After leaving her home at the Yankton Indian Reservation in South Dakota for the brutal regiment of boarding school in the east, Zitkála-Šá began developing the creative talents and political consciousness that would make her one of the most influential Native American women of the 20th Century. Her acclaimed stories and essays chronicled her struggles with identity and culture, and her translations brought Native American legends to a whole new audience. All the while, she maintained a subversive rebellious spirit that lit the flames of her later activism. So join us as we traverse prairies and plains with one who knows them best, Zitkála-Šá.
Fisher, Dexter. "Zitkala Sa: The evolution of a writer." American Indian Quarterly (1979): 229-238.
Susag, Dorothea M. “Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin): A Power(Full) Literary Voice.” Studies in American Indian Literatures, vol. 5, no. 4, (1993), pp. 3–24.
Terrance, Laura L. "Resisting colonial education: Zitkala-Sa and Native Feminist archival refusal." International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 24.5 (2011): 621-626.
Lukens, Margot. “The American Indian Story of Zitkala-Sa.” In Her Own Voice: Nineteenth-Century American Women Essayists. Ed. Sherry Lee Linkon. New York: Garland Publishing, (1997): 141-55.
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