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Blue Marrow

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  • 109pages
  • 4 heures de lecture

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In this intricate dance of language and voice, a contemporary narrator – a Cree woman – draws into the telling of her own story the poignant history of her ancestors and the European newcomers they tragically welcomed into their lives.Grandmothers both actual and spiritual are prominent in this book of vivid characters, but many others, present and past, also appear – Native men and women, fur traders, Jesuits, Metis – all of whose stories interact in the drama of contact so brilliantly rendered here. “Louise Halfe has listened with reverent attention to the beautiful, strong voices of her Cree grandmothers and has allowed her own voice to dance with theirs. Exuberant, disturbing, and always deeply moving, the resulting poems roar, whisper and sing on the page. This book is a gift. It is a privilege to read it.” – Jane UrquhartFURTHER "Cree-ing Loud Into My Night": Louise Bernice Halfe's Blue Marrow, chapter in That's Raven holophrastic readings of contemporary Indigenous literatures by Marieke Neuhaus, CPRC Press, 2011

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Blue Marrow, Louise Bernice Halfe

Langue
Année de publication
2004
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(souple),
État du livre
Abîmé
Prix
4,71 €

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4,1
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Titre
Blue Marrow
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Coteau Books
Publié
2004
Format
souple
Pages
109
ISBN10
1550503049
ISBN13
9781550503043
Séries
Évaluation
4,05 sur 5
Description
In this intricate dance of language and voice, a contemporary narrator – a Cree woman – draws into the telling of her own story the poignant history of her ancestors and the European newcomers they tragically welcomed into their lives.Grandmothers both actual and spiritual are prominent in this book of vivid characters, but many others, present and past, also appear – Native men and women, fur traders, Jesuits, Metis – all of whose stories interact in the drama of contact so brilliantly rendered here. “Louise Halfe has listened with reverent attention to the beautiful, strong voices of her Cree grandmothers and has allowed her own voice to dance with theirs. Exuberant, disturbing, and always deeply moving, the resulting poems roar, whisper and sing on the page. This book is a gift. It is a privilege to read it.” – Jane UrquhartFURTHER "Cree-ing Loud Into My Night": Louise Bernice Halfe's Blue Marrow, chapter in That's Raven holophrastic readings of contemporary Indigenous literatures by Marieke Neuhaus, CPRC Press, 2011