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Joy Harjo

January 2005

Joy HarjoWriter and musician Joy Harjo (Muscogee Creek) has won many awards for her poetry, which is known for its vivid images and directness. The Oklahoma Center for the Book honored Harjo in 2003 with both the Arrell Gibson Lifetime Achievement Award and the Oklahoma Book Award for Poetry, in recognition of her anthology How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems. An accomplished screenwriter, she has recently written with Scott Garen the script for A Thousand Roads, directed by Chris Eyre for regular screening at NMAI. Harjo developed her early work on the spoken word performance circuit in the Southwest. She set her words to music with her first band, Joy Harjo and Poetic Justice, and continues to perform original music today, releasing the album Native Joy for Real in 2004. Harjo received an MFA at the University of Iowa and a BA from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. Harjo lives in Honolulu, where she was a 2003 Distinguished Visiting Writer at the University of Hawai'i.

"I first loved rhythm and music, listened to the radio and my mother singing. Begged dimes and quarters to play the jukebox in the bars and truck stops my mother worked in. Poetry was first in song lyrics for my ears, though I read everything I could, especially forbidden texts, and loved Emily Dickinson and the Song of Solomon.

I have to merge thinking with dreaming. All artists do. The creative process involves both, and then we rely on gifts from that bright energy that sets all births into motion."

Screened by NMAI

Image credit: Joy Harjo - courtesy of the filmmaker

Screened by NMAI

Chris Eyre

Scott Garen

Participant, 2003 Native American Film and Video Festival


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