Lost Ladies of Lit

Zitkála-Šá — "The School Days of an Indian Girl" with Jessi Haley and Erin Marie Lynch

Amy Helmes & Kim Askew Episode 122
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At the age of eight, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (later known by her pen name Zitkála-Šá) left her Yankton Dakota reservation to attend a missionary boarding school for Native Americans, a harsh and abusive experience about which she eventually wrote a series of articles published in The Atlantic Monthly. Jessi Haley, editorial director of Cita Press (which just published a free anthology of the author’s work) joins Yankton Dakota poet Erin Marie Lynch to discuss how Zitkála-Šá’s sense of cultural displacement impacted her life and literary output.


Mentioned in this episode:


Free edition of Planted in a Strange Earth: Selected Writings of Zitkála-Šá by Cita Press


Cita Press’s Substack newsletter on Zitkála-Šá


Removal Acts by Erin Marie Lynch


Zitkála-Šá


Ella Cara Deloria


Standing Rock Sioux Tribe


Yankton Dakota people


Sugarcane 2024 documentary


Air/Light magazine


Joe Biden’s October 2024 federal apology to Indigenous Americans


Carlisle Indian Industrial School


Richard Henry Pratt


Earlham College


The Sun Dance Opera


PBS’s “Unladylike” documentary episode on Zitkála-Šá


Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann 


“Oklahoma’s Poor Rich Indians: An Orgy of Graft and Exploitation of the Five Civilized Tribes, Legalized Robbery” by Zitkála-Šá


P. Jane Hafen’s full PBS interview on  Zitkála-Šá


Oral History Proj

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