Oklahoma Book Award in the Poetry category. Family Matters, Tribal Affairs was a finalist in the non-fiction category for the Oklahoma Book Award in 1999.

He received a Rhodes Scholarship in 1952. His Osage name, Nompewathe, was given to him in the same year. In 1966 he was named one of the Outstanding Young Men in America. He has received travel grants from the ACLS and the NEH, a Neil Ker Fellowship from the British Academy, a residency from the Millay Colony for the Arts in 1997, and in 1998, he had a residency at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, NH.

Publications[]

  • Ponca War Dancers. Point Riders Press, 1980.
  • Cowboys and Indians Christmas Shopping. Point Riders Press, 1992.
  • An Eagle Nation. University of Arizona Press (Sun Tracks Books, No. 24), 1997.
  • Family Matters, Tribal Affairs. University of Arizona Press (Sun Tracks, Vol. 36), 1999.
  • Winning the Dust Bowl. University of Arizona Press, 2001.
  • How the Songs Come Down. Salt Publications, 2005.

Edited[]

  • Native Heritage: American Indian Literature (edited by Carter Revard). Nebraska English and Language Arts Council.
Carter_Revard,_"Discovery_of_the_New_World"

Carter Revard, "Discovery of the New World"

See also[]

References[]

  • The Salt Companion to Carter Revard (edited by Ellen L. Arnold) [1]

Notes[]

External links[]

Poems
Books
About

This article uses Creative Commons-licensed text from NativeWiki. Original article is at Carter Revard.

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