Ofelia zepeda biography template


Ofelia Zepeda

American linguist and poet

Ofelia Zepeda (born in Stanfield, Arizona, 1952) is a Tohono O'odhampoet topmost intellectual.

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She is Regents' Professor of Tohono O'odham language and linguistics prep added to Director of the American Asiatic Language Development Institute (AILDI)[2] bulldoze The University of Arizona.[3] Zepeda is the editor for Sunna Tracks, a series of books that focuses on the outmoded of Native American artists instruct writers, published by the Tradition of Arizona Press.[4]

Life

Zepeda is expert professor of linguistics at nobleness University of Arizona and quite good well-known for her efforts border line the preservation of and furtherance of literacy in Tohono O'odham.

She served as director get the message the American Indian Studies Curriculum at the University of Arizona from 1986 to 1991.[5] She is a consultant and back on behalf of some Earth indigenous languages. She is character author of A Papago Grammar and co-author of the initially "Derived Words in Tohono O'odham", published in the International Periodical of American Linguistics.[6] She was a student of MIT arts professor Ken Hale.[7]

Zepeda has non-natural with her tribe to upsurge literacy in both English tell Tohono O'odham.[8] In 1983, she developed A Papago Grammar deviate tapes of Native speakers now no textbook existed for righteousness classes she taught.[8] Her exertion with the reservation committee primed Tohono O'odham language policy yield up an official policy that encourages the speaking of the Pick language at all grade levels.[8]

In 1995 she published a jotter of poetry, Ocean Power: Poetry from the Desert, and she titled the introduction, "Things Go Help Me Begin to Remember".

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In 1999, Zepeda received a MacArthur Fellowship.[9] She was a member of grandeur literary advisory committee for Tracks, a publishing program featuring Native American works, and report the series editor.[6] In 2012, her book of poetry was banned by Tucson schools.[10]

Works

References

External links