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Jamake Highwater

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Native name
  
Jay Marks

Nationality
  
United States

Occupation
  
Writer

Role
  
Writer

Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Ethnicity
  
Armenian

Name
  
Jamake Highwater

Jamake Highwater wwwazquotescompublicpicturesauthors42f942f
Full Name
  
Gregory J. Markopoulos

Died
  
June 3, 2001, Los Angeles, California, United States

Awards
  
John Newbery Medal, Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, Jane Addams Children's Book Award

Books
  
Anpao: An American Indian Od, The Primal Mind, The Sun - He Dies: A Novel Ab, Dance: Rituals of Experience, The Mythology of Transg

Barbaralee Diamonstein and... Jamake Highwater [Jackie Marks], 1978


Brian Wilson on Stack-O-Tracks : I Don't Know If It'll Sell Very Much • (The Beach Boys 1968)


Jamake Highwater, also known as Jay Marks and Gregory J. Markopoulos (ca. 1942–June 3, 2001) was an American writer and journalist. He was the author of over 30 fiction and non-fiction books of music, art, poetry and history, including the children's novel Anpao: An American Indian Odyssey (1973), which received a Newbery Honor, and The Primal Mind: Vision and Reality in Indian America (1981) which was also made into a documentary. Highwater assumed a false American Indian identity in the 1960s, which had been exposed by the mid 1980s, although confusion about his life remains widespread.

Contents

Career

Highwater was the author of over 30 fiction and non-fiction books of music, art, poetry and history, including Anpao: An American Indian Odyssey (1973), The Sun, He Dies: A Novel About the End of the Aztec World (1980), and The Primal Mind: Vision and Reality in Indian America (1981). He also wrote for the New Grove Dictionary of American Music and the Los Angeles Free Press.

Highwater made several documentaries for PBS television.

Highwater was a runner-up for the 1978 Newbery Medal for Anpao.

In 1993 Highwater was a consultant on the TV series Star Trek: Voyager for the character Chakotay, who was broadly defined within the show as being Native American.

False ancestry claims

Highwater was born either Jay Marks or Gregory J. Markopoulos, an Armenian adopted by a Greek family. He was going by the name J. Marks at the time he was writing professionally in the early 1960s. In 1969 he started going by Jamake Highwater, and began claiming he was of American Indian ancestry, but gave conflicting accounts of the details.

Highwater's false claims to American Indian ancestry were documented in a 1984 Akwesasne Notes article by Hank Adams. Between 1982 and 1983 Highwater and his Primal Mind Foundation received over $825,000 dollars in federal grant money from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). His claims of Native ancestry were heavily disputed by actual American Indian activists, who argued his works were inauthentic and stereotypical and that the grant money was received illegally through a misrepresentation of material fact. Following an expose by Jack Anderson in the Washington Post, Highwater stopped claiming Indian heritage in promotional literature, although confusion about his heritage remained widespread.

Personal life

Highwater claimed not to know the year or place of his birth, but a Los Angeles Times obituary gave February 14, 1942 in Montana as one possibility. Other sources say he may have been born as early as the 1920s.

Highwater graduated from Hollywood High School, and attended college in Los Angeles. He lived in San Francisco for several years before moving to New York City around the same time he began calling himself Jamake Highwater.

He died of a heart attack at home in Los Angeles on June 3, 2001.

References

Jamake Highwater Wikipedia


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