Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#canadians
review
Lindy
post image
Pickpick

A collection of provocative essays by Sto:lo writer Lee Maracle. She doesn‘t pull punches and sometimes doesn‘t let facts get in the way of a good story (treatment of Chinese railway workers was grossly unjust, but there‘s no evidence that they were intentionally “killed instead of paid”). Maracle‘s take on marginalization (it depends on whose viewpoint is at the centre) and cultural appropriation were particularly interesting to me. #Indigenous

Lindy Maracle also perpetuates the myth that the tale about choosing to feed either a good or evil inner wolf is an Indigenous parable, when it actually originated from a white Christian evangelist (promoting the idea that we all contain sin). 3y
34 likes1 comment
quote
Lindy
post image

About halfway through the question and answer period an older man got up and bellowed out his question: “What are you going to do with us white guys? Drive us into the sea?”
I stared at him for awhile, thinking. […]
I said, “Thank you, that you think I could.”

blurb
Lindy
post image

A common audience question when Lee Maracle was giving author readings of her autobiographical Bobbi Lee Indian Rebel (published in 1990) was: “Who wrote it for you?”

TrishB 😞 3y
JazzFeathers 😳 3y
25 likes2 comments
quote
Lindy
post image

I asked Anne Cameron to stop stealing our stories. […] We did not own property & we gave away all our possessions during potlatches & potlatched as often as possible in our lifetime. All we owned was our stories, our songs & our names. This is our private clan family wealth. That was our private property.

SamAnne It is so infuriating. 3y
Lindy @SamAnne Indeed. The essay on cultural appropriation has been the most enlightening section of this book. 3y
28 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
jessjess

Hey #canadians does anyone know if I can mail a box of salt to my friend in the US?

LeahBergen Yes. My friend in the US sent me some special Japanese salt a little while ago. 😄 3y
jessjess @LeahBergen awesome, thank you so much for replying! 3y
11 likes3 comments
quote
shawnmooney
post image

This quote is from the Anishinaabe visual artist, filmmaker, and arts educator from Couchiching First Nation, Susan Blight (quoted in Lee Maracle‘s My Conversations With Canadians)

blurb
SqueakyChu
Itsuka | Joy Kogawa
post image

If you would have told me ahead of time that this novel would be #political in style, I certainly would not have read it now. However, I‘m rooting for the #Japanese #Canadians to get redress from the Canadian government. I know what happened in real life. I want to see how the action plays out in the rest of this novel, though. I‘m enjoying this read very much so far.

Melissa_J I read Obasan in high school but didn‘t realize there was a follow-up book. 6y
SqueakyChu @Melissa_J I didn‘t either. I found it in #TheWriteBookshop, a used book store owned by friends in St. Catherine‘s, #Ontario, during my visit to #Canada this past July. Itsuka was first published in 1992, but I‘d never heard of it before. (edited) 6y
15 likes2 comments
quote
SqueakyChu
Itsuka | Joy Kogawa
post image

This part of the book is about #Japanese #Canadians meeting to form a grass roots movement seeking redress for the measures taken by the Canadian government against Japanese Canadians after #WorldWarII. What particularly struck me was the label “radicals” applied to that grass roots movement seeking political clout. Sadly, this label is more widely used than solely in Canada‘s history.

blurb
kidamy
post image

"Maaail caaaaaall in the camp office!" Do any of my fellow #canadians remember Camp Caribou? They used to show it on YTV. I think only about 20 of us watched it when we were kids.

Aaaaanyway, yay for #bookmail! Also #junkmail. I'm so glamourous.

RaimeyGallant I watched it. :) 6y
lil_ms_spitfire I watched it too!!! 6y
16 likes2 comments