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Josephine Binford Editor

Esther Martinez (aka P’oe Tsáwá, Blue Water, and Estefanita Martinez), a renowned storyteller from San Juan Pueblo, is a traditional storyteller for the National Park Service and for numerous public and private schools and professional organizations, as well as a Tewa language consultant to linguists and many academic institutions. Among her many recognitions are a Living Treasure Award from the State of New Mexico, the Indian Education Award for Teacher of the Year from the National Council of American Indians (1997), and the New Mexico Arts Commission Governor’s Award for Excellence and Achievement in the Arts.
 
Sue-Ellen Jacobs, who developed, shaped, and inspired this project, is a professor of womens studies at the University of Washington, the editor of Beatrice Medicine’s Learning to Be an Anthropologist and Remaining Native, and a coeditor of Two-Spirit People: Native American Gender Identity, Sexuality, and Spirituality.Josephine Binford, Esther Martinez’s daughter, is a public health nurse for the Indian Health Service with specialization in gerontology, giving her the honored position of caring for the Pueblo elders in Northern New Mexico, as wellas care of her Mother. M. Eileen Carroll is the founder of Storytellers International. Henrietta M. Smith is professor emerita with the School of Library and Information Science at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Tilar Mazzeo is an assistant professor of English at the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh. Tessie Naranjo, an enrolled member of Santa Clara Pueblo, is a sociologist and the vice president of the board of the Indigenous Languages Institute.