Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation
Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation invites and demonstrates actions by academics in relation to some of the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). Poetry, short stories, and children’s stories sit alongside academic chapters, mixing personal and academic voices to challenge and engage both the head and the heart about what Truth and Reconciliation—and the Calls to Action—require of us all.

Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria Handford, and their collaborators invite readers not only to explore the diverse facets of Indigenous identity, but to embark on a transformative, collective journey towards mutual understanding and respect.

Contributions by Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian, Georgann Cope Watson, Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria (Tory) Handford, Sarah Ladd, Patricia Liu, Baergen, Tina Matthew, Rod McCormick, Gloria Ramirez, Fred Schaub, and Bernita Wienhold-Leahy.

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Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation
Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation invites and demonstrates actions by academics in relation to some of the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). Poetry, short stories, and children’s stories sit alongside academic chapters, mixing personal and academic voices to challenge and engage both the head and the heart about what Truth and Reconciliation—and the Calls to Action—require of us all.

Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria Handford, and their collaborators invite readers not only to explore the diverse facets of Indigenous identity, but to embark on a transformative, collective journey towards mutual understanding and respect.

Contributions by Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian, Georgann Cope Watson, Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria (Tory) Handford, Sarah Ladd, Patricia Liu, Baergen, Tina Matthew, Rod McCormick, Gloria Ramirez, Fred Schaub, and Bernita Wienhold-Leahy.

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Overview

Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation invites and demonstrates actions by academics in relation to some of the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). Poetry, short stories, and children’s stories sit alongside academic chapters, mixing personal and academic voices to challenge and engage both the head and the heart about what Truth and Reconciliation—and the Calls to Action—require of us all.

Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria Handford, and their collaborators invite readers not only to explore the diverse facets of Indigenous identity, but to embark on a transformative, collective journey towards mutual understanding and respect.

Contributions by Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian, Georgann Cope Watson, Garry Gottfriedson, Victoria (Tory) Handford, Sarah Ladd, Patricia Liu, Baergen, Tina Matthew, Rod McCormick, Gloria Ramirez, Fred Schaub, and Bernita Wienhold-Leahy.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780776644653
Publisher: Les Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa/University of Ottawa Press
Publication date: 11/12/2024
Series: Education
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)
Age Range: 15 Years

About the Author

Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian (Contributor) Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian is Secwépemc and Syilx from the interior plateau regions of what is known as British Columbia. She is happy to be a good relative to her Coast Salish cousins while she lives, works, and plays on their lands. Her research centralizes land, story, cultural protocols, and how Indigenous knowledge informs and guides interrelationships with Canadian settler society. Her curiosity about how cultural knowledge influences Indigenous production practices started when she was working for the national broadcaster VisionTV to bring Indigenous stories to the screen.

Dorothy works as the associate director, Indigenous Policy and Pedagogy at Simon Fraser University. While she writes scholarly chapters and participates in community on many levels, Dorothy remains involved in the Indigenous visual storytelling culture in Canada. She serves as a board member of the Indigenous Screen Office in Toronto and curated programs for the 2018 and 2019 ImagineNATIVE film festival, the largest Indigenous film festival in the world.Georgann Cope Watson (Contributor) Georgann Cope Watson is an Open Learning faculty member in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at Thompson Rivers University. She is invested in qualitative research methods that inquire into decoloniza­tion and reconciliation, the praxis of critical and feminist pedagogy, the pedagogy of adult education, and the pedagogy of online teaching. Current research projects include the praxis of reconciliaction. Georgann lives, works, studies, teaches, and plays on the traditional territory of Ktunaxa First Nation.Sarah Ladd (Contributor) Sarah Ladd is currently the administrative coordinator for the graduate programs in Education at Thompson Rivers University, responsible for non-academic coordination of two programs, which have more than 500 students annually. She is regularly involved in the hiring of staff and fac­ulty. Prior to this, she spent 14 years as a post-secondary career advisor at TRU, the University of British Columbia, the University of Calgary, and Simon Fraser University. She remains passionate about all aspects of career Contributors 181
development and is working to learn more about how Western career mod­els can be changed and improved to be more inclusive for newcomers and Indigenous people.Rod McCormick (Contributor) Rod McCormick is an Indigenous health researcher and clinician. His nation is Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk). He lives on reserve in his partner’s home community of Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc. His professional training and experience is in counselling psychology and in Indigenous mental health. He was a psychologist and counselling psychology professor at the University of British Columbia for 18 years and a professor of education at Thompson Rivers University(TRU) for the last 11 years. His research focuses on community capacity building in Indigenous mental health and research as well as the reclamation of traditional forms of healing. He has been a clini­cian, consultant, trainer, and researcher in Indigenous mental health for approximately 35 years. He was the lead for the BC Aboriginal Capacity and Developmental Research Environments, the BC Network Environments for Aboriginal Health Research, the Kloshe Tillicum research network, and he is currently the lead on the national/international Indigenous men­torship network Ombaashi, as well as the Knowledge Makers program and the All My Relations Research Centre at TRU.Gloria Ramirez (Contributor) Gloria Ramirez is a professor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at Thompson Rivers University, where she teaches courses on language, literacy, and research methods in education. She has more than 30 years of teaching experience in K–12 and higher education in Colombia, England, and Canada. Her research examines language and literacy development across different languages, bilingual learning, and the revitalization of Indigenous languages. Specifically, she examines effective teaching strate­gies to accelerate language learning and reading development. She has been collaborating with Secwépemc scholars, educators, Elders, and knowledge keepers for about 12 years on initiatives to revitalize Secwepemctsín. She is currently learning Secwepemctsín as an act of decolonization.Alfred Schaub (Contributor) Fred Schaub is an online learning faculty member and sessional instructor with Thompson Rivers Universityand a sessional instructor at Vancouver Island University. As an educational leader, Fred has worked at all levels of the K–12 public education system, including at an independent band school in British Columbia. For the last 20 years, Fred has been on a jour­ney of learning to walk respectfully in both worlds, the Indigenous and the non-Indigenous. He has developed close relational and professional ties to Indigenous communities along the BC coast and holds the honour of being adopted into two Indigenous families. One of Fred’s greatest acco­lades is being described as a cultural ambassador by an Indigenous Elder and Knowledge Keeper; he attempts to honour this description every day.Bernita Weinhold-Leahy (Contributor) Bernita Weinhold-Leahy is a university instructor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at Thompson Rivers University. Bernita worked in special education in the K–12 system for more than a decade, when she became concerned by the numbers of students suffering from mental health issues. She studied contemplative practices and became a mindfulness and compassion teacher to help students build resiliency. Her research interests relate to mindfulness and compassion toward students and teachers to encourage personal well-being and inner strength.Tina Matthew (Contributor) Tina Matthew is a proud Secwépemc woman and member of Simpcw First Nation located in the North Thompson Valley in the interior of BC. She is honoured to hold the position of executive director in the Office of Indigenous Education at Thompson Rivers University. Tina holds a Master of Education and an undergraduate degree from Simon Fraser University. She is an education professional with over 30 years’ experience working with Indigenous communities, organizations, public and private institu­tions, and industry. She has particular strengths in conducting research, developing organizational processes, and connecting Indigenous people with training and collaboration opportunities. She is an active commu­nity member who always strives for self-governance and leadership for all Indigenous people through mentorship and respectful leadership.Gary Gottfriedson (Editor) Garry Gottfriedson is from Kamloops, BC. He is strongly rooted in his Secwépemc (Shuswap) cultural teachings. He holds a Master of Arts Education degree from Simon Fraser University. In 1987, the Naropa Institute (now University) in Boulder, Colorado, awarded a Creative Writing Scholarship to Gottfriedson for Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. There, he studied under Allen Ginsberg, Marianne Faithfull, and others. Gottfriedson has 12 published books. He has read from his work across Canada, the United States, South America, New Zealand, Europe, and Asia. Gottfriedson’s work unapologetically unveils the truth of Canada’s treatment of First Nations. His work has been anthologized and published nationally and internationally. He recently received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Northern British Columbia.Victoria Handford (Editor) Victoria (Tory) Handford is a professor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at Thompson Rivers Universityand is currently the chair of the School of Education. Prior to moving to TRU, Tory held multiple posi­tions in JK–12 education as a teacher, vice-principal, and principal. She has been an education officer (Leadership) for the Ontario Ministry of Education and program officer (Standards of Practice and Accreditation) for the Ontario College of Teachers. Her recent publications include a three-book series that addresses experiences of faculty in Canadian uni­versities. Tory has also published multiple articles and chapters addressing components of school and district leadership.

Read an Excerpt

Dangling in the Glimmer of Hope: Academic Action on Truth and Reconciliation invites and demonstrates actions by academics in relation to some of the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). It does this in two ways. Throughout you will find poetry, short stories, and children’s stories. You will also encounter academic chapters. We hope you will find the mixing of personal and academic voices a challenge and engages you to consider what Truth—and Reconciliation—and the Calls to Action—require of each of us. These voices are used to engage both the head and the heart. Change needs the engagement of both to succeed.


The collection includes six chapters of varying styles and more than 10 poetry contributions, some of which are listed in the Table of Contents, and some of which are internal to the chapters themselves and are therefore listed only in the List of Poems. The actions that are addressed in this collection include “Language and Culture,” “Health,” Education for Reconciliation,” “Business and Reconciliation,” “Commemoration,” and “Newcomers to Canada,” notwithstanding that the cover photo itself is a poignant, emotional representation of “Missing Children and Burial Information.”


[...]



One of the aims of this book is to provoke real change. The Calls to Action, published in 2015, make it clear that colonial thinking and pandering to issues rather than addressing them must stop. To this end, we embrace the Indigenous values of all people. It is the voices of the many, aiming at change, that is going to make this country better for all. For “all” includes beginning, experienced, and expert academics. We invited all: those willing and able to invest the time and energy to learn and to, correspondingly, work. There was vulnerability for everyone in this process. By using the priorities of a university related to research and dissemination, we hope we will change the country! This work is academic, albeit also creative (ideally then—using both sides of the brain, and a level of personalization that is often not part of academic writing). It will take a total investment, including all brain capacity and emotional capacity, to do what needs to be done.
This collection is intended to be helpful, to stimulate creativity, and, most importantly, to encourage all to act according to their abilities, interests, and opportunities, on the actions demanded by the TRC Calls to Action. It may be useful in a college or university classroom. It may be useful for Indigenous communities. And it may inspire other works that expand on this concept. In the end, the goal remains the same—change. Change requires personal commitment. We hope we inspire commitment and actions.


Tk’emlúps

Table of Contents

Land Acknowledgement
In Your Canada—A Thousand and Counting by Garry Gottfriedson
About the Cover Photograph
List of Poems
List of Figures
List of Tables
Foreword by Dorothy Cucw-la7 Christian

Introduction by Garry Gottfriedson and Victoria Handford

SECTION 1
Language and Culture Calls to Action

Returning from School by Garry Gottfriedson
Disrupting Colonial Practices through Indigenous Language Learning and Research by Gloria Ramirez

SECTION 2
Health Calls to Action

lessons by Garry Gottfriedson
Grave Concerns by Rod McCormick
A Walk Together by Bernita Wienhold-Leahy
Health Care Practices by Bernita Wienhold-Leahy

SECTION 3
Education for Reconciliation Calls to Action

KIRS Curriculum by Garry Gottfriedson
Change Begins with a Whisper by Georgann Cope Watson

SECTION 4
Business and Reconciliation Calls to Action

Too Much by Sarah Ladd
Cultural Dissonance: Job Interviewing and Indigenous Candidates by Sarah Ladd

SECTION 5
Commemoration Calls to Action

An Unholy Act by Garry Gottfriedson
Debwewin by Victoria Handford
Red Bridge by Victoria Handford

SECTION 6
Newcomers to Canada Calls to Action

The Flesh of Ice by Garry Gottfriedson
Encounters by Fred Schaub
Reconciliation and Decolonization: From the Shadows of Settler Shame to the Generosity of an Ethical Relationality by Fred Schaub
Exploring Curriculum as a Lived Experience of Poetic Dwelling in between Place Stories by Patricia Liu Baergen

Afterword by Tina Matthew
Contributors
Appendices

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