In a tribute published upon his death,Joy Harjo (Mvskoke), 23rdPoet Laureate of the United States, noted that inHouse Made of Dawn, "Momaday found a way to move eloquently between oral storytelling forms and the written English novel form. The trajectory of the book moves from sunrise to sunrise, making a circle–a story structure recognizable in Indigenousoral history, yet following traditional American literary shape and expectations of a novel. The title is drawn directly from the traditional literature of the Diné people."[2]
Navarre Scotte Momaday, also written Novarro Scotte Mammedaty.[1][4] was born on February 27, 1934, in Lawton, Oklahoma.[5] He was delivered in the Kiowa and Comanche Indian Hospital, registered as havingseven-eighths Indian blood.[6] N. Scott Momaday's mother was Mayme 'Natachee' Scott Momaday (1913–1996), who Momaday stated was to be of English, Irish, French, and "some degree ofCherokee" descent,[7][8][9] born inFairview, Kentucky,[10] while his father was Alfred Morris Momaday, who was a full-bloodedKiowa.[11] His mother was a writer and his father a painter.[5] His grandfather John spelled the name Mammeday. In addition, the etymology of Momaday appears in John Peabody Harringon’sVocabulary of the Kiowa language, Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1928, as an unambiguous entry on page 121:mῌm-dei ‘up, upper; roof’. Harrington used a small-capital Greek etaH to represent the sound of “ǎ” inland /lænd/ and iotacized it (subscript iota, as a right-turning curl) to represent that nasalized vowel: [æ˜], thus [mæ˜m-dei], corresponding to “original” Mammeday and then Momaday.[12]
As an infant, Momaday was taken toDevils Tower and given the Kiowa name Tsoai-talee (Rock-Tree Boy).[13] In 1935, when N. Scott Momaday was one year old, his family moved to Arizona, where both his father and mother became teachers ona reservation.[clarification needed][5] In 1946, a 12-year-old Momaday moved toJemez Pueblo, New Mexico, living there with his parents until his senior year of high school.[6] Growing up in Arizona and New Mexico allowed Momaday to experience not only his father's Kiowa traditions but also those of other Southwest Native Americans including theNavajo,Apache, andPueblo traditions.[5]
To challenge himself, Momaday spent his final year of high school at theAugusta Military Academy in Virginia. He then enrolled at theUniversity of Virginia, where he metWilliam Faulkner andJohn Dos Passos.[14] Momaday subsequently transferred to the University of New Mexico, graduating in 1958 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English.[6] He continued his education at Stanford University where, in 1963, he earned a Ph.D. in English Literature.[6]
In a 2022 interview for thePBS showAmerican Masters, the director Jeff Palmer asked Momaday what knowledge would he want to pass on to younger generations. He responded: "I would want them to be mindful of that fact that at the beginning of the 20th Century say, I was born in a house inOklahoma, which had no electricity, no plumbing. We would be considered at the very bottom of the scale in terms of land and poverty. I came from that by the virtue of good luck and perseverance into a kind of existence that has been visible.
"I have achieved a kind of reputation and I think the legacy has to do with what is possible. It is possible to overcome great disadvantage. You know the Indian people, at the turn of the 20th Century, were terribly defeated. They had a sense of defeat. They had been conquered and put down and held down. And it was terribly hard for them to come out of that, to survive that kind of poverty of the morale, let’s say. But they have done it to a large extent. There’s still a ways to go. I want my legacy to be the example of how one can survive against those odds. I think it gets easier all the time..."[15]
After receiving his Ph.D. in 1963 from Stanford University, Momaday's first book publication wasThe Complete Poems ofFrederick Goddard Tuckerman, which he edited and wrote the "Introduction".[16] Momaday's doctoral dissertation was on Tuckerman.[1]
House Made of Dawn was the first novel of theNative American Renaissance, a term coined by literary critic Kenneth Lincoln in theNative American Renaissance. The novel is a seminal work of contemporary Native American literature.[17][18] His follow-up workThe Way to Rainy Mountain blended folklore with memoir.[19]
As other Indigenous American writers began to gain recognition, Momaday turned to poetry, releasing a small collection calledAngle of Geese. Writing forThe Southern Review, John Finlay described it as Momaday's best work, and that it should "earn him a permanent place in our literature."[20]The Gourd Dancer, which was finished while Momaday taught in the USSR, was released in 1976.[13]
According to Matthias Schubnell, Momaday's memoirThe Names "is best described as an extension ofThe Way to Rainy Mountain: while the earlier work conveys the mythic and historical precedents to Momaday's personal experiences in story fragments within an associative structure,The Names is a chronological account of his childhood and adolescence."[21]
In 1963, Momaday began teaching at the University of California–Santa Barbara as an assistant professor of English. From 1966 to 1967, he focused primarily on literary research, leading him to pursue theGuggenheim Fellowship atHarvard University.[23] Two years later, in 1969, Momaday was named professor of English at the University of California-Berkeley. Momaday taught creative writing, and produced a new curriculum based on American Indian literature and mythology.[23] In 1981, he settled at the University of Arizona in Tucson, where he retired in 2005.[24]
Momaday was a visiting professor at theUniversity of New Mexico during the 2014–15 academic year to teach in the Creative Writing and American Literary Studies Programs in the Department of English. Specializing in poetry and the Native oral tradition, he taught The Native American Oral Tradition.[26]
Momaday received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago on May 9, 2010.[38]
In 2018, Momaday won a Lifetime Achievement Award[39] from the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards,[40] the only juried prize to honor the best books addressing racism and questions of equity and diversity. The same year, Momaday became one of the inductees in the first induction ceremony held by the National Native American Hall of Fame.[41]
In 2019, Momaday was awarded the Ken Burns American Heritage Prize.[42]
In 2019 Momaday received the Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize.[43]
In 2007, Momaday returned to live in Oklahoma for the first time since his childhood. Though initially he moved back to Oklahoma for his wife's cancer treatment, Momaday's relocation coincided with the state's centennial, andGovernor Brad Henry appointed him as the 16thOklahoma Poet Laureate, succeedingNimrod International Journal editorFrancine Leffler Ringold. Momaday held the position for two years.[45]
Momaday was the founder of the Rainy Mountain Foundation[46] and Buffalo Trust, a nonprofit organization working to preserve Native American cultures.[47] Momaday, a known watercolor painter, designed and illustrated the book,In the Bear's House.[48]
^Steed, Patricia L."Momaday, Navarre Scott (1934–2024)".The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society. RetrievedNovember 24, 2024.
^Jim Charles,Reading, Learning, Teaching N. Scott Momaday (Peter Lang, 2007), p. 29.
^See Kay Bonetti, "N. Scott Momaday: An Interview," inConversations with N. Scott Momaday, edited by Matthias Schubnell (University Press of Mississippi, 1997), p. 133.
^Nagin, Emily (Winter 2016). "Irredeemable Stories? Native American Children's Literature and the Radical Potential of Commercial Literary Forms".Studies in American Indian Literatures.28 (4):1–24.doi:10.5250/studamerindilite.28.4.0001.JSTOR10.5250/studamerindilite.28.4.0001.S2CID164607101.Momaday's mother was born in 1913 in Fairview, Kentucky, and her given name was Mayme Natachee Scott ...
^Velie, Alan R. (Ed.); Lee, A. Robert (Ed.) (2014).The Native American Renaissance: Literary Imagination and Achievement. Norman, OK: Oklahoma University Press. p. 3.
^"2005 Summit Highlights Photo". 2005.Archived from the original on January 19, 2021. RetrievedDecember 4, 2020.Academy members: Pulitzer Prize-winning author N. Scott Momaday and Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize recipient.
^"Suzan-Lori Parks Biography Photo". 2007.Archived from the original on January 29, 2024. RetrievedDecember 4, 2020.Suzan-Lori Parks receives the American Academy of Achievement's Golden Plate Award from the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and novelist N. Scott Momaday at the 2007 International Achievement Summit in Washington, D.C.