Coyote Raven Go Canoeing: Coming Home to the Village

Front Cover
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2006 - Education - 337 pages

we are narrators narratives voices interlocutors of our own knowings
we can determine for ourselves what our educational needs are
before the coming of churches residential schools prisons
before we knew how we knew we knew

In a gesture toward traditional First Nations orality, Peter Cole blends poetic and dramatic voices with storytelling. A conversation between two tricksters, Coyote and Raven, and the colonized and the colonizers, his narrative takes the form of a canoe journey. Cole draws on traditional Aboriginal knowledge to move away from the western genres that have long contained, shaped, and determined ab/originality. Written in free verse, Coyote and Raven Go Canoeing is meant to be read aloud and breaks new ground by making orality the foundation of its scholarship.

Cole moves beyond the rhetoric and presumption of white academic (de/re)colonizers to aboriginal spaces recreated by aboriginal peoples. Rather than employing the traditional western practice of gathering information about exoticized other, demonized other, contained other, Coyote and Raven Go Canoeing is a celebration of aboriginal thought, spirituality, and practice, a sharing of lived experience as First Peoples.

 

Contents

please dont take our stories our knowings our technologies away
81
Indian experts revisited
91
much rez adieux about deweys goats in the curriculum
100
british columbia
111
intertext
118
a coyotec interlude with heesoon bai
126
ghettoizing the margins
133
special education special delivery cod return to sender
140
iterature review
151
our stories of schooling
204
other aboriginal stories of schooling
230
first nations
286
moving
315
references
325
index
331
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Peter Cole is associate professor, Indigenous education, University of British Columbia.

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