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Dg nanouk okpik

Iñupiaq poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dg nanouk okpik
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dg nanouk okpik is an Inuk poet, specifically Iñupiaq. She received the American Book Award for her debut poetry collection, Corpse Whale (2012). In 2023 she was the recipient of a Windham Campbell Literature Prize for poetry[1] and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry.[2]

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Education

Born in Anchorage and raised by Irish/German adoptive parents, dg nanouk okpik has experienced some of the same hardships faced by other Indigenous women, including urban relocation, poverty, and disrupted access to her culture.[3][4] She attended the University of Southern Maine, earning an MFA. She was the recipient of the Truman Capote Literary Trust Scholarship. She is also an alumna of the Institute of American Indian Arts.[3]

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Career

okpik is a resident advisor at the Santa Fe Indian School.[3] She received the American Book Award for her debut poetry collection, Corpse Whale, which was published in 2012 and received praise from critics.[5] In a review for Studies in American Indian Literatures, Jasmine Johnston described Corpse Whale as "both surreal and mythic", praising okpik's imagery and code-switching between Inuit and English.[6] Diego Báez, writing for Booklist, called it a "captivating debut" and similarly commended okpik's use of Inuit vocabulary.[7]

okpik's writing has been widely anthologized. Among collections including her is The Poem Is You: 60 Contemporary American Poems and How to Read Them by literary critic and poet Stephanie Burt.[8] Her poetry was also part of the collection Sing: Poetry from the Indigenous Americas by Allison Adelle Hedge Coke.[9] as well as Effigies: An Anthology of New Indigenous Writing by the same author.[10]

She was awarded a Windham Campbell Prize for poetry in 2023.[11]

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Awards

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Personal life

She was raised in Anchorage, Alaska, and currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.[3]

Published works

Monographs

  • 2012: Corpse Whale (University of Arizona Press), ISBN 978-0816526741
  • 2022: Blood Snow (Wave Books), ISBN 978-1950268634

Anthologies

Selected poetry

  • 2009: "For-The-Spirits-Who-Have-Rounded-The-Bend IIVAQSAAT"
  • 2012: "Cell Block on Chena River"
  • 2012: "Warming"
  • 2012: "If Oil is Drilled in Bristol Bay"
  • 2012: "The Pact with Samna"
  • 2012: "Little Brother and the Serpent Samna"
  • 2018: "A Year Dot"
  • 2018: "Necklaced Whalebone"
  • 2018: "Found"
  • 2020: "When White Hawks Come"
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References

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