Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction

Indigenous children’s and young adults’ literature remains in the margins of the academic community – either misidentified as multicultural fiction or left aside in favour of critiquing controversial literature produced by non-Aboriginal writers. Through children’s and young adults’ literature, Abo...

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Main Author: Grant, Brianne Alia May
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7322
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-73222018-01-05T17:23:26Z Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction Grant, Brianne Alia May Indigenous children’s and young adults’ literature remains in the margins of the academic community – either misidentified as multicultural fiction or left aside in favour of critiquing controversial literature produced by non-Aboriginal writers. Through children’s and young adults’ literature, Aboriginal writers are expressing their own perspectives on the way Western education has affected and continues to affect their lives, and these representations present a significant contribution to the way North American children learn about the history of Aboriginal relations with the dominant society. My thesis examines education issues in a representative sample of contemporary Aboriginal young adult fiction. It is innovative in its application of several forms of Indigenous theory, which provide rich and complex insights into the political and social circumstances of the Aboriginal protagonists. Relationships between land, community, and identity are examined in The Porcupine Year by Anishinabe writer Louise Erdrich, Good for Nothing by Métis author Michel Noël, No Time to Say Goodbye: Stories of Kuper Island Residential School by Sylvia Olsen with Tsartlip community members Rita Morris and Anne Sam, and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Spokane / Coeur D’Alene writer Sherman Alexie. Drawing primarily on the critical writing of Robert Warrior, Craig S. Womack, and Kimberly Blaeser, this thesis examines issues of land, community, and identity as manifested in education systems affecting Aboriginal peoples. The primary works for this thesis all convey an unresolved paradox of hope and hopelessness through the contrast between the historical and political context and the protagonists’ emotional strength and connection to their communities and homelands. Arts, Faculty of Library, Archival and Information Studies (SLAIS), School of Graduate 2009-04-17T20:13:40Z 2009-04-17T20:13:40Z 2009 2009-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7322 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 636581 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Indigenous children’s and young adults’ literature remains in the margins of the academic community – either misidentified as multicultural fiction or left aside in favour of critiquing controversial literature produced by non-Aboriginal writers. Through children’s and young adults’ literature, Aboriginal writers are expressing their own perspectives on the way Western education has affected and continues to affect their lives, and these representations present a significant contribution to the way North American children learn about the history of Aboriginal relations with the dominant society. My thesis examines education issues in a representative sample of contemporary Aboriginal young adult fiction. It is innovative in its application of several forms of Indigenous theory, which provide rich and complex insights into the political and social circumstances of the Aboriginal protagonists. Relationships between land, community, and identity are examined in The Porcupine Year by Anishinabe writer Louise Erdrich, Good for Nothing by Métis author Michel Noël, No Time to Say Goodbye: Stories of Kuper Island Residential School by Sylvia Olsen with Tsartlip community members Rita Morris and Anne Sam, and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Spokane / Coeur D’Alene writer Sherman Alexie. Drawing primarily on the critical writing of Robert Warrior, Craig S. Womack, and Kimberly Blaeser, this thesis examines issues of land, community, and identity as manifested in education systems affecting Aboriginal peoples. The primary works for this thesis all convey an unresolved paradox of hope and hopelessness through the contrast between the historical and political context and the protagonists’ emotional strength and connection to their communities and homelands. === Arts, Faculty of === Library, Archival and Information Studies (SLAIS), School of === Graduate
author Grant, Brianne Alia May
spellingShingle Grant, Brianne Alia May
Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
author_facet Grant, Brianne Alia May
author_sort Grant, Brianne Alia May
title Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
title_short Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
title_full Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
title_fullStr Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
title_full_unstemmed Where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native North American young adult fiction
title_sort where hope lives : an examination of the relationship between protagonists and education systems in contemporary native north american young adult fiction
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7322
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