N. Scott Momaday: Biographical, Literary, And Multicultural Contexts Essay, Research Paper
Kenneth M. Roemer
Momaday’s Major Works
The Journey of Tai-me. Santa Barbara: Privately Printed, 1967.
House Made of Dawn. New York: Harper & Row, 1968.
The Way to Rainy Mountain. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1969.
Angle of Geese and Other Poems. Boston: Godine, 1974.
The Gourd Dancer. New York: Harper & Row, 1976.
The Names: A Memoir. New York: Harper & Row, 1976.
The Ancient Child. New York: Doubleday, 1989.
In the Presence of the Sun: Stories and Poems, 1961-1991. New York: St. Martin’s
Press, 1992.
Circle of Wonder: A Native American Christmas Story. Santa Fe: Clear Light, 1994.
The Man Made of Words: Essays, Stories, Passages. New York: St. Martin’s Press,
1997.
In the Bear’s House. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999.
Edited Collection:
The Complete Poems of Frederick Goddard Tuckerman. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1965.
Collections of Interviews:
Ancestral Voice: Conversations with N. Scott Momaday. Ed., Charles L. Woodard.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989.
Conversations with N. Scott Momaday. Ed., Matthias Schubnell, Jackson: University
of Mississippi Press, 1997.
Momaday, Vizenor, Armstrong: Conversations on American Indian Writing. Ed., Hartwig
Isernhagen. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998.
A truism of canon formation: unrecognized literatures need
breakthrough events to gain attention and legitimacy. For American Indian literatures, the
key event occurred in 1969 when a young, unknown Kiowa painter, poet, and scholar won a
Pulitzer Prize for his first novel, The House Made of Dawn (1968). This event is
filled with ironies, two of which offer revealing insights about the way Native American
literatures have gained acceptance, about the nature of N. Scott Momaday’s writing, and
about the significance of contemporary Native American literature.
The most obvious irony is the great delay in recognition of literatures in several
hundred languages that include centuries, even millennia-old oral narratives, ceremonial
liturgies, and autobiographical accounts, as well as histories, essays, autobiographies,
poetry, and fiction written in English. The delay reflects not only the power of cultural
blinders, but also a 19th- and 20th-century disciplinary territorialism that placed
Indians within the anthropologist’s and, occasionally, the historian’s camp. Of course,
the breakthrough suggests the importance of the 1960’s commitment to civil rights and
ethnic studies. It also reflects another truism: literary critics and teachers of
literature tend to recognize examples of "new" literatures that are different
enough to seem Authentically Other but familiar enough to be incorporated into current
interpretive discourses. House Made of Dawn fulfilled these two requirements
wonderfully. The authentically different quotient was provided by the focus on a Jemez
Pueblo protagonist and two significant types of Indian settings (Jemez Pueblo in New
Mexico and an urban relocation center, Los Angeles); by the use of English recreations of
oral literatures, both specific (Kiowa narrative, Jemez ritual, Navajo song) and general
(the circular structure of the novel); and by the authority of an Indian author who
"looked Indian," was a "certified" tribal member (Kiowa), and had a
marvelous performance style and voice. Accessibility came from the use of a familiar and
popular genre (the novel) and from beautifully crafted sentences that could echo
Hemingway’s compactness, Faulkner’s stream of consciousness, and the Bible (the
protagonist’s name is Abel).
House Made of Dawn’s rich integrations of oral and written literatures suggest
another irony of the 1969 Pulitzer Prize, one that offers specific insights into Momaday’s
fiction and poetry and into the significance of contemporary Native American fiction and
poetry in general. House Made of Dawn is routinely associated with
"Indian" or "Native American" literatures. These labels, though useful
and appropriate, tend to obscure two dimensions of the multiculturalism (multitribalism,
multiethnicity) expressed in Momaday’s major works and in the best contemporary literature
by Native American writers.
Momaday’s background certainly fostered multicultural perspectives. Navarro Scott
Mammedaty was born in 1934 in Lawton, Oklahoma, Kiowa country in southwestern Oklahoma.
His autobiographical books, The Way to Rainy Mountain (1969) and The Names
(1976) emphasize the importance of the Kiowa landscape and his father’s tribal heritage.
But his mother was one-eighth Cherokee and seven-eighths Euroamerican blends, and young
Scott spent his childhood in several different Southwestern communities (Gallup, Shiprock,
Tuba Ci
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