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My Times: An Autobiography: 2006 Aribam Syam Sharma: Living Shadows: Phoolan Devi: The Bandit Queen of India: 2008 L. K. Advani: My Country My Life: 2009 V. R. Krishna Iyer: Wandering in Many Worlds: 2011 Abhinav Bindra: A Shot at History: I K Gujral: Matters of Discretion: 2012 Arjun Singh: A Grain of Sand in the Hourglass of Time: Hay House ...
In 1920, Radin published "The Autobiography of an American Indian" as an article in the University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology, which was a substantially different text covering the same events, once again identifying its subject only as S.B.
Phillip Round, a Professor of English and Native American and Indigenous Studies, writes about the significance of Cuero's autobiography: "the Autobiography of Delfina Cuero is particularly useful to American Indian literary studies for the way it enriches our understanding of narrated Indian texts by introducing borderlands theory and the ...
She graduated from the Institute of American Indian Arts in 2018. [4] LaPointe is an enrolled member in the Nooksack Tribe . [ 5 ] Her great grandmother Vi taqʷšəblu Hilbert was a revered elder of the Upper Skagit Tribe, [ 6 ] who has served as an inspiration for her writing. [ 7 ]
Ved Parkash Mehta (21 March 1934 – 9 January 2021) was an Indian-born writer who lived and worked mainly in the United States. Blind from an early age, Mehta is best known for an autobiography published in installments from 1972 to 2004. He wrote for The New Yorker for many years.
The Journey Home: Autobiography of an American Swami is a 2008 auto-biographical account [1] of a young nineteen-year-old boy, Richard Slavin's journey from the suburbs of Chicago to the caves of the Himalayas and through this, his transformation [2] to being Radhanath Swami, one of India's most respected spiritual leaders and an ISKCON figure. [3]
Through her autobiography, Mountain Wolf Woman shared 75 years of Native American life, which included her marriage, the displacement of her family by the U.S. government, and the role of women in native cultures, in contrast to her brother’s book from 35 years earlier, making it a significant contribution. [3] [4]
Baba Rampuri, born William A. Gans (July 14, 1950) is an American born Sadhu.He claims to be the first westerner to become a Naga Sadhu, having been initiated in 1970.He is the author of the 2010 Destiny Books published book Autobiography of a Sadhu: A Journey into Mystic India, originally published in 2005 by Harmony/Bell Tower as Baba: Autobiography of a Blue-Eyed Yogi, and now released by ...