Bitterroot: A Salish Memoir of Transracial Adoption

Author:   Susan Devan Harness
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
ISBN:  

9781496207463


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   01 October 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $92.27 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Bitterroot: A Salish Memoir of Transracial Adoption


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Susan Devan Harness
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
Imprint:   University of Nebraska Press
ISBN:  

9781496207463


ISBN 10:   1496207467
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   01 October 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Prologue 1. I Wasn’t Born; I Was Adopted 2. Coming-of-Age without a Net 3. Coping Mechanisms 4. Lost Bearings 5. Sliding 6. Fort Laramie 7. Institutions of Higher Learning 8. Coyote 9. How Rez Cars Are Made 10. Thicker Than Water, Thinner Than Time 11. In Memory 12. Too White to Be Indian, Too Indian to Be White 13. This Once Used to Be Ours 14. Integration 15. Custer’s Ghost 16. Vernon 17. Will You Be Here Tomorrow? 18. Gifts 19. Losing the Master Key Epilogue

Reviews

A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living `in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives -- John Calderazzo One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart-wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage -- Luana Ross Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams -- Harrison Candelaria Fletcher A moving tale of assimilation and cultural search for identity. -Vernon Schmid, Roundup Magazine -- Vernon Schmid * Roundup Magazine * Though there is a distinct sense of dissonance throughout the book, Sue still locates pride in her heritage, when all is said and done. And in finding pride in a troubled history, she is more able to combat her own internal conflict. Despite feelings of abandonment and nonbelonging, love and understanding can still prevail. -Victoria Collins, Hippocampus Magazine -- Victoria Collins * Hippocampus Magazine * What does it mean to be Native when you weren't raised Native? What does it mean when the members of your birth family who remained on the reservation tell you that you were lucky to be raised elsewhere, but you don't feel lucky? Harness brings us right into the middle of these questions and shows how emotionally fraught they can be. . . . It's time everyone learned about the many ways there are of being Native. -Carter Meland, Star Tribune -- Carter Meland * Star Tribune *


A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living `in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives -- John Calderazzo One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart-wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage -- Luana Ross Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams -- Harrison Candelaria Fletcher


A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living `in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives -- John Calderazzo One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart-wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage -- Luana Ross Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams -- Harrison Candelaria Fletcher Though there is a distinct sense of dissonance throughout the book, Sue still locates pride in her heritage, when all is said and done. And in finding pride in a troubled history, she is more able to combat her own internal conflict. Despite feelings of abandonment and nonbelonging, love and understanding can still prevail. -Victoria Collins, Hippocampus Magazine -- Victoria Collins * Hippocampus Magazine * What does it mean to be Native when you weren't raised Native? What does it mean when the members of your birth family who remained on the reservation tell you that you were lucky to be raised elsewhere, but you don't feel lucky? Harness brings us right into the middle of these questions and shows how emotionally fraught they can be. . . . It's time everyone learned about the many ways there are of being Native. -Carter Meland, Star Tribune -- Carter Meland * Star Tribune *


A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living `in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives -- John Calderazzo One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage -- Luana Ross Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams -- Harrison Candelaria Fletcher


A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living 'in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives -- John Calderazzo One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart-wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage -- Luana Ross Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams -- Harrison Candelaria Fletcher


What does it mean to be Native when you weren't raised Native? What does it mean when the members of your birth family who remained on the reservation tell you that you were lucky to be raised elsewhere, but you don't feel lucky? Harness brings us right into the middle of these questions and shows how emotionally fraught they can be. . . . It's time everyone learned about the many ways there are of being Native. -Carter Meland, (Minneapolis) Star Tribune As with any good memoirist, Susan Devan Harness intersperses the past with the present to create dramatic tension, relating how her experience as the American Indian adoptee of white parents shaped her understanding of identity, family, and social responsibility. -House of Books Though there is a distinct sense of dissonance throughout the book, Sue still locates pride in her heritage, when all is said and done. And in finding pride in a troubled history, she is more able to combat her own internal conflict. Despite feelings of abandonment and nonbelonging, love and understanding can still prevail. -Victoria Collins, Hippocampus Magazine A moving tale of assimilation and cultural search for identity. -Vernon Schmid, Roundup Magazine Making sense of her family, the American Indian history of assimilation, and the very real-but culturally constructed-concept of race helped Harness answer the often puzzling questions of stereotypes, a sense of nonbelonging, the meaning of family, and the importance of forgiveness and self-acceptance. In the process Bitterroot also provides a deep and rich context in which to experience life. -Prairie Edge The collective scholarly and political work that Harness's writing has supported and inspired, and now is continuing in her memoir, offers the hope that a more humane approach to transracial adoption-one that works with and learns from Indigenous traditions-is possible. -Lori Askeland, Adoption and Culture Harness's memoir tells a story that we are not often told, one that has taken a generation of knowledge from us and held it hostage, trapped in liminal spaces just out of reach, locked in government offices and files. Hers is a story that our old people remember, but cannot tell, and one that our young people need to hear. -Tarren Andrews, Transmotion Harness has converted her childhood and early adulthood traumas into a story that can save lives. Bitterroot will be a soothing balm, an extended hand, to anyone who faces the demons of abuse and trauma and is an authoritative guide to those seeking to understand the historical and social structures that perpetuate the vulnerability of Indigenous children and families today. -Katrina Jagodinsky, Oregon Historical Quarterly Bitterroot is an inspiration-one woman's quest to find herself among the racial, cultural, economic, and historical fault lines of the American West. A compelling, important memoir, as tenaciously beautiful as the flower for which it's named. -Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, author of Presentimiento: A Life in Dreams One Salish-Kootenai woman's journey, this memoir is a heart-wrenching story of finding family and herself, and of a particularly horrific time in Native history. It is a strong and well-told narrative of adoption, survival, resilience, and is truthfully revealed. -Luana Ross (Bitterroot Salish), codirector of Native Voices Documentary Film at the University of Washington and author of Inventing the Savage A page-turner of a memoir that illuminates a great historical injustice. With wit and a sturdy heart, Susan Harness plumbs her own and the American West's uneasy past to shed the burden of living 'in between' and find wholeness. A compelling and moving story. -John Calderazzo, author of Rising Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives


Author Information

Susan Devan Harness (Confederated Salish Kootenai Tribes) is a writer, lecturer, and oral historian and has been a research associate for the Tri-Ethnic Center for Prevention Research at Colorado State University. She is the author of Mixing Cultural Identities Through Transracial Adoption: Outcomes of the Indian Adoption Project (1958–1967).  

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List