LC control no. | n 79081519 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
LC classification | PS3527.E35 |
Personal name heading | Neihardt, John G., 1881-1973 |
Variant(s) | Neihardt, John Gneisenau, 1881-1973 Flaming Rainbow, 1881-1973 Niihatʻŭ, J. G., 1881-1973 |
Located | Bancroft (Neb.) Branson (Mo.) |
Birth date | 1881-01-08 |
Death date | 1973-11-24 |
Place of birth | Sharpsburg (Ill.) |
Place of death | Columbia (Mo.) |
Profession or occupation | Writer Poet Professor Ethnographer Literary editor |
Found in | His A bundle of myrrh, 1907. Richards, J. T. Rawhide laureate, John G. Neihardt, 1983: CIP t.p. (John G. Neihardt) Black Elk. Black Elk speaks, 1988, c1932: CIP t.p. (John G. Neihardt (Flaming Rainbow)) data sheet (1881-1973) Ppaeatkin taeji ŭi kkum, 1981: cover (J.G. Niihatʻŭ) His The song of the Indian Wars, 1925: title page (John G. Neihardt) preface (signed: John G. Neihardt) WIkipedia, July 16, 2015 (hdg.: John Neihardt; John Gneisenau Neihardt (January 8, 1881--November 24, 1973); American writer and poet, an amateur historian and ethnographer; born in Sharpsburg, Illinois; family moved to Wayne, Nebraska when he was 10; graduate of Nebraska Normal College in Wayne; In 1901, Neihardt moved to Bancroft, Nebraska, on the edge of the Omaha Reservation; In 1920, Neihardt moved to Branson, Missouri; served as a professor of poetry at the University of Nebraska, and a literary editor in St. Louis, Missouri; his most well-known work is Black Elk Speaks (1932); Black Elk gave him a Sioux name meaning "Flaming Rainbow"; Neihardt died in 1973 in Columbia, Missouri) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Neihardt> |
Associated language | eng |
Invalid LCCN | n 50031718 |