Fire in the Village: New and Selected Stories
Autor Anne M. Dunnen Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 oct 2016
"These are stories of the magic of and connection to Earth, to people and to spirit that can be found on any day we choose to look through eyes of wonder."—Winds of Change
A large gathering of more than seventy engaging stories that represent a lifetime of master story-telling and offer keen, loving insights into the mythic origins of the natural and supernatural worlds around and within the reader.
Living on the Leech Lake Reservation near Cass Lake, Minnesota, Anne M. Dunn is an Anishinabeg grandmother and elder storyteller who has provided a compelling and invaluable contribution to Native American folklore studies.
A large gathering of more than seventy engaging stories that represent a lifetime of master story-telling and offer keen, loving insights into the mythic origins of the natural and supernatural worlds around and within the reader.
Living on the Leech Lake Reservation near Cass Lake, Minnesota, Anne M. Dunn is an Anishinabeg grandmother and elder storyteller who has provided a compelling and invaluable contribution to Native American folklore studies.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780986448058
ISBN-10: 0986448052
Pagini: 260
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Holy Cow Press
Colecția Holy Cow! Press
ISBN-10: 0986448052
Pagini: 260
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Holy Cow Press
Colecția Holy Cow! Press
Recenzii
"Everyone knows a circle has no beginning and no end. In Fire in the Village, Anishinabe elder and wisdom-sharer Anne M. Dunn shows us a world in which everything in Creation has life, in which everything has volition, in which everything needs to be thanked and respected. It’s a world inhabited by mischievous Little People and wise elders; by four-leggeds, two-leggeds, flying nations, swimmers and those who creep; by hovering spirits and the children who can see them, and by haunting flashbacks that just won’t go away. Like points in a circle, each story has a place that informs the whole.
Here are 75 stories of how things came to be and how the humans (some of them, anyway) came to understand their responsibilities to all Creation. Stories of how the Little People can make huge things happen and how elders and children may be the only ones who understand and respect them. Stories about why butterflies are beautiful but can’t sing, why Tamarack drops its needles in winter, and why, every season, Anishinabeg give great thanks to the sap-giving maple trees. And gut-wrenching stories of the horrors inflicted on innocent little children in the Indian residential schools and stories of internalized racism and stories of good, loving parents who have alcoholism.
One of my favorite of Anne’s not-so-subtle stories (that reminds me of the US and Canadian governments’ failed attempts at cultural erasure of Indian peoples) involves an elder woman’s dreams to create a monument to fry bread, and the Department of Fry Bread Affairs—'suspicious that the women were engaged in resistance and eager to crush any possibility of dissent'—finds a way to destroy their Great Fry Bread Mountain and outlaw the women’s Fry Bread dances. But, if you know any history, you know that the struggle continues.
Without didacticism, without polemic, Anne gives each story the attention it needs so it can speak its own truth. How a little boy finds the perfect gift for his grandma. How a bear reciprocates for an elder woman’s generosity. How the Little People encourage an old man on his final journey. How a drum dreamed by a woman long ago can bring healing to the community.
Ojibwe artist Annie Humphrey’s beautifully detailed black-and-white pen-and-ink interior illustrations, together with the cover’s bright eye-catching colors in Prismacolor colored pencil, complement Anne’s tellings and will draw readers into the stories.
Children can enjoy acting out many of Anne’s stories about how things came to be, and some of the others as well. But, please—pitch the fake 'Indians' with costumes, headdresses, wigs and face paint; also, the 'woo-woos,' 'hows,' 'ughs,' and 'hop-hop' dances. The most effective 'costumes' I’ve seen were plain t-shirts and jeans for the two-legged characters, and minimal decorations to denote the four-leggeds, flying ones, swimming nations and those who creep.
In her Foreword, Anne writes:
'The storyteller is usually a recognized member of the community, one who carries the stories that must be told. Perhaps young tellers will arrive to carry them forward. So our stories will continue to be passed from generation to generation.
Some stories are told more often, she also writes, 'because those are the stories that want to be told. They are the ones that teach the vital lessons of our culture and traditions.' Depending on what lessons are being imparted, some stories may be for everyone, some for children, some for initiates, and some for adults. I would encourage parents, classroom teachers and librarians to use the same caution with this written collection.'
As in the old times, when the people were taught by example and by stories, Anne sits in a circle with her audience and relates teachings and events from the long ago, from the distant past, from almost yesterday, and from now and beyond tomorrow—because every day, you know, brings a new story. If you listen for it. As Anne ends some of her stories, 'That’s the way it was. That’s the way it is.'
‘Chi miigwech, Anne. I’m honored to call you friend."--Beverly Slapin, American Indians in Children's Literature
Notă biografică
Anne M. Dunn (1940) is an Anishinabeg-Ojibwe grandmother story-teller. She was born on the Red Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota, was enrolled at the White Earth Reservation, grew up on the Leech Lake Reservation and resides in Cass Lake. Her books include: "When Beaver Was Very Great," "Grandmother's Gift" and "Winter Thunder"
As a young girl, she received many gifts from the wonderful storehouse of oral legends and animal fables of the Ojibwe, especially from her mother, Maefred Vanos Arey, and her grandmother, Frances Vanoss. Like many Native American children, Anne experienced life on reservation land and also lived for a time in Minneapolis. Anne grew up to become a licensed practical nurse, a mother of six, a newspaper reporter, and a professional storyteller.
As a young girl, she received many gifts from the wonderful storehouse of oral legends and animal fables of the Ojibwe, especially from her mother, Maefred Vanos Arey, and her grandmother, Frances Vanoss. Like many Native American children, Anne experienced life on reservation land and also lived for a time in Minneapolis. Anne grew up to become a licensed practical nurse, a mother of six, a newspaper reporter, and a professional storyteller.
Descriere
A dynamic, imaginative collection of seventy-five new and selected stories by Anne M. Dunn, Anishinabeg-Ojibwe grandmother story-teller.