“Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”

The present essay is dedicated to reflecting upon Jeannette Armstrong’s Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water, a picture book in which this Okanagan artist, writer and educator is committed to presenting counter-images to the official history of the encounter between Aboriginals and settlers. In fact, as Heat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Amante, Susana
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/2028
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spelling ftipviseu:oai:repositorio.ipv.pt:10400.19/2028 2023-05-15T16:16:50+02:00 “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers” Amante, Susana 2014-02-13T10:54:29Z http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/2028 eng eng 1-4438-4920-0 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/2028 restrictedAccess Children's literature First Nations bookPart 2014 ftipviseu 2021-08-11T19:39:15Z The present essay is dedicated to reflecting upon Jeannette Armstrong’s Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water, a picture book in which this Okanagan artist, writer and educator is committed to presenting counter-images to the official history of the encounter between Aboriginals and settlers. In fact, as Heather Glebe once pointed out in Cross Canada Writers’ Magazine, Jeannette Armstrong “. is committed to promoting cross-cultural understanding through literature.” (Glebe, 1990: 6), an understanding that brings all of us together, beyond our differences. This understanding and healthy syncretism is even more necessary for the well-being of humankind now at a time when the global economic crisis – and a crisis of values as a consequence (or is the former a consequence of the latter?) – is being felt deeply around the world. It is time for us to open one’s heart and mind to others, respect them and listen actively to their words, for “. it is the duty of each person to care for and take care of one another and seek to resolve conflicts among the people so that the process of life will not be interrupted” (George, “Life is the Gift of Nature but Beautiful Living is the Gift of Wisdom”, 1990: 193). Because these are discourses that matter, I will attempt to show the other side of the story in Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water and discuss how children’s literature may be the way out of crisis, since it raises one’s awareness and promotes critical thinking. Book Part First Nations Repositório do Instituto Politécnico de Viseu Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório do Instituto Politécnico de Viseu
op_collection_id ftipviseu
language English
topic Children's literature
First Nations
spellingShingle Children's literature
First Nations
Amante, Susana
“Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
topic_facet Children's literature
First Nations
description The present essay is dedicated to reflecting upon Jeannette Armstrong’s Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water, a picture book in which this Okanagan artist, writer and educator is committed to presenting counter-images to the official history of the encounter between Aboriginals and settlers. In fact, as Heather Glebe once pointed out in Cross Canada Writers’ Magazine, Jeannette Armstrong “. is committed to promoting cross-cultural understanding through literature.” (Glebe, 1990: 6), an understanding that brings all of us together, beyond our differences. This understanding and healthy syncretism is even more necessary for the well-being of humankind now at a time when the global economic crisis – and a crisis of values as a consequence (or is the former a consequence of the latter?) – is being felt deeply around the world. It is time for us to open one’s heart and mind to others, respect them and listen actively to their words, for “. it is the duty of each person to care for and take care of one another and seek to resolve conflicts among the people so that the process of life will not be interrupted” (George, “Life is the Gift of Nature but Beautiful Living is the Gift of Wisdom”, 1990: 193). Because these are discourses that matter, I will attempt to show the other side of the story in Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water and discuss how children’s literature may be the way out of crisis, since it raises one’s awareness and promotes critical thinking.
format Book Part
author Amante, Susana
author_facet Amante, Susana
author_sort Amante, Susana
title “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
title_short “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
title_full “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
title_fullStr “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
title_full_unstemmed “Enwhisteetkwa/Walk in Water: The Okanagan Version of the History of the Encounter Between Aboriginals and Settlers”
title_sort “enwhisteetkwa/walk in water: the okanagan version of the history of the encounter between aboriginals and settlers”
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/2028
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation 1-4438-4920-0
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/2028
op_rights restrictedAccess
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