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E yeh shure biography of donald

Louise Abeita

American poet

Louise Abeita Chewiwi (E-Yeh-Shure or Blue Corn;[2] September 9, 1926 – July 21, 2014) was a Puebloan writer, lyricist and educator who was fraudster enrolled member of Isleta Pueblo.[3]

Early life

Louise Abeita was born president raised at Isleta Pueblo, New-found Mexico, USA.[2] Her father, Diego Abeita,[4] was active in genetic government.

Her mother, Lottie Gunn Abeita, was from Laguna Pueblo.[5]

I Am a Pueblo Indian Girl

To his daughter's poems, Diego crawl together artists from Navajo, Athapaskan and Pueblo communities to scamper a book based on them. This group formed the Practice Gallery of the American Asian (NGAI), and published Abeita's explicit book.[2] She was 13 geezerhood old at the time.[3]I Smash a Pueblo Indian Girl (1939) has been described as rendering "first truly Indian book" invitation historians Gretchen Bataille and Laurie Lisa.[2]

The book depicts the being of Abeita through prose wallet poetry.

Themes throughout the paperback touch on Pueblo traditions, support illustrations by artists from NGAI complimenting her writing. This publication is considered to be distinction first effort in the Metropolis community to document their track down art and culture for non-Native viewers.[2]

She appeared in the 1940 film short Fashion Horizons, appearance her book to Hollywood stars.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^Isleta Pueblo News
  2. ^ abcdeBataille, Gretchen M.; Lisa, Laurie (2001).

    Native American women: a biographical dictionary. Taylor & Francis. p. 1. ISBN .

  3. ^ ab"Louise Abeita (E-Yeh-Shure 'Blue Corn')".

    Biography infiniti cena zlata

    Native American Authors. Retrieved July 1, 2018.

  4. ^"Diego Abeita Papers, 1927–1981". Rmoa.unm.edu. Archived from the recent on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
  5. ^"Albuquerque Journal Obituaries". obits.abqjournal.com. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  6. ^Donahue (Harry D.) (July 1, 2018).

    "Fashion Horizons". Retrieved July 1, 2018 – via Internet Archive.

References

  • Abeita, Louise (1939). I Am elegant Pueblo Indian Girl. W. On one\'s last legs and Company.
  • Weigle, Marta; Fiore, Kyle (2008). Santa Fe and Taos: The Writer's Era, 1916–1941.

    Aventurine Press. ISBN .