Marie Annharte Baker

Marie Annharte Baker (born 1942) is a Canadian Anishnabe (Ojibwa) poet and author, a cultural critic and activist, and a performance artist/contemporary storyteller.[2]

Through books, poetry, essays, interviews and performance Annharte articulates and critiques life from western Canada, with a special focus on women, urban, Indigenous, disabilities, academic, and poverty-centric (or "street") awareness and issues/foibles.

Life

Baker is from Little Saskatchewan First Nation and she was born in 1942 and grew up in Winnipeg, Manitoba.[3][4] Her father was Irish and her mother was Anishinabe. Marie Annharte Baker was considered to be part of a specific Anishinabe nation, the Obibwa. She would spend her holidays with her Anishinabe grandparents on a reservation in Manitoba.[5] She received what she considered an unsuccessful education at Brandon College, the University of British Columbia and the Simon Fraser University during the 1960s. Baker considers herself self-taught but she did return to education in the 1970s and this included a degree in English for the University of Winnipeg.[5] After graduating, Baker became involved in Native American activism, and taught Native Studies at multiple colleges in Minneapolis. Baker was one of the first people in North America to teach a class entirely on Native American women. After her teaching career, Baker returned to Winnipeg and began to work as a community family advocate.

She has been associated with (studied or taught at) the University of Manitoba, University of Winnipeg, Brandon University, Augsburg College, and University of Minnesota.[6] She has collaborated with or co-founded numerous groups of community-based writer activists, including Regina Aboriginal Writers Group and the Aboriginal Writers Collective of Manitoba. She was a founding member of the Canadian Indian Youth Council. Presently, she is organizing Nokomis Storyteller Theatre which features comic/clown and puppet performances.[2] She also volunteered for Vancouver weekly radio program, When Spirit Whispers, interviewing Native people while discussing the bounds of Native art forms.

Works

  • Being on the Moon, Vancouver: Polestar, 1990; Vancouver: Raincoast Books, 2000
  • Coyote Columbus Cafe, Winnipeg: Moonprint, 1994
  • Exercises in Lip Pointing, Vancouver: New Star Books, 2003
  • Indigena Awry, Vancouver: New Star Books, 2013
  • Too Tough, 1990
  • "Porkskin Panorama" Callalloo
  • "Medicine Lives"
  • "Borrowing Enemy Language"

Awards

  • 1990 National Film Board grant for Too Tough, her film celebrating the spiritual power of Native women to counter media victim image.
  • 1991 City of Regina's writing award for Albeit Aboriginal, a script reclaiming voices of Native women.

See also

References

  1. ^ I'POYI Panel 1 Marie AnnHarte Baker on YouTube, Calgary AB, 2009
  2. ^ a b Marie Annharte Baker, World Poetry Movement, Retrieved 14 April 2016
  3. ^ Ave, 1200 Atwater; Westmount; H3Z 1X4, Québec. "Marie Annharte Baker's Bio | Atwater Library and Computer Centre". Retrieved 2026-03-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Exercises in Lip Pointing by Annharte [Marie Baker]". www.publishersweekly.com. January 1, 2003. Retrieved 2026-03-08.
  5. ^ a b Pauline Butling; Susan Rudy (2005). Poets Talk: Conversations with Robert Kroetsch, Daphne Marlatt, Erin Mouré, Dionne Brand, Marie Annharte Baker, Jeff Derksen and Fred Wah. University of Alberta. pp. 89–91. ISBN 978-0-88864-431-2.
  6. ^ Room (2016-02-07). "Marie Annharte Baker: On Contemporary Storytelling, Interaction, and Community". ROOM Magazine. Retrieved 2026-03-08.

Further reading

  • Bataille, G. M., & Lisa, L. (2001). Marie Annharte Baker. Native American women: A biographical dictionary (pp. 27–28). ! Routledge, ! 2016.