Anne Pellowski

Anna Rose Pellowski, Polish American educator and author, was born June 28, 1933 on the family farm in the Trempealeau County town of Arcadia, Wisconsin, daughter of Alexander and Anna (Dorawa) Pellowski, both of whom were descended from Kashubian immigrants. She was educated at Sacred Heart School, Pine Creek. WI) Cotter High School, and College of Saint Teresa in Winona, where she received her Bachelor of Arts in 1955. Upon graduation from Saint Teresa's, she studied at Munich University and the International Youth Library also in Munich on a Fulbright Program grant. In 1959 she earned a Master of Arts in Library Science, with honors, from Columbia University.

As educator

From 1966 to 1981 Anne Pellowski was employed by the U.S. Committee for UNICEF as the founding director of the Information Center on Children's Cultures.[1] After leaving this position she divided her time between writing (see below) and traveling throughout the world as a consultant to UNICEF, UNESCO, the World Council of Churches and many other international organizations.[2] Late in her eighth decade of life, Anne Pellowski continues to travel the world giving presentations on storytelling and empowering her listeners to tell their own stories in locales such as Ethiopia and Honduras.[3] She also volunteers her time to establish children's libraries in underprivileged nations; most recently she led a parish mission to Nicaragua for this purpose in February 2013.[4]

As author

Anne Pellowski is the author of numerous works on the theory and practice of storytelling, ranging from popular children's handbooks to scholarly academic articles. These include The World of Children's Literature (1968) The World of Storytelling (1977, revised edition 1991), The Story Vine: A Source Book of Unusual and Easy-to-Tell Stories from around the World (1984), The Family Storytelling Handbook: How to Use Stories, Anecdotes, Rhymes, Handkerchiefs, Paper, and Other Objects to Enrich Your Family Traditions (with Lynn Sweat, 1987) and The Storytelling Handbook: A Young People's Collection of Unusual Tales and Helpful Hints on How to Tell Them (1995).

Anne Pellowski is also the author of the "Latsch Valley Series" or "Polish American Girls Series:" five novels about life in the Kashubian Polish farm communities in Trempealeau County, Wisconsin. Each of the novels, Willow Wind Farm: Betsy's Story (1981), Stairstep Farm: Anna Rose's Story (1981), Winding Valley Farm: Annie's Story (1982), First Farm in the Valley: Anna's Story (1982), and Betsy's Up-and-Down Year (1998), treats one year in the life of a girl from four successive generations of the Pellowski family; a five-year-old Ms. Pellowski herself is the protagonist of Stairstep Farm. The novels were first and foremost intended as children's literature, and have been widely acclaimed for their success. However, the painstaking research and the abundant detail evident throughout all five novels marks them also as valuable historical-cultural documents in which, as Thomas J. Napierkalski observes, "Anne Pellowski has given Polish Americans a voice."[5] In addition, Pellowski's novels are noted for moving "beyond the confines of Polishness through interethnic marriage and, more important, by showing the younger generation's acquisition of a global perspective."[6]

Honors and Awards

References

  1. Robert W. Wells, "She's generating a world for children," The Milwaukee Journal, November 1, 1981
  2. "Creating Children's Books Around The World," The Learning Club (Winona, MN) Newsletter, January-February 2012
  3. "Anne Pellowski Returns to the Suffolk Cooperative Library System," aa0library: Thoughts about public library service on Long Island, January 27, 2012.
  4. "Mission Trip To Nicaragua With Winona Parish," Pax Christi Roman Catholic Church (Rochester, MN) Newsletter, July 1, 2012, p. 3.
  5. Thomas J. Napierkowski, "Anne Pellowski: A Voice for Polonia," Polish American Studies, Vol. 42, No. 2 (Autumn, 1985), pp. 89-97.
  6. Thomas S. Gladsky, Princes, Peasants, and Other Polish Selves: Ethnicity in American Literature, University of Massachusetts Press 2009, p. 261.
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