Restoring Nationhood:
Addressing Land Dispossession in the
Canadian Reconciliation Discourse
November 13,
2013
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson is a writer, scholar, organizer and storyteller of
Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg ancestry and is a member of
Alderville First Nation. She holds a
Ph.D. from the
University of Manitoba, and teaches in the PhD
Program in
Indigenous Studies at
Trent University. She has also lectured at the
University of British Columbia,
Athabasca University,
Ryerson University, the
University of Victoria, the University of Manitoba, the
University of Winnipeg and the Dechinta
Centre for
Learning and
Research.
She has published two edited volumes including Lighting the Eighth
Fire: The
Liberation,
Resurgence and
Protection of Indigenous Nations (2008,
Arbeiter Ring), and This is An
Honour Song:
Twenty Years Since the
Barricades (with Kiera Ladner,
2010, Arbeiter Ring), in celebration of the twenty year anniversary of the "
Oka Crisis".
Leanne has published over thirty scholarly articles and written for
Now Magazine,
Spirit Magazine,
Anishinabek News, the
Link, Briarpatch
Magazine,
The Dominion, Muskart Magazine, Racialious, Rabble,
Huffington Post and
Canadian Art Magazine, among many others. Her third book,
Dancing on Our
Turtle's
Back:
Stories of Nishnaabeg Re-Creation, Resurgence and a New
Emergence was published in
2011 and turns to Nishnaabeg theory and philosophy for guidance in building and maintaining resurgence movements.
Leanne is a traditional story-teller and has performed at Indigenous arts festivals throughout
Ontario. Her short fiction and poetry has been published in
Geist Magazine, Ricepaper Magazine, As Us Literary
Journal, Kimiwan, Honouring Indigenous
Women and
Muskrat Magazine. Leanne was the
2012 winner of Briarpatch Magazine's Writing from the Margins competition for short fiction. Her first book of short stories
Islands of Decolonial
Love, explores love and connection within contemporary Nishnaabe life in a series of sharp, witty and insightful stories and has a full length accompanying storytelling and music
album featuring Indigenous musicians from across
Canada.
Also published 2013 is Leanne's collection of re-told traditional Nishnaabeg stories,
The Gift is in the Making, from the Debwe
Series,
Highwater Press.
Based on her oral practice and the traditions of Nishnaabeg story-telling, this book captures the imaginations of young and old alike as they are immersed in the storied world of her people. Leanne is currently working with an Indigenous editorial collective gathering together the writing and art of the
Idle No More movement.
Watch for The
Winter We Danced:
Voices from the past, future and the Idle No More movement coming from
ARP Books this winter.
Presented by
SFU's Vancity
Office of
Community Engagement, SFU Office of
Aboriginal Peoples, and
UBC First Nations Studies.
http://sfuwoodwards.ca/index
.php/community
- published: 13 Jan 2014
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