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LIGHT TO DO SHELLWORK BY POEMS


en Paperback – 13 noi 2022
Elders are precious to Indigenous peoples as carriers of truth. In a time of propaganda and deliberate "fake news," the truth of a people's history becomes increasingly essential. Indigenous people have always understood how his/stories are needed to continue traditions. During the years when tens of thousands Indigenous children were forced to attend boarding schools in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, powow songs encodes history from the indigenous perspective. This encryption evaded mainstream society and its censorship. Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez publishes with Scarlet Tanager Books a contemporary and equally essential testament to her personal, family, and community history in A Light to Do Shellwork By. The poems are songs and histories at once, and they encode a durable culture.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781734531350
ISBN-10: 1734531355
Pagini: 84
Dimensiuni: 148 x 224 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Editura: Scarlet Tanager Books

Notă biografică

Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez is a descendant of Islander and Coastal Chumash Peoples from her father's lineage, and O'odham (Akimel and Tohono) from her mother's lineage. She is currently an enrolled member of The Coastal Band of the Chumash Nation and chair of the Chumash Women's Elders Council for the Wishtoyo Foundation. She taught many different classes for the American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach, including two classes she designed: "World Genocides: An American Indian Perspective," with graduate student Anna Nazarian-Peters, and "Conduits of California Indian Cultures: Art, Music, Dance and Storytelling." She retired from CSULB in 2014, after twenty-seven years. She was a board member for many years at the California Indian Storytelling Association, and she continues to be an advocate for California Indian languages and sacred sites. Her poem "I Saw My Father Today" is on display at the Embarcadero Muni/BART station as one of twelve poems cast in bronze and placed prominently in San Francisco.