Anishinaabe Syndicated: A View from the Rez
Autor Jim Northrup Introducere de Margaret Noorien Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 dec 2010
Vezi toate premiile Carte premiată
Northeastern Minnesota Book Award (2011), Minnesota Book Award (2012)
The topics of the day fly fast and furious over Jim Northrup’s moccasin telegraph:
The game wardens were playing catch and release with the Anishinaabeg spearers. one Shinnob went back for seconds. He got two tickets. . . .
The powwow was great. I’d like to thank all those who worked to make this happen. as a Vietnam vet, I felt honored, but still think we should quit
making veterans. . . .
Hell just froze over because Fonjalackers got a per capita gambling payment. after almost fifteen years of high-stakes bingo and gambling casinos, we got a check for $1,500 each. . . . Now Mom can get that operation and I can send my kids to Harvard. I can also get that Ferrari I’ve always wanted. I’ll decide on the color after my round-the-world vacation. . ..
Between 1989 and 2001, Indian Country saw enormous changes in treaty rights, casino gambling, language renewal, and tribal sovereignty. Jim Northrup, a thoroughly modern traditional Ojibwe man who writes a monthly syndicated newspaper column, the Fond du Lac Follies, witnessed it all. With humor sometimes gentle, sometimes biting, sometimes broad, these excerpts tally the changes, year by year, as he spears walleye, raises a grandson, harvests wild rice and maple sugar, fixes rez cars, attends powwows, and jets across the country and across the ocean to tell stories.
Jim Northrup is an award-winning journalist, poet, and playwright and the author of Rez Road Follies and Walking the Rez Road. Margaret Noori is the director of the Comprehensive Studies program and a lecturer in the Native American Studies program at the University of Michigan.
The game wardens were playing catch and release with the Anishinaabeg spearers. one Shinnob went back for seconds. He got two tickets. . . .
The powwow was great. I’d like to thank all those who worked to make this happen. as a Vietnam vet, I felt honored, but still think we should quit
making veterans. . . .
Hell just froze over because Fonjalackers got a per capita gambling payment. after almost fifteen years of high-stakes bingo and gambling casinos, we got a check for $1,500 each. . . . Now Mom can get that operation and I can send my kids to Harvard. I can also get that Ferrari I’ve always wanted. I’ll decide on the color after my round-the-world vacation. . ..
Between 1989 and 2001, Indian Country saw enormous changes in treaty rights, casino gambling, language renewal, and tribal sovereignty. Jim Northrup, a thoroughly modern traditional Ojibwe man who writes a monthly syndicated newspaper column, the Fond du Lac Follies, witnessed it all. With humor sometimes gentle, sometimes biting, sometimes broad, these excerpts tally the changes, year by year, as he spears walleye, raises a grandson, harvests wild rice and maple sugar, fixes rez cars, attends powwows, and jets across the country and across the ocean to tell stories.
Jim Northrup is an award-winning journalist, poet, and playwright and the author of Rez Road Follies and Walking the Rez Road. Margaret Noori is the director of the Comprehensive Studies program and a lecturer in the Native American Studies program at the University of Michigan.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780873518239
ISBN-10: 0873518233
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Minnesota Historical Society Press
Colecția Minnesota Historical Society Press
ISBN-10: 0873518233
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Minnesota Historical Society Press
Colecția Minnesota Historical Society Press
Notă biografică
Descriere
A thoroughly traditional, modern man lives the seasonal round on the rez and writes for a national audience about the changes he sees.
Premii
- Northeastern Minnesota Book Award Nominee, 2011
- Minnesota Book Award Finalist, 2012