Nasdijj
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nasdijj an entity of type: Thing
Timothy Patrick Barrus (* 1950 in Lansing, Michigan) alias Nasdijj oder auch Yinishye Nasdijj, ist ein amerikanischer Schriftsteller. Er gewann für seinen angeblich autobiographischen Roman The Boy and the Dog Are Sleeping den "PEN American Center's Beyond Margins award" und ist bekannt für den Skandal um seine angeblich autobiographischen Werke.
rdf:langString
Timothy Patrick Barrus, also known as Tim Barrus (born 1950), is an American author and social worker who is best known for having published three "memoirs" between 2000 and 2004 under the pseudonym Nasdijj, by which he presented himself as a Navajo. The books were critically acclaimed, and Nasdijj received several literary awards and recognition from major institutions. His "memoirs" dealt in part with issues of two adopted children who suffered from severe problems.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Timothy Patrick Barrus
rdf:langString
Nasdijj
xsd:integer
21697763
xsd:integer
1108453020
rdf:langString
Timothy Patrick Barrus (* 1950 in Lansing, Michigan) alias Nasdijj oder auch Yinishye Nasdijj, ist ein amerikanischer Schriftsteller. Er gewann für seinen angeblich autobiographischen Roman The Boy and the Dog Are Sleeping den "PEN American Center's Beyond Margins award" und ist bekannt für den Skandal um seine angeblich autobiographischen Werke.
rdf:langString
Timothy Patrick Barrus, also known as Tim Barrus (born 1950), is an American author and social worker who is best known for having published three "memoirs" between 2000 and 2004 under the pseudonym Nasdijj, by which he presented himself as a Navajo. The books were critically acclaimed, and Nasdijj received several literary awards and recognition from major institutions. His "memoirs" dealt in part with issues of two adopted children who suffered from severe problems. In 2006, journalists revealed that Barrus had published the Nasdijj books under a fictional identity, and that the events depicted in all three were largely fiction. In the United States publishing world, Barrus' work is cited as an example of memoirs released under misleading pretenses. The deception was revealed in the same period as two other literary scandals. Controversy arose over the portrayal of fictional accounts as memoirs, as well as authors presenting false personas. Native Americans strongly criticized Barrus for appropriating the historic suffering of their people. They criticized the publishing world for so readily accepting impostors. In the 1980s and 1990s, Barrus had published numerous articles and several novels. He is credited by Jack Fritscher with coining the term "Leather Lit."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
23062