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Full Description
Zitkala-Ša: Letters, Speeches, and Unpublished Writings, 1898-1929, edited by Tadeusz Lewandowski, offers a fascinating, intimate portrait of the Yankton Sioux writer and activist Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (1876-1938).
Gertrude Bonnin, better known by her Lakota name, Zitkala-Ša, was one of the most prominent American Indians of the early 20th century. A talented writer, orator, and musician, she devoted much of her life to the protection of Native peoples. As such, Bonnin corresponded with many other distinguished persons within the early Native rights movement, including Carlos Montezuma, Richard Henry Pratt, and Arthur C. Parker, as well as Fathers Martin Kenel and William H. Ketcham of the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions. This volume gathers together Bonnin's letters, lesser-known writings and speeches, illuminating her private and public struggles.
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
List of Archive Abbreviations
Notes on the Archival Material
Notes on the Editorial Policy
Chronology
Zitkala-Ša/Gertrude Simmons Bonnin: A Biographical Sketch
Letters
From Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and the Dakotas (1898-1902)
From Uintah and Los Angeles (1908-17)
From Washington, D.C. (1917-19)
Speeches and Unpublished Writings
"The Sioux Claims" (1923)
"Our Sioux People" (1923)
"How the National Council of American Indians Came into Being and What of the Things It is Trying to Do through Organization." (ca. 1926)
"The Petition of the National Council of American Indians" (1926)
"American Indian Problem" (1928)
"The Indian Side of the Question" (1929)
Selected Bibliography
Index