Louis Oliver (poet)

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Native name
Wotkoce[1]
Born(1904-04-09)April 9, 1904
DiedMay 10, 1991(1991-05-10) (aged 87)
Occupationwriter
Louis Oliver
Louis Oliver
Louis Oliver
Native name
Wotkoce[1]
Born(1904-04-09)April 9, 1904
DiedMay 10, 1991(1991-05-10) (aged 87)
Occupationwriter
LanguageEnglish, Muscogee
NationalityMuscogee Nation, American
Alma materBacone College
Notable awardsAlexander Posey Literary Award (1987)[1]

Louis Oliver (April 9, 1904 – May 10, 1991), also known as Little Coon or Wotkoce Okisce, was a citizen of the Muscogee Nation[1] and an American poet.[2][3] His poetry combines themes of Muscogee oral history with an examination of intellectualism in the context of the Muscogee Nation.[4]

Oliver was born on April 9, 1904, in Coweta, Indian Territory, which became part of Oklahoma in 1907. His parents died when he was young and he was raised by relatives in Okfuskee.[4] He studied at the Euchee Indian School and then Bacone College,[5] where he graduated in 1926. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he earned a diploma in 1926, an accomplishment that alienated some other Muscogee who accused him of "capitulating to the White Man's ways".[4]

Career

Maskoke Okisce (Creek Fable) on display in Leiden

While living among the Cherokee in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, in the early 1980s, Oliver joined a writing group that included several published authors, and moved away from the more classical European forms of poetry that he had been practicing until then.[5] He became the author of two books of poetry, Caught in a willow net: poems and stories (Greenfield Review Press, 1983) and Chasers of the Sun: Creek Indian thoughts (Greenfield Review Press, 1990).

One of his poems, about and in the form of a tornado, is included in the Wall poems in Leiden outdoor poetry project in Leiden, Netherlands.[6]

Honors

Death

References

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