Betty Louise Bell
Betty Louise Bell was born on November 23, 1949. She is a scholar and fiction writer of Cherokee ancestry. Bell is a former director of the Native American Studies Program and former assistant professor of American culture, English, and Women's Studies at the University of Michigan. Her areas of scholarly interest include Native American literature, Women's Studies, nineteenth-century American literature, and creative writing. She earned her PhD in 1985 from Ohio State University.Her first novel Faces in the Moon was published in 1994 and received favorable reviews. In addition, Bell has published critical articles on Native American Literature that emphasize the political and personal aspects of Native American identity.
Other works
Faces in the Moon
A Red Girl's Reasoning: Native American Women Writers and the Twentieth Century
Reading Red: Feminism in Native America (Editor)
Norton Anthology of Native America Literatures (Coeditor)
References
Jump up ^ "Betty Louise Bell on Native American Authors". Retrieved 2012-11-09.
Jump up ^ Bataille, Gretchen M. and Laurie Lisa, Ed. Native American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland, 1993*
MANIK
Kin 187: Blue Overtone Hand
I empower in order to know
Commanding healing
i seal the store of accomplishment
With the overtone tone of radiance
I am guided by the power of vision.
The Noogenesis, the Great Cosmic Shift, will be realized in a short time, and is dependent on the personal discovery of those capable of becoming cosmically aligned.*
*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.
The Sacred Tzolk'in
Visshudha Chakra (Alpha Plasma)
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