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Dadibaajim Returning Home Through Narrative Helen Olsen Agger

  • SKU: BELL-37597946
Dadibaajim Returning Home Through Narrative Helen Olsen Agger
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Dadibaajim Returning Home Through Narrative Helen Olsen Agger instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.58 MB
Pages: 272
Author: Helen Olsen Agger
ISBN: 9780887559549, 0887559549
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Dadibaajim Returning Home Through Narrative Helen Olsen Agger by Helen Olsen Agger 9780887559549, 0887559549 instant download after payment.

Dadibaajim narratives are of and from the land, born from experience and observation. Invoking this critical Anishinaabe methodology for teaching and learning, Helen Olsen Agger documents and reclaims the history, identity, and inherent entitlement of the Namegosibii Anishinaabeg to the care, use, and occupation of their Trout Lake homelands. When Agger’s mother, Dedibaayaanimanook, was born in 1922, the community had limited contact with Euro-Canadian settlers and still lived throughout their territory according to seasonal migrations along agricultural, hunting, and fishing routes. By the 1940s, colonialism was in full swing: hydro development had resulted in major flooding of traditional territories, settlers had overrun Trout Lake for its resource, tourism, and recreational potential, and the Namegosibii Anishinaabe were forced out of their homelands in Treaty 3 territory, north-western Ontario. Agger mines an archive of treaty paylists, census records, and the work of influential anthropologists like A.I. Hallowell, but the dadibaajim narratives of eight community members spanning three generations form the heart of this book. Dadibaajim provide the framework that fills in the silences and omissions of the colonial record. Embedded in Anishinaabe language and epistemology, they record how the people of Namegosibiing experienced the invasion of interlocking forces of colonialism and globalized neo-liberalism into their lives and upon their homelands. Ultimately, Dadibaajim is a message about how all humans may live well on the earth.

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