Volume 46, numéro 2, 2021 Indigenous Literary Arts of Truth and Redress Arts littéraires autochtones de vérité et de réparation
Sommaire (13 articles)
Introduction
Articles
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Two Poems: Dancing with Creation & A Call for Love
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Called to Relationship and Reckoning through Story: Reflections on Reading, Teaching, and Writing about Residential School Literatures
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Indigenous Practices and Performances of Mobility as Resistance and Resurgence
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“Walking Backwards”: From Truth to Reconciliation
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Spin the Tale Inside: Opacity and Respectful Distance in Lee Maracle’s Celia’s Song
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Indigenous Refusal and Settler Complicity: Listening Positionality and Critical Reorientations in Helen Knott’s In My Own Moccasins: A Memoir of Resilience
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Anishinaabemowin in Indianland, The Marrow Thieves, and Crow Winter as a Key to Cultural and Political Resurgence
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Finding Indigenous Place in Colonial Space: Place-Based Redress in Leanne Simpson’s This Accident of Being Lost
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« Ce que tu dois savoir, Julie » : épistémologies et réparation dans Shuni (2019) de Naomi Fontaine
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“And Whom We Have Become”: Indigenous Women’s Narratives of Redress in Quebec
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Igniting Conciliation and Counting Coup as Redress: Red Reasoning in Tailfeathers, Johnson, and Lindberg
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“Forget What Disney Tells You”: Redressing Popular Culture in Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers’ A Red Girl’s Reasoning