
Wītāmōwik / Tell Them!
Essays and Poems on a Life of Inspiration
Versandkostenfrei!
Erscheint vorauss. 3. März 2026
28,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Cree poet and kēhtē-aya Louise Bernice Halfe - Sky Dancer's genre-bending collection chronicles her childhood in a cabin on reserve, her experiences in the Indian Residential School system, and finally her reclamation of her nēhiýaw language, culture, and spirituality. My parents taught us the art of observation. I learned to hunt, skin, and butcher game through non-verbal methods. I also watched my grandparents work on the land and live their spirituality. I helped gather, dry, and grind their medicines. I inhaled the medicines' power and ingested it. When I left for residential school al...
Cree poet and kēhtē-aya Louise Bernice Halfe - Sky Dancer's genre-bending collection chronicles her childhood in a cabin on reserve, her experiences in the Indian Residential School system, and finally her reclamation of her nēhiýaw language, culture, and spirituality. My parents taught us the art of observation. I learned to hunt, skin, and butcher game through non-verbal methods. I also watched my grandparents work on the land and live their spirituality. I helped gather, dry, and grind their medicines. I inhaled the medicines' power and ingested it. When I left for residential school all this fell asleep. Poet Louise Bernice Halfe - Sky Dancer tells the story of how she woke up from the trauma of separation in these never-before-collected essays and new poems about her life and the source of her inspiration: her culture and the land. In Cree, inspiration is described as a sudden insight. It can come from visits from spirit, from the charged reciprocal experience of being taught by Elders and teaching the next generation, from speaking Cree which allows the poet to "somersault into memory," and in the practice of observing and being in relationship with the land as it "constantly gives birth to itself." wītāmōwik / Tell Them! is a stunning love song to nēhiýaw ways of knowing--ways which Halfe has reclaimed from the violence of colonization to celebrate their survival and share their enduring relevance with future generations.