Language English Ethnicity Haudenosaunee | Name Eric Gansworth Role Novelist | |
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Occupation Professor of English and Lowery Writer-in-Residence at Canisius College Nationality United States and Haudenosaunee (Onondaga Nation) Genre Native American literature Subject Contemporary Haudenosaunee culture Education State University of New York College at Buffalo Books If I Ever Get Out of Here, Mending skins, A half‑life of cardio‑pu, Smoke dancing, Extra Indians |
Eric gansworth 2013 national book festival
Eric Gansworth is a Haudenosaunee novelist, poet and visual artist.
Contents
- Eric gansworth 2013 national book festival
- Eric gansworth nccc s 2010 distinguished alumnus
- Biography
- Novelist
- Visual arts
- References

Eric gansworth nccc s 2010 distinguished alumnus
Biography

Gansworth was born in 1965 and is an enrolled citizen of the Onondaga Nation; however, he grew up in the Tuscarora Nation as a descendant of one of two Onondaga women present among the Tuscarora at the foundation of the nation in the 18th century. Gansworth originally qualified in electroencephalography, considered a profession useful to his nation; however, he went on to study literature and to continue a lifelong interest in painting and drawing.
Novelist
Gansworth has written five novels, including the award-winning Mending Skins (2005) and Extra Indians (2010). In all his novels, illustrations form an integral part of the reading experience. His most recent novel, If I Ever Get out of Here is his first Young Adult novel, and deals with the 1975 friendship between two boys, one a resident of the Tuscarora Nation, the other living on the nearby Air Force base. In a starred review, Booklist stated that the book succeeded in "sidestepping stereotypes to offer two genuine characters navigating the unlikely intersection of two fully realized worlds."
Gansworth states that growing up he was struck by an absence of images of contemporary Native American life to use as drawing practice, noting that "I could offer images from the Planet of the Apes, The Towering Inferno, Spiderman and, of course, Batman, but I had a critical shortage of Indian drawings." Subsequently, in his literary studies he was again critical of the lack of American Indian authored texts offered on his courses. Much of his current literary and artistic drive can be seen as attempting to overcome this lack of attention. Gansworth himself sees the two themes most important to his work as being "the ways history informs the present" and also a strong interest in entertainment culture.
Critic Susan Bernardin has analyzed Gansworth's writing via Gerald Vizenor's concept of survivance, suggesting that his novel Mending Skins "suggests how Native peoples reimagine patterns of loss into new stories, especially through humored stories of survivance."
Visual arts
Gansworth's art career began with "trying to hawk my drawings to the folks who lived down the road"; his professional career, however, began with the exhibition Nickel Eclipse: Iroquois Moon in 1999. Since then, he has exhibited regularly. One of his images was chosen for the cover of Sherman Alexie's novel, First Indian on the Moon.