Paperback
978-1-77212-367-8Size: 6" x 9"
Pages: 400
epub
978-1-77212-391-3Pages: 400
Pages: 400
Kindle
978-1-77212-392-0Pages: 400
Keetsahnak / Our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Sisters
Edited by Kim Anderson, Maria Campbell and Christi Belcourt
In Keetsahnak / Our Murdered and Missing Indigenous Sisters, the tension between personal, political, and public action is brought home starkly as the contributors look at the roots of violence and how it diminishes life for all. Together, they create a model for anti-violence work from an Indigenous perspective. They acknowledge the destruction wrought by colonial violence, and also look at controversial topics such as lateral violence, challenges in working with “tradition,” and problematic notions involved in “helping.” Through stories of resilience, resistance, and activism, the editors give voice to powerful personal testimony and allow for the creation of knowledge.
It’s in all of our best interests to take on gender violence as a core resurgence project, a core decolonization project, a core of Indigenous nation building, and as the backbone of any Indigenous mobilization. —Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Contributors: Kim Anderson, Stella August, Tracy Bear, Christi Belcourt, Robyn Bourgeois, Rita Bouvier, Maria Campbell, Maya Ode’amik Chacaby, Downtown Eastside Power of Women Group, Susan Gingell, Michelle Good, Laura Harjo, Sarah Hunt, Robert Alexander Innes, Beverly Jacobs, Tanya Kappo, Tara Kappo, Lyla Kinoshameg, Helen Knott, Sandra Lamouche, Jo-Anne Lawless, Debra Leo, Kelsey T. Leonard, Ann-Marie Livingston, Brenda Macdougall, Sylvia Maracle, Jenell Navarro, Darlene R. Okemaysim-Sicotte, Pahan Pte San Win, Ramona Reece, Kimberly Robertson, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Beatrice Starr, Madeleine Kétéskwew Dion Stout, Waaseyaa’sin Christine Sy, Alex Wilson
Book details
Publication date: May 2018Features: 6 B&W photographs, notes, index
Keywords: Indigenous History / Women’s Studies
Subject(s): SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in Society, Sociology, Social Sciences / Race & Racism, Gender & Sexuality, Gender & Sexuality / Women’s Studies, Indigenous Studies, Indigenous Studies / Indigenous Author(s), Social Sciences, Social Sciences / Activism & Social Movements, Law & Legal Studies, Law & Legal Studies / Indigenous Peoples & Colonial Law, Indigenous History / Women’s Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, Indigenous History / Women’s Studies, Sociology, Indigenous peoples, Gender studies: women & girls, Indigenous Authors, Bestseller, Women's Studies, Indigenous Studies
Publisher(s): The University of Alberta Press
Book details
Publication date: May 2018Features: 6 B&W photographs, notes, index
Keywords: Indigenous History / Women’s Studies
Subject(s): SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in Society, Sociology, Social Sciences / Race & Racism, Gender & Sexuality, Gender & Sexuality / Women’s Studies, Indigenous Studies, Indigenous Studies / Indigenous Author(s), Social Sciences, Social Sciences / Activism & Social Movements, Law & Legal Studies, Law & Legal Studies / Indigenous Peoples & Colonial Law, Indigenous History / Women’s Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, Indigenous History / Women’s Studies, Sociology, Indigenous peoples, Gender studies: women & girls, Indigenous Authors, Bestseller, Women's Studies, Indigenous Studies
Publisher(s): The University of Alberta Press
"Indigenous women, these keepers, continue to go missing and be murdered in staggering numbers in Canada. This new collection of essays, most of which were written by Indigenous women scholars and activists, was edited by Campbell, Kim Anderson, and Christie Belcourt. The essays look at the violence against, the challenges facing, and the action taken by their sisters in this country."
"The stories in this book are presented with power, truth, humility, and beauty. They reveal complexities of women's lives that cannot be adequately reflected in statistics on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women."
"Many chapters in Keetsahnak will appeal to academic and non-academic thinkers and teachers alike - allowing readers to think holistically about community remembrance, mourning, celebration and healing."
"Keetsahnak will be a staple resource in future research on violence against Indigenous women and girls....future historians and critics studying Indigenous resistance, both at the barricades and through artistic production, will want this book on their shelves."
"The essays in Keetsahnak outline historical, legal, cultural, philosophical, and psychological perspectives on the topic of missing and murdered women in Canada. Their power is in detailing the affective consequences of living in pain, grief, rage; simultaneously they offer strategic examples of resilience, legal challenges, and paradigm shifts. There is an immediate and personal tone to each essay that provides a transparency to the process and a depth to the volume, reminding us that we have all been affected by the horrors of this reality. This is a serious and important read… [A]n excellent resource for university students taking courses in the fields of sociology, Indigenous Studies, Women Studies, or Social Work.”
"If one wishes to examine this international issue of concern on a personal level, wherein the subject is deeply internalized by many Indigenous women and then shared thoughtfully with the reader, this is a good book with which to do so."
"Contributors to the anthology include family members of MMIWG2S, survivors of violence, activists, artists, counsellors, lawyers, and academics who provide insights from unique vantage points. Their incisive analyses offer us compelling testimonies, models of accountability and care, and proposals for action. Rooted in deeply personal stories, these pieces remind us that antiviolence organizing and theory must emerge out of everyday lived experiences.... Keetsahnak is imbued with an urgent call to rethink, complicate, and deepen our understandings of violence against Indigenous women, girls, and two-spirit people."
"Keetsahnak defies categorisation. The book is fundamentally a collective project that seeks to understand and raise awareness of the issue of MMIWG2S, examining the roots of the violence and registering the resilience of Indigenous peoples. Through chapters that are at once political and personal, intimate and analytical, the volume brings together over 35 contributors to honour Indigenous lives. Yet, the volume emphasises the need for action as well as remembrance... [The] lessons borne out of Keetsahnak’s wide-ranging dialogue are invaluable for Indigenous and allied scholars, policy makers, and activists working to bring an end to this crisis."
“Keetsahnak / Our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Sisters will be welcomed by members of Indigenous communities, scholars and students, and all those who are open to the overarching story of resiliency and resistance being shared.”
Scholarly and Academic Book Award | Alberta Book Publishing Awards, Book Publishers Association of Alberta, Canada
Short-listed
2019
1 Voices from the Downtown Eastside
DEBRA LEO, BEATRICE STARR & STELLA AUGUST
DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE POWER OF WOMEN GROUP
2 Honouring Women
BEVERLY JACOBS
3 Sacred Sisters and Sacred Circles
A Story of One Nehiyawak Family and the Power of Spirit
SANDRA LAMOUCHE
4 Honouring Elsie
Was She Just a Dream?
ANN-MARIE LIVINGSTON & SARAH HUNT
II | The Violence of History
5 Generations of Genocide
The Historical and Sociological Context of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
ROBYN BOURGEOIS
6 A Tradition of Violence
Dehumanization, Stereotyping, and Indigenous Women
MICHELLE GOOD
7 The (Un)Making of Property Gender Violence and the Legal Status of Long Island Algonquian Women
KELSEY T. LEONARD
8 (The Missing Chapter) On Being Missing
From Indian Problem to Indian Problematic
MAYA ODE’AMIK CHACABY
III | Challenges
9 Violence and Extraction
Stories from the Oil Fields
HELEN KNOT T
10 Skirting the Issues
Indigenous Myths, Misses, and Misogyny
ALEX WILSON
11 The Moose in the Room
Indigenous Men and Violence against Women
ROBERT ALEXANDER INNES & KIM ANDERSON
12 Considering Wenonah, Considering Us
WAASEYAA’SIN CHRISTINE SY
13 Centring Resurgence
Taking on Colonial Gender Violence in Indigenous Nation Building
LEANNE BETASAMOSAKE SIMPSON
IV | Action, Always
14 Iskwewuk E-wischiwitochik
Saskatchewan Community Activism to Address Missing and Murdered
Indigenous Women and Girls
DARLENE R. OKEMAYSIM-SICOT TE, SUSAN GINGELL &
RITA BOUVIER
15 Woman Sacred
PAHAN PTE SAN WIN
16 Leading with Our Hearts
Anti-Violence Action and Beadwork Circles as Colonial Resistance
LAURA HARJO, JENELL NAVARRO & KIMBERLY ROBERTSON
Epilogue
Sitting in with Sisters
KIM ANDERSON, TRACY BEAR, CHRISTI BELCOURT, MARIA CAMPBELL, MAYA ODE’AMIK CHACABY, TANYA KAPPO, TARA KAPPO, LYLA KINOSHAMEG, JO-ANNE LAWLESS, BRENDA MACDOUGALL, SYLVIA MARACLE, RAMONA REECE, MADELEINE KÉTÉSKWEW DION STOUT
"Indigenous women, these keepers, continue to go missing and be murdered in staggering numbers in Canada. This new collection of essays, most of which were written by Indigenous women scholars and activists, was edited by Campbell, Kim Anderson, and Christie Belcourt. The essays look at the violence against, the challenges facing, and the action taken by their sisters in this country."
"The stories in this book are presented with power, truth, humility, and beauty. They reveal complexities of women's lives that cannot be adequately reflected in statistics on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women."
"Many chapters in Keetsahnak will appeal to academic and non-academic thinkers and teachers alike - allowing readers to think holistically about community remembrance, mourning, celebration and healing."
"Keetsahnak will be a staple resource in future research on violence against Indigenous women and girls....future historians and critics studying Indigenous resistance, both at the barricades and through artistic production, will want this book on their shelves."
"The essays in Keetsahnak outline historical, legal, cultural, philosophical, and psychological perspectives on the topic of missing and murdered women in Canada. Their power is in detailing the affective consequences of living in pain, grief, rage; simultaneously they offer strategic examples of resilience, legal challenges, and paradigm shifts. There is an immediate and personal tone to each essay that provides a transparency to the process and a depth to the volume, reminding us that we have all been affected by the horrors of this reality. This is a serious and important read… [A]n excellent resource for university students taking courses in the fields of sociology, Indigenous Studies, Women Studies, or Social Work.”
"If one wishes to examine this international issue of concern on a personal level, wherein the subject is deeply internalized by many Indigenous women and then shared thoughtfully with the reader, this is a good book with which to do so."
"Contributors to the anthology include family members of MMIWG2S, survivors of violence, activists, artists, counsellors, lawyers, and academics who provide insights from unique vantage points. Their incisive analyses offer us compelling testimonies, models of accountability and care, and proposals for action. Rooted in deeply personal stories, these pieces remind us that antiviolence organizing and theory must emerge out of everyday lived experiences.... Keetsahnak is imbued with an urgent call to rethink, complicate, and deepen our understandings of violence against Indigenous women, girls, and two-spirit people."
"Keetsahnak defies categorisation. The book is fundamentally a collective project that seeks to understand and raise awareness of the issue of MMIWG2S, examining the roots of the violence and registering the resilience of Indigenous peoples. Through chapters that are at once political and personal, intimate and analytical, the volume brings together over 35 contributors to honour Indigenous lives. Yet, the volume emphasises the need for action as well as remembrance... [The] lessons borne out of Keetsahnak’s wide-ranging dialogue are invaluable for Indigenous and allied scholars, policy makers, and activists working to bring an end to this crisis."
“Keetsahnak / Our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Sisters will be welcomed by members of Indigenous communities, scholars and students, and all those who are open to the overarching story of resiliency and resistance being shared.”
Scholarly and Academic Book Award | Alberta Book Publishing Awards, Book Publishers Association of Alberta, Canada
Short-listed
2019
1 Voices from the Downtown Eastside
DEBRA LEO, BEATRICE STARR & STELLA AUGUST
DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE POWER OF WOMEN GROUP
2 Honouring Women
BEVERLY JACOBS
3 Sacred Sisters and Sacred Circles
A Story of One Nehiyawak Family and the Power of Spirit
SANDRA LAMOUCHE
4 Honouring Elsie
Was She Just a Dream?
ANN-MARIE LIVINGSTON & SARAH HUNT
II | The Violence of History
5 Generations of Genocide
The Historical and Sociological Context of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
ROBYN BOURGEOIS
6 A Tradition of Violence
Dehumanization, Stereotyping, and Indigenous Women
MICHELLE GOOD
7 The (Un)Making of Property Gender Violence and the Legal Status of Long Island Algonquian Women
KELSEY T. LEONARD
8 (The Missing Chapter) On Being Missing
From Indian Problem to Indian Problematic
MAYA ODE’AMIK CHACABY
III | Challenges
9 Violence and Extraction
Stories from the Oil Fields
HELEN KNOT T
10 Skirting the Issues
Indigenous Myths, Misses, and Misogyny
ALEX WILSON
11 The Moose in the Room
Indigenous Men and Violence against Women
ROBERT ALEXANDER INNES & KIM ANDERSON
12 Considering Wenonah, Considering Us
WAASEYAA’SIN CHRISTINE SY
13 Centring Resurgence
Taking on Colonial Gender Violence in Indigenous Nation Building
LEANNE BETASAMOSAKE SIMPSON
IV | Action, Always
14 Iskwewuk E-wischiwitochik
Saskatchewan Community Activism to Address Missing and Murdered
Indigenous Women and Girls
DARLENE R. OKEMAYSIM-SICOT TE, SUSAN GINGELL &
RITA BOUVIER
15 Woman Sacred
PAHAN PTE SAN WIN
16 Leading with Our Hearts
Anti-Violence Action and Beadwork Circles as Colonial Resistance
LAURA HARJO, JENELL NAVARRO & KIMBERLY ROBERTSON
Epilogue
Sitting in with Sisters
KIM ANDERSON, TRACY BEAR, CHRISTI BELCOURT, MARIA CAMPBELL, MAYA ODE’AMIK CHACABY, TANYA KAPPO, TARA KAPPO, LYLA KINOSHAMEG, JO-ANNE LAWLESS, BRENDA MACDOUGALL, SYLVIA MARACLE, RAMONA REECE, MADELEINE KÉTÉSKWEW DION STOUT