Walter R. Echo-Hawk, a hero of persistence and one of the most thoughtful and engaging of writers, takes on the 10 Worst Indian Law Cases Ever Decided in the book I am reading now. In the Courts of the Conqueror is written with such passion, wit, and candor that I literally can't put this book down. Even though it is heavy. True, it is painful to come to terms with the truth about what happens in the court system, particularly the Supreme Court. It is even more difficult to resist the flow of history and precedent and re-imaging a society based on justice. Patricia N. Limerick says in her introduction that this book is "an effective challenge to the fatalistic school of history." As such, while reading it you may be outraged and startled -- but the fact that it, and the writer, exist and fight on gives one hope. Plus, a fascinating read.
Nobody but Gerald Vizenor could write the words "cosmoprimitive casino series", or "mongrel driving schools", or describe the Band Box Diner and capture with such skewed energy what it means to be an Indian, an Anishinaabe, a human being on and off the White Earth Reservation here in Minnesota. Shrouds of White Earth is another wildly laudable work by our master ironist. A meditation on Native Art, Marc Chagall, George Morrison, The Gallery of Irony Dogs, and too much else to mention, this book is a small feast just in time for our favorite holiday -- whatever else happened on that fateful pilgrim afternoon I am thankful for Visioner, I mean Vizenor.
Can you take The 500 Years of Resistance Comic Book? It isn't funny, and the pictures are brutal, but that's the real history and Gord Hill tells it in quick takes. This book is packed with information and particularly valuable for the information on resistence in British Columbia at Ts'peten and at Aazhoodena.
Lyrical, moving, quiet and profound, the photographs taken by John Willis on Pine Ridge are that rare artifact -- art that increases the dignity and beauty of the subject while remaining honest. Mr. Willis spent many years visiting and revisiting the people and places he photographed. There is a clear, deep love in many of these images. Views from the Reservation is a large photography book, a collection, but you wouldn't put it on your coffee table. I carry my copy from place to place in the house because even the endpapers provoke meditation.
Comments
Lisa commented on 06-Jan-2011 03:18 PM
How strange is west. When I was ten I traveled west with my parents. West is so far, that you don't know whether you have arrived yet, once you are standing on the continenetal granite plate that seems to tilt to the north looking up. I suppose, that I was surprised to see herds of bison grazing from a distance when we went through the Dakotas. Summer 1970, the same year that "Riders on the Storm" was a hit and on the jukebox
We visited a reservation near the Black Hills--where we could tour dwellings, a village, look at art, and go to hear stories at night. If you were a kid--you just accepted it automatically. Everything was real and there you were in another world. I suppose that is the best time to find friends and think about differences. I found friends my age at the reservation general store. It is near the souvenir store--the store is divided.
I've only driven by Minneapolis/St. Paul once--in fact, I've only been through Minnesota once, during the summer in 1983. I was again a passenger, looking out the car window trying to see the Twin Cities. They looked miniature among the bluffs.
When I read the Lousie Erdrich books, I think about the different worlds that you find, once the characters' personalities make the reader think within a place. I can't imagine what this place is like. But I can't believe, turning the pages, that the stories keep going and the jokes keep you laughing--and the descriptions are so idiosynchratic to the events. Descriptions, that is, of what will be when. I get these books new; and the ones I don't have, I buy at store clearances--so, I have most of them! "The Master Butchers Singing Club" really becomes alive--it is a charged story--and "The Plague of Doves" is so well worked that you don't stop turning the pages until the story is near the final chapters! I read the e-mails I get from Birchbark Books--I look forward to seeing the news and events and to thinking about distance. Birchbark Books seems to have the most different ideas all kept together in its pictures.
Narrated by Louise Erdrich. Featuring Anton Treuer.
From Twin Cities Public Television.
The entire show can now be viewed online! http://www.tpt.org/?a=productions&id=3
A language is lost every fourteen days. One of those endangered tongues
is Minnesota’s own Ojibwe language. Now a new generation of Ojibwe
scholars and educators are racing against time to save the language.
Working with the remaining fluent-speaking Ojibwe elders, they hope to
pass the language on to the next generation. But can this language be
saved? Told by Ojibwe elders, scholars, writers, historians and
teachers, this tpt original production is filled with hope for the future. Find all airdates here.
Video preview:
About First Speakers: Restoring the Ojibwe Language
As recent as World War II, the Ojibwe language (referred to as
ojibwemowin in Ojibwe) was the language of everyday life for the
Anishinaabe and historically the language of the Great Lakes fur trade.
Now this indigenous language from where place names like Biwabik,
Sheboygan and Nemadji State Forest received their names is endangered.
The loss of land and political autonomy, combined with the damaging
effects of U.S government policies aimed at assimilating Native
Americans through government run boarding schools, have led to the steep
decline in the use of the language. Anton Treuer, historian, author
and professor of Ojibwe at Bemidji State University and featured in First Speakers: Restoring the Ojibwe Language,
estimates there are fewer than one thousand fluent Ojibwe speakers left
in the United States, mostly older and concentrated in small pockets in
northern Minnesota with fewer than one hundred speakers in Wisconsin,
Michigan and North Dakota combined.
Treuer is a part of a new generation of Ojibwe scholars and educators
who are now racing against time to save the language and the well-being
of their communities. Narrated by acclaimed Ojibwe writer, Louise
Erdrich, First Speakers tells their contemporary and
inspirational story. Working with the remaining fluent Ojibwe speaking
elders, the hope is to pass the language on to the next generation. As
told through Ojibwe elders, scholars, writers, historians and teachers,
this TPT original production reveals some of the current strategies and
challenges that are involved in trying to carry forward the language.
First Speakers takes viewers inside two Ojibwe immersion
schools: Niigaane Ojibwemowin Immersion School on the Leech Lake
Reservation near Bena, Minnesota and the Waadookodaading Ojibwe Language
Immersion Charter School on the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation near
Hayward, Wisconsin. In both programs, students are taught their academic
content from music to math entirely in the Ojibwe language and within
the values and traditional practices of the Ojibwe culture. Unique to
the schools is the collaboration between fluent speaking elders and the
teachers who have learned Ojibwe as their second language.
First Speakers: Restoring the Ojibwe Language provides a window into their innovative and intergenerational learning experience and the language they are determined to save.
Comments
Linda White commented on 03-Feb-2011 03:42 PM
This was a fascinating program! I was entranced. I had no idea that there was such a resurgence in the native languages. It is great to hear that there are those who are working to keep them alive.
Frankie commented on 01-Feb-2012 10:26 PM
I really appreicate free, succinct, reliable data like this.
Dear Friends and Book Lovers of the World and the Twin Cities in particular,
Thank you for your visits all through the summer. I didn't visit this blog because this is Minnesota. Who can bear to sit inside and write when this brief, golden, breathlessly hot, high pressure perfect, time is upon us? Niibin. The word for summer in Ojibwe. No blogging in Niibin. But now it is the first of September and things get serious. The school bell rings across from Birchbark Books and there is the periodic hysterical joy of recess sounds. There is a new garden placed beside the lunch room, right across from us. There are books to be read.
Keeping Heart on Pine Ridge by Vic Glover gave me heart one day, and indelible images. A book filled with everyday wisdom, gentle survival humor, and practical advice for those who wonder what it is like to be in Indian.
Let's Take the Long Way Home, a memoir of friendship by Gail Caldwell, is (disclosure) by my friend Gail Caldwell. For anyone who has ever lost another precious human, and that includes all of us, this is a map of grief and joy you'll hold to your heart. For anyone who has struggled with addiction or likes dogs, and that includes many of us, this is a map of terror and hope .
I've resisted reading Roberto Bolano's 2666 and now I cannot stop. It is like entering a strange and compelling dream.
I have just picked up Empire of the Summer Moon, Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History, by S.C. Gwynne. It is a promising read.
I also have the advanced readers copy of Philip Roth's Nemesis, which I think is one of his best books. The ending says all there is to say about the arc and beauty of our mortality.
For me the end of August and its long light is a time of relentless nostalgia -- Faulker knew about this light. I am watching the sun creep behind the still green leaves, lighting them fiercely from behind so they glow. Unearthly. Gorgeous. Mundane.
Comments
Deborah Hirsch Bezanis commented on 02-Sep-2010 01:35 PM
I'm preparing to visit Mpls and its Guthrie Theatre for Master Buthers.....no better time of year to be there again. Thank you for your lovely interview with Moyers, and for sustaining my favorite bookshop in the universe.
http://www.seed4song.com/
ann commented on 03-Sep-2010 10:01 AM
Happy to read that even you justify your August activities but was not neccesary as we also enjoyed niibin. Deep summer is when laziness finds respectability. Here in North Dakota, Labor Day means the end of summer. I plan on making sure I squeeze every last drop out of the season by doing absolutely nothing. I’d like to think we can all take time to smell flowers, enjoy all those zuicinni and tomatoes, and revel in being happily unproductive.
Barbara Scott Zeller commented on 11-Sep-2010 03:24 PM
I just read Let's Take the Long Way Home. Unlike my usual book-buying behavior, I picked it up without looking inside, or reading the book blurbs. I picked it up because on the cover it had "a memoir of friendship" and I had just returned from Colorado where I had been visiting my best friend of 53 years. I found that this book was about so much more. It made me think, and it made me sad, and it made me smile, and it made me treasure my friendship with my best friend so much more. And it made me hug my dogs -- even more than usual :)
This reader highly recommends this book.
Off to see The Master Butchers Singing Club tonight! How lucky are we in Minneapolis to have Louise Erdrich and the Guthrie Theater local.
Barbara Scott Zeller (again) commented on 12-Sep-2010 06:47 AM
The Master Butchers Singing Club at the Guthrie. It is wonderfully told on stage in this production. The actors have their hearts in this story (we were in the front row - could see this on their faces and in their eyes). And the narrator - Step and Half - OMG. To all Louise Erdrich fans, readers, and theater-goers, you must see this play.
Annie commented on 23-Sep-2010 04:40 PM
I think it's funny that you said no blogging in the summer. My partner is a native american storyteller, drum keeper and professor of Native American studies at Southern Oregon University and he's not supposed to tell stories in the summer because it is a time of preparation. He recently went to Minnesota and Wisconsin to help establish a Native American academic camp over there. I love your books, I have read about four so far. I am English education major in my last year of college before I get my masters degree. If you are ever in Oregon you should stop by our small liberal arts college!
http://www.sou.edu/natam/florendb.html
Carol commented on 23-Sep-2010 10:15 PM
I absolutely loved Fail Caldwell's Let's Take the Long Way Home. I have now ordered Caroline Knapp's Drinking: A Love Story. Thank you, dear Louise for posting this recommendation. I've also started 2666 and am impressed with its prose and storyline. My students in American Literature will be discussing Love Medicine next week. I can't wait!
Barbara K. Carlier commented on 30-Oct-2010 02:56 PM
I visited your bookstore last spring for the book club and the discussion of Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel and was very happy to talk with you then. I don't often get to Minneapolis as I live in France. This week I watched on television , La Grand Librairie (The Big Bookstore), a weekly literary program on books with their respective authors. This week the program was done in New York City with several American authors and you, Louise Erdrich, were one of the authors interviewed by François Busnel for your book The Plague of Doves which has just come out in French. A lovely interview although it was difficult to hear you because, as usual, the French dubbing was done over your voice. It was amazing, however, to see that you were the only women writer to be included in the program! Bravo!
annie b siemer commented on 26-Dec-2010 10:06 PM
Thank You Loiuse for all that you have contributed to this Earth at this time. Today I was needing something new to read. Not unlike you and Ober, I too am a lover of books. I had purchased (and read) Books and Islands back in Santa cruz in 2006. I don't recall any of it but am thrilled to have picked it up again. I do remember all of your other books though.Thank You for all of it . I love learning about a (new to me) character, Ober. I love being able to walk into your store via the internet for the first time yesterday. It makes me want to come sit in that comfy chair and read and read and heal. Hopefully someday I'll get to see the store in person. Annie B. Siemer www.anniebsiemer.blogspot.com
Comments
We visited a reservation near the Black Hills--where we could tour dwellings, a village, look at art, and go to hear stories at night. If you were a kid--you just accepted it automatically. Everything was real and there you were in another world. I suppose that is the best time to find friends and think about differences. I found friends my age at the reservation general store. It is near the souvenir store--the store is divided.
I've only driven by Minneapolis/St. Paul once--in fact, I've only been through Minnesota once, during the summer in 1983. I was again a passenger, looking out the car window trying to see the Twin Cities. They looked miniature among the bluffs.
When I read the Lousie Erdrich books, I think about the different worlds that you find, once the characters' personalities make the reader think within a place. I can't imagine what this place is like. But I can't believe, turning the pages, that the stories keep going and the jokes keep you laughing--and the descriptions are so idiosynchratic to the events. Descriptions, that is, of what will be when. I get these books new; and the ones I don't have, I buy at store clearances--so, I have most of them! "The Master Butchers Singing Club" really becomes alive--it is a charged story--and "The Plague of Doves" is so well worked that you don't stop turning the pages until the story is near the final chapters! I read the e-mails I get from Birchbark Books--I look forward to seeing the news and events and to thinking about distance. Birchbark Books seems to have the most different ideas all kept together in its pictures.