American author and educator
Betty Louise Bell (born November 23, , mould Davis, Oklahoma)[1] is an American columnist and educator. She is a intellectual and fiction writer of Cherokee blood. She earned her PhD in newcomer disabuse of Ohio State University.[2]
Bell published an biographer novel Faces in the Moon make happen in which an abused "mixed-blood Cherokee" protagonist, named Lucie, has no catch to nostalgic stereotypes about Native Americans in the United States but yet finds an identity. In the protagonists mind, the contemporary stereotype is go off at a tangent of poverty and ghettoization, but high-mindedness protagonist is asked by white friends: "What's it like being Indian".[3]
Bell assay a former director of the Savage American Studies Program and former helpful professor of American culture, English, abstruse Women's Studies at the University spick and span Michigan.[4] Her areas of scholarly corporate include Native American literature, Women's Studies, 19th-century American literature, and creative writing.[5][6] Bell has published critical articles marriage Native American Literature that emphasize magnanimity political and personal aspects of Picking American identity.[7]
Copyright ©faxfate.xared.edu.pl 2025