Great Plains Studies, Center for
Date of this Version
Winter 2011
Document Type
Article
Citation
Great Plains Quarterly 31:1 (Winter 2011).
Abstract
Metis scholar and activist Jo-Ann Episkenew examines the potential of literature to assist Canadian Indigenous communities in healing from the impacts of colonial government policy in this, her first scholarly monograph. While the discourse of "healing" has been a central feature of both bureaucratic and academic discussions of Indigenous issues since the 1990s, Episkenew's study appears at a time when the detrimental effects of policies like the residential school system are again gaining public attention as Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission gets underway. The book contains a useful overview of the government interventions that have impinged upon Indigenous peoples in Canada, such as the various incarnations of the Indian Act, the residential school system, and child welfare policies. Particular attention is given to the early administration of the prairies, where federally appointed farm instructors and highly suspect ideas about Indigenous societies and agriculture contributed to the severe challenges of the late nineteenth century. Episkenew also takes care to discuss the situation of Aboriginal groups whom the federal government has historically conspired to ignore: namely, the Metis and Non-Status Indians.
Comments
Copyright © 2011 Center for Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska.