James Welch (writer)


James Phillip Welch Jr., who grew up within the Blackfeet and A'aninin cultures of his parents, was a Native American novelist and poet, considered a founding author of the Native American Renaissance. His novel Fools Crow received several national literary awards, and his debut novel Winter in the Blood was adapted as a film by the same name, released in 2013.
In 1997 Welch received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers' Circle of the Americas.

Early life

James Welch was born in Browning, Montana on November 18, 1940. His father, James Phillip Welch Sr., a welder and rancher, was a member of the Blackfeet tribe and his mother, Rosella Marie Welch, a stenographer for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, was a member of the Gros Ventre. Both also had Irish ancestry but had grown up within Native American cultures. As a child, Welch attended schools on the Blackfeet and Fort Belknap reservations.
Because Welch was raised in an American Indian setting, the traditions and religion, specifically from the Blackfoot history, were the sources of his writing.

Education

In 1958, James Welch graduated from Washburn High School in Minneapolis. Post high school he worked as a firefighter for the U.S Forest Service, as a laborer and as an Upward Bound counselor. Eventually, Welch began a master of fine arts degree program at the University of Montana. It was there that he studied under the poet Richard Hugo, who told him that "his poetry needed roots, so he should write what he knew about. Write about Indians and Indian culture. Write about home" he said. He graduated in 1965 with a B.A. in liberal arts. Shortly after, Welch published his first poem in the "Montana poet" issue of Visions International in 1967. He also briefly attended Northern Montana College.

Career

He began his writing career publishing poetry and fiction. His novels established his place in the Native American Renaissance literary movement. Welch also taught at the university. He also received Honorary Doctorates from Rocky Mountain College and the University of Montana.
James Welch was an internationally acclaimed writer and had a faithful following in Europe. In 1995, Welch was given the Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Cultural Ministry. His novels were translated into nine foreign languages.
Welch's work was collected in Nothing but the Truth, an Anthology of Native American Literature. He is one of the early authors of what became called the Native American literary renaissance. He wanted to explore Native American life in his writing, both its good and bad aspects as people struggled with modern United States culture.
He based his rich landscape imagery on lands he knew in Montana. In his writing, the landscape was featured as a character. Welch had a unique style of writing from "'an outside observer with an insider's understanding' of Native American experience." Although he was raised on the reservation as a young boy, he lived most of his life off of it. He said that he felt a lack of close connection with the tribal community.
In 1968, James Welch married Lois Monk, a comparative literature professor at the University of Montana. She was head of the English Department there until her retirement. During her sabbaticals, they traveled internationally and lived in France, Greece, Italy, and Mexico. Welch often used these periods to help finish his novels, taking advantage of the relative isolation.
The couple donated regularly to the Piegan Institute's language immersion program, dedicated to restoring use of the native Blackfeet language.
Welch briefly attended Northern Montana College. He taught English and writing at the University of Washington and at Cornell University.
In her introduction to the 2007 reprint of Winter in the Blood, fellow writer Louise Erdrich said: "It is a central and inspiring text to a generation of western regional and Native American writers, including me." This novel was adapted as a film by the same name, released in 2012 and produced by Sherman Alexie.
In addition to his novels, Welch co-wrote with Paul Stekler the screenplay for Last Stand at Little Bighorn, the Emmy Award-winning documentary that was part of the American Experience, shown on PBS. Together they also wrote the history, Killing Custer: The Battle of Little Bighorn and the Fate of the Plains Indians.
Welch served on the Board of Directors of the D'Arcy McNickle Center of the Newberry Library in Chicago.
In addition to his literary work, Welch served as the Vice Chairman of the Montana Board of Pardons and Parole for ten years.

Death

James Welch died at the age of sixty-two in Missoula, Montana, on Monday, August 4, 2003. His death was preceded by a struggle with lung cancer.

Poetry and Novels

When he began his writing, Indian authors were unknown. "Kind of growing up around the reservations, I just kept my eyes open and my ears open, listened to a lot of stories. You might say my senses were really brought alive by that culture. I learned more about it than I knew I did. It was only after I began writing about it that I realize that I had learned. I knew quite a bit, in certain ways, about the Blackfeet and Gros Ventre ways of life."
His poems are alert, sorrowful, and true. His only collection of poetry, Riding the Earthboy 40, is deeply ingrained in the steppe of Montana. Shortened but expressive, the poems arrive in an instant of thought or experience that handles seasons, animals, and the stories that reservation Native Americans tell.
After writing poetry "exclusively for seven or eight years," Welch turned his attention towards fiction and his first novel, Winter in the Blood, a severe narrative about a nameless character from northern Montana who drank too much and cared too little. Winter in the Blood attracted immediate critical interest, in result to a seminar on that novel in 1977 at the Modern Language Association Convention happened. The notes from the session were released a year after the seminar in a special symposium issue of American Indian Quarterly, edited by Peter G Beidler. Welch's promise was understood in his first novel, Winter in the Blood, the story of an Indian American youth living on a reservation in Montana. The narrator that is without a name is, just like Welch, a mix of Blackfoot and Gros Ventre Indian. He calls himself a "servant to a memory of death." Both his father and brother are dead; in the midst of the novel, his deeply loved grandmother also dies. In Winter in the Blood, Welch presents a nameless protagonist who feels displaced, caught between two worlds, helpless in a world of stalking white men, but unaccepted by Indians—a stranger to both.
Similarly, in The Death of Jim Loney, Welch portrays a half-blood who is unable to find a place in either world
Unlike Welch's first two novels, Fools Crow is a bygone novel set in the 1870s which depicts Fools Crow, strive to live a classic Blackfoot life in the background of the white settlement and the U.S. government's war against Plains Indians.
Welch writes part of his own family's history into his third novel, Fools Crow.
Critics frequently write about how to describe James Welch. Whether to describe him as a Native American storyteller or an American author. The truth is that Welch's work exceeds such categorization; he joins Native American traditions and concepts with Western literary conventions to form compelling narratives. Much of Welch's fiction pivots on the interaction between the American Indian and white America.

Adaptations

On November 18, 2016, Google celebrated his 76th birthday with a Google Doodle.

Publications

Novels