James Anaya’s remarks came after a nine-day visit to Canada. Pressing issues include education reform and the epidemic disappearance of aboriginal women.
Here is a Huffington Post article, and here’s a CBC article.
Here’s an interesting perspective from PERC. It’s hard to tell if it’s a termination/allotment perspective dressed up in new clothes or a true self-determination perspective.
I received the following information from a listserv:
Mongrel Empire Press, an Eclectic Publishing House specializing in regional and uncommon literary works, is seeking submissions for an upcoming anthology featuring Oklahoma writers of color.
Quraysh Ali Lansana and Dr. Jeanetta Calhoun Mish, in collaboration with Mongrel Empire Press, seek to publish the writing of People of Color born and/or raised in Oklahoma or who have lived in the Oklahoma for five or more years. Though the editors prefer writing that speaks to some aspect of life in the Sooner State (politics, history, culture, the land, etc), all topics and genres are welcome. This anthology will be the first to document exclusively the lives of minorities in Oklahoma. We are looking for essays, interviews, short fiction, poetry and personal reflections for publication that explore life in Oklahoma as well as the state’s rich history.
Born and raised in Enid, OK, anthology editor Quraysh Ali Lansana is author of five poetry books, three textbooks, a children’s book, editor of eight anthologies, and coauthor of a book of pedagogy. Quraysh earned an MFA at the Creative Writing Program at New York University where he was a Departmental Fellow and he served as Director of the Gwendolyn Brooks Center for Black Literature and Creative Writing from 2002-2011. Quraysh is a member of the faculty of The Red Earth Creative Writing MFA Program at Oklahoma City University.
Co-editor Jeanetta Calhoun Mish was born in Hobart, OK and raised in Wewoka, OK; she completed her Ph.D. in American Literature at the University of Oklahoma in 2009. Her second poetry collection, Work Is Love Made Visible, was awarded the Oklahoma Book Award, the WILLA Award from Women Writing the West, and the Western Heritage Award. Jeanetta is a contributing editor to Oklahoma Today and to Sugar Mule: A Literary Magazine. Mish is also editor of Mongrel Empire Press and the director of The Red Earth MFA Program at Oklahoma City University.
Submission Guidelines:
1. All manuscripts must be typed. For multiple page manuscripts the title of the work and page number must appear on each page.
2. Manuscripts may be e-mailed as an attachment in Microsoft Word or in RTF.
3. All manuscripts must be submitted electronically.
4. A cover letter must be included with your attachment(s) listing the titles of submitted works and contact information. Also, please include acknowledgments if submitting previously published work.
5. All submitted material must include an e-mail address. Submissions without contact information will not be considered.
6.The deadline for consideration is October 31, 2013
Please send submissions to:
Oklahoma Writers of Color Anthology
https://mongrelempirepress.submittable.com/submit
E-mail general questions only to
okiewritersofcolorATgmailDOTcom
okiewritersofcoloranthology@gmail.com
If you know of previously published or historical work that should be included, please contact the editors at
okiewritersofcolorATgmailDOTcom
okiewritersofcoloranthology@gmail.com.
The projected date of publication for the Oklahoma people of color anthology is January 2014. the anthology will be available through most online bookstores and at local independent bookstores in Oklahoma. The editors are planning for a series of readings throughout the state where writers whose submissions appear in the book can present their work to the public.
About Mongrel Empire Press
Mongrel Empire Press was established in 2007 with a mission to publish well-written, thoughtfully-considered works across generic and disciplinary boundaries. The Press actively identifies and promotes Oklahoma and regional writers while at the same time making room for outside the region works that, because of their mixed generic, disciplinary, and philosophical approaches, cannot find a home at other presses that have a more narrowly defined mission.
Contact:
Jeanetta Calhoun Mish, Editor
Mongrel Empire Press
mongrel@mongrelempire.org
http://www.mongrelempirepress.org
Here.
Here. Sherman Alexie is one of the many faculty members.
I’m honored that historian and Professor Emerita Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has reviewed one of my law review articles in Native Sun News.
A Book Review: ‘Unjustifiable Expectations’ by Ann E. Tweedy
I happened across this libertarian-oriented article advocating (among other things) that tribes allow less-regulated medicine within their borders. I don’t tend to agree–personally I think the medical profession should be regulated, but I wanted to pass this along anyway.
SSRN-id1726074[1]
The announcement is below. I used to work with the attorneys in this office as outside counsel–it seems like a great place to work!
Coeur d’Alene Tribe
Position Announcement
In-House Tribal Attorney. The Coeur d’Alene Tribe, located in Plummer, Idaho, is seeking one or two attorneys to join its In-House Legal Department. We will consider both experienced and entry-level positions. The ideal candidate will have experience in all aspects of Indian law and environmental and natural resources law. Applicants should be currently admitted to a state bar and willing to become a member of the Idaho State Bar within a reasonable time. Salary is competitive, dependent upon qualifications and experience, full benefit package and opportunity to work with a motivated and progressive team in a beautiful part of Idaho near Coeur d’Alene Lake. To apply, please send a letter of interest, resume and list of professional references to
tjordan@cdatribe-nsn.gov.
Here’s the info. I received from a listserv:
2013 Native Writers Chapbook Series Contest
The Sequoyah National Research Center is pleased to announce the return of their Poetry Chapbook Award for emerging American Indian writers. One manuscript will be published annually, and although there is no cash prize, the writer selected will receive 250 copies of their chapbook to distribute at will. The winning manuscript will also be archived in our prestigious Tribal Writers Digital Library.
Guidelines are as follows:
• The Sequoyah Chapbook Award is open to any member of a federally recognized tribe in the United States. Individual must be either enrolled as a member of that tribe or accepted by that community as a member.
• Manuscripts, which need not be Native American in theme or subject matter, should be between 20 to 36 pages of poems, bound with a clip, single-spaced, one poem per page, paginated consecutively, with a table of contents and acknowledgments. Previous journal or magazine publication (web or print) is encouraged with acknowledgements, but we will not reprint work that has appeared as a whole in books (self-published or otherwise).
• A cover letter is required that identifies the writer’s tribal affiliation and has all contact information, including name, complete mailing address, email, and phone number. A short bio would also be helpful.
• We ask that you not submit manuscript simultaneously to other publishers or contests; winner will be notified no later than June 15, 2013.
• There is no reading fee, and manuscripts will not be read anonymously. All things being equal, we will select the work of emerging authors over established ones.
• Please include a stamped, self-addressed postcard for confirmation of receipt of your manuscript.
• Manuscript must be postmarked between March 15 and May 1, 2013. Anything received after that reading period will be returned unread. We do not accept email submissions. Please mail submission to:
Professor Nickole Brown, Department of English
University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Little Rock, AR 72204
• Questions should be emailed to Professor Brown at lnbrownATualrDOTedu
lnbrown@ualr.edu. Again, please do not email poems.
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