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Wilma Mankiller was not known as a poet. With a tip from her husband, Charlie Soap, and her friend, Kristina Kiehl, Pulley Press founders learned that Mankiller had been writing poetry throughout her life. After searching through her barn at Mankiller Flats in Adair County Oklahoma, Greg Shaw and Frances McCue located 19 of the 20 poems published here. The 20th came from the collection of Kristina Kiehl. The poems show Mankiller's engagement with her own artistry and reflection upon her life, particularly her Native heritage and the role of women in the world.
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Produktbeschreibung
Wilma Mankiller was not known as a poet. With a tip from her husband, Charlie Soap, and her friend, Kristina Kiehl, Pulley Press founders learned that Mankiller had been writing poetry throughout her life. After searching through her barn at Mankiller Flats in Adair County Oklahoma, Greg Shaw and Frances McCue located 19 of the 20 poems published here. The 20th came from the collection of Kristina Kiehl. The poems show Mankiller's engagement with her own artistry and reflection upon her life, particularly her Native heritage and the role of women in the world.

Readers of Mankiller Poems might include other poets, amateur and professional historians, those interested in America's indigenous heroes, women's rights activists, political and civic leaders, young adults who are interested in leadership and all those who want to see another side of an inspiring leader. How the Chief of the Cherokee Nation wrote poems as a means of reflection on her life reveals a unique perspective on how art, and these poems in particular, may have enhanced Mankiller's own leadership. Her empathy is palpable and her quick wit and loving temperament, all wrapped in the artistry of verse, shines here.


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Autorenporträt
Wilma Mankiller (1945-2010) served as Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation for more than ten years. She was the first woman elected as Deputy Chief (1983) and then as Principal Chief (1985-1995), a role that years of work as a community activist for the tribe. The Bell Water project, an endeavor in which Mankiller took a leadership role, is depicted in The Cherokee Word for Water, a feature length dramatic film directed by Tim Kelly and her husband, Charlie Soap. Mankiller was born in Tahlequah, Oklahoma and lived much of her life on her grandfather's allotment in Adair County. When Mankiller lived in The Bay Area (1957-1976), she founded a youth center in Oakland, supported the Reoccupation of Alcatraz and participated in other work of the American Indian Movement. She returned to Oklahoma with her two young daughters 1976. In 2010, Mankiller won the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Her likeness is appearing on the US Mint's quarter-dollar coin.