Finding my talk : how fourteen Native women reclaimed their lives after residential school / Agnes Grant.

Finding my talk : how fourteen Native women reclaimed their lives after residential school / Agnes Grant.

By
Grant, Agnes, 1933-

Publication Date
2004

Publication Information
Calgary, Alta. : Fifth House,

Physical Description
xii, 212 p.

Subject Term
Indigenous women -- Canada.
 
Indigenous peoples -- Education -- Canada.
 
Indigenous peoples -- Canada -- Residential schools.
 
Indigenous children -- Abuse of.

Summary
When residential schools opened in the 1830s, First Nations envisioned their children learning in a nurturing environment, staffed with their own teachers, ministers, and interpreters. Instead, students were taught by outsiders, regularly forced to renounce their cultures and languages, and some were subjected to degradations and abuses that left severe emotional scars for generations." "In Finding My Talk, fourteen Aboriginal women who attended residential schools, or whose lives were affected by the schools, reflect on their experiences. They describe their years in residential schools across Canada and how they overcame tremendous obstacles to become strong and independent members of Aboriginal cultures. Dr. Agnes Grant's painstaking research and interview methods ensure that it is the women's voices we hear in Finding My Talk, and that these women are viewed as members of today's global society, not only as victims of their past.

Language
English

ISBN
9781894856577


LibraryCollectionCollectionCall NumberStatus
Corner Brook (WCB)Adult NFic IndigenousAdult Non-Fiction Indigenous371.82997 G76Checked In
Happy Valley - Goose Bay (LHV) MelvilleAdult NFic IndigenousAdult Non-Fiction Indigenous371.82997 G76Checked In
St. John's - A.C. Hunter (SJH)Adult NFic IndigenousAdult Non-Fiction Indigenous371.82997 G76Lost