Ella Cara Deloria

Ella Cara Deloria

Ella Cara Deloria (January 30, 1888 – February 12, 1971), also called Ąnpétu Wašté Wįn (Beautiful Day Woman), was an educator, anthropologist, ethnographer, linguist, and novelist of Yankton Sioux background. She recorded Sioux oral history and legends, and in the 1940s wrote a novel, "Waterlily", finally published in 1988.

Life

Deloria was born in the White Swan district of the Yankton Indian Reservation, South Dakota. Her parents were Mary Sully Bordeaux Deloria and Philip Deloria, the family having Yankton Dakota Sioux, English, and French roots. (The family name goes back to a French trapper ancestor named "Delaurier".) Her father was one of the first Sioux to be ordained as an Episcopal priest. Although Ella was the first child to the couple, they each had two daughters by previous marriages; she was followed by three further children.

Deloria was brought up on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, at Wakpala, and was educated first at her father's mission school and All Saints Boarding School in Sioux Falls, and then – after a brief period at the University of Chicago – at Oberlin College, Ohio, to which she had won a scholarship. After two years at Oberlin she transferred to Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, and graduated with a B.Sc. in 1915.

Throughout her professional life, she suffered from not having the money or the free time necessary to take an advanced degree, largely because of her commitment to the support of her family; her parents were elderly, and her sister suffered from brain tumours. In addition to her work in anthropology (of which more below), Deloria had a number of jobs, including teaching (dance and physical education), lecturing and giving demonstrations (on Native American culture), working for the Camp Fire Girls and for the YWCA, and holding positions at the Sioux Indian Museum in Rapid City, South Dakota, and (as assistant director) the W.H. Over Museum in Vermillion. Her nephew was the writer and intellectual, Vine Deloria, Jr.

Deloria had a stroke in 1970, dying the following year of pneumonia.

Work and achievements

Deloria met Franz Boas while at Teachers College, and began a professional association with him until his death in 1942, also working with his students Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict. She had the advantage for her work on Native American culture of fluency in both the Yankton and Lakota dialects of Sioux, both of which she had used as a child, as well as the eastern dialect of Sioux (in addition to English and Latin).

Her linguistic abilities and her intimate knowledge of traditional and Christianised Sioux culture, together with her deep commitment both to Native American culture and to scholarship, allowed Deloria to carry out important, often ground-breaking work in anthropology and ethnology, as well as to produce translations in to English of historical and scholarly texts in Sioux (such as the Lakota texts of George Bushotter and the Santee texts of Gideon and Samuel Pond). She was compiling a Sioux dictionary at the time of her death.

Deloria won the Indian Achievement Award in 1943, and was the recipient of grants from the Wenner-Gren Foundation (1948) and the National Science Foundation (1960s).

Books by Deloria

Fiction

*1988: "Waterlily" (reprinted 1990, University of Nebraska Press; ISBN 0-8032-6579-4)
*1993: "Ella Deloria's Iron Hawk" (single narrative, ed. Julian Rice. University of New Mexico Press; ISBN 0-8263-1447-3)
*1994: "Ella Deloria's the Buffalo People" (collection of stories, ed. Julian Rice. University of New Mexico Press; ISBN 0-8263-1507-0)

Non-fiction

*1928: "The Wohpe Festival: Being an All-Day Celebration, Consisting of Ceremonials, Games, Dances and Songs, in Honor of Wohpe, One of the Four Superior Gods... Games, of Adornment and of Little Children"
*1929: "The Sun Dance of the Oglala Sioux" (American Folklore Society)
*1932: "Dakota Texts" (reprinted 2006, Bison Books; ISBN 0-8032-6660-X)
*1941: "Dakota Grammar" (with Franz Boas) (National Academy of Sciences; reprinted 1976, AMS Press, ISBN 0-4041-1829-1)
*1944: "Speaking of Indians" (reprinted 1998, University of Nebraska Press; ISBN 0-8032-6614-6)

ources and further reading

*Julian Rice, "Deer Women and Elk Men: The Lakota Narratives of Ella Deloria" (1992, University of New Mexico Press; ISBN 0-8263-1362-0)
*Raymond A. Bucko, "Ella Cara Deloria", in "Encyclopedia of Anthropology" ed. H. James Birx (2006, SAGE Publications; ISBN 0-7619-3029-9)
*Janette Murray, "Ella Deloria: A Biographical Sketch and Literary Analysis" (Ph.D. thesis, 1974 — University of North Dakota
*Anne Ruggles Gere, [http://www.historycooperative.org/cgi-bin/justtop.cgi?act=justtop&url=http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/heq/45.1/gere.html "Indian Heart/White Man's Head: Native-American Teachers in Indian Schools, 1880–1930"] ("History of Education Quarterly" 45:1, Spring 2005)

ee also

* [http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Bios/entries/deloria_ella_cara.html Ella Cara Deloria from Voices in the Gaps]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Deloria — is a Native American surname, derived from the name of a French trapper, Phillippe des Lauriers, who settled and married into a Yankton community of the Sioux,[1] and may refer to: Ella Cara Deloria (1888 1971), educator, anthropologist,… …   Wikipedia

  • Maria Cotera — Maria Eugenia Cotera is daughter of Chicano activist Martha P. Cotera and Juan Cotera. Maria is Mexican American and has family originally from Chihuahua, Mexico. Maria who was born on July 17 in Texas spent most of early childhood there with her …   Wikipedia

  • Nakotas — Articles principaux : Assiniboines, Assiniboine (langue), Stoneys et Stoney. Le terme Nakotas (ou Nakodas ou aussi Nakonas[1]) est l endonyme utilisé aujourd hui par les peuples amérindiens d’Amérique du Nord qui sont traditionnellement… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Nakota — Nakotas Articles reliés: Assiniboines, Assiniboine (langue) et Stoney On définit aujourd’hui comme Nakotas (ou Nakodas ou aussi Nakonas[1]) les peuples amérindiens d’Amérique du Nord qui sont traditionnellement connus par le nom d’Assiniboines… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Forschungsgeschichte der indianischen Kulturen Nordamerikas — Die Forschungsgeschichte der indianischen Kulturen Nordamerikas reicht bis in die Phase der ersten Kontakte zwischen Indianern und Europäern zurück. Dabei standen zunächst Missions und Verwertungsinteressen bei der Beforschung im Vordergrund.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nakota — Main articles: Assiniboine people, Assiniboine language, Nakoda (people), and Stoney language The term Nakota (or Nakoda or also Nakona[1]) is the endonym used by the native peoples of North America who usually go by the name of Assiniboine (or… …   Wikipedia

  • List of writers from peoples indigenous to the Americas — This is a list of writers from Indigenous peoples of the Americas. It includes people who self identify as Alaskan Native, American Indian, First Nations, Inuit, Métis, Native Hawaiian, and Indigenous Central and South American writers. It has… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Native Americans of the United States — This is a list of note worthy Native Americans born within the area now known as the United States, which includes Alaska natives, Pacific Islanders and indigenous people to the Americas. [ [http://www.infoplease.com/spot/aihmbioaz.html Notable… …   Wikipedia

  • Thomas Sully — en 1869 Nacimiento 19 de junio de 1783 Horncastle (Lincolnshire) Falle …   Wikipedia Español

  • Water lily — The phrase water lily is used to describe aquatic plants of the following families: * Nymphaeaceae * Nelumbonaceae, (Nelumbo) also called lotus .Other uses: * Water Lilies , a famous painting series by Claude Monet. * Water Lilies (film) (… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”