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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mini Aodla Freeman , Keavy Martin , Julie RakPublisher: University of Manitoba Press Imprint: University of Manitoba Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.508kg ISBN: 9780887552137ISBN 10: 0887552137 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 30 April 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAodla is critical of the system that thrust Inuit into southern sanatoriums without providing any communications with families in the north, and of the annual visits her band received from 'big qallunaat who came to count how many of us were left.' In 1960 her own band was relocated and her people lost their occupations. Aodla does not try to explain or simplify this tragic transitional era for northern Canadians. Her book is the story of a very personal journey, and it is a page-turner. --Faith Johnston Winnipeg Free Press From out of the basement and into the hands of readers, Life Among the Qallunaat is funny, engaging, and honest. --Carleigh Baker The Malahat Review Her stories are intelligent and curious and her history is a small piece of the large and complex history of Inuit relocation and assimilation. Her use of memoir allows these stories to become personal, and gives the reader a sense of friendship with Mini herself. --Nancy Campbell Inuit Art Quarterly Life Among the Qallunaat is a book about Mini Aodla Freeman's journey from her small hometown to a big city for a job. The cultural transition from traditional Inuit lifestyle to modernized cities was interesting, humorous, difficult and downright honest. Her perspectives on city culture and lifestyle offers a glimpse into where humans have devolved and progressed through the eyes of an Inuk that knows a supernatural way of living. She tells her story with gentleness, honesty, humour and a love common to all people. --Tanya Roach CBC Books The interview with Freeman that opens this edition is a valuable addition. The interview provides insight into the author's original experiences of writing and publishing as an Indigenous former Canadian government employee of the Department of Northern Affairs and Natural Resources, and is enlightening in terms of the 1960s-1970s environment in which aspiring Indigenous writers operated. This was an era in which contemporary Indigenous voices were first really acknowledged in the mainstream Canadian publishing world. But as Freeman explains, a significant proportion of her original text was cut or heavily edited. This new edition revisits parts of the original manuscript that previously never made it to print. --B.F.R. Edwards CHOICE This revised edition of Life Among the Qallunaat make an important contribution to the canon of Indigenous autobiography, particularly as it consciously seeks to restore the author's agency and original intents--with her permission and input. --Laura M. Furlan Studies in American Indian Literatures More than a candid look at our culture, the book is a vivid account of [Mini Aodla Freeman's] childhood and adolescence, of Inuit customs, of the rules which ensure their physical and emotional survival.--Carole Corbeil Globe and Mail Aodla is critical of the system that thrust Inuit into southern sanatoriums without providing any communications with families in the north, and of the annual visits her band received from 'big qallunaat who came to count how many of us were left.' In 1960 her own band was relocated and her people lost their occupations. Aodla does not try to explain or simplify this tragic transitional era for northern Canadians. Her book is the story of a very personal journey, and it is a page-turner. --Faith Johnston Winnipeg Free Press From out of the basement and into the hands of readers, Life Among the Qallunaat is funny, engaging, and honest. --Carleigh Baker The Malahat Review Her stories are intelligent and curious and her history is a small piece of the large and complex history of Inuit relocation and assimilation. Her use of memoir allows these stories to become personal, and gives the reader a sense of friendship with Mini herself. --Nancy Campbell Inuit Art Quarterly Life Among the Qallunaat is a book about Mini Aodla Freeman's journey from her small hometown to a big city for a job. The cultural transition from traditional Inuit lifestyle to modernized cities was interesting, humorous, difficult and downright honest. Her perspectives on city culture and lifestyle offers a glimpse into where humans have devolved and progressed through the eyes of an Inuk that knows a supernatural way of living. She tells her story with gentleness, honesty, humour and a love common to all people. --Tanya Roach CBC Books The interview with Freeman that opens this edition is a valuable addition. The interview provides insight into the author's original experiences of writing and publishing as an Indigenous former Canadian government employee of the Department of Northern Affairs and Natural Resources, and is enlightening in terms of the 1960s-1970s environment in which aspiring Indigenous writers operated. This was an era in which contemporary Indigenous voices were first really acknowledged in the mainstream Canadian publishing world. But as Freeman explains, a significant proportion of her original text was cut or heavily edited. This new edition revisits parts of the original manuscript that previously never made it to print. --B.F.R. Edwards CHOICE This revised edition of Life Among the Qallunaat make an important contribution to the canon of Indigenous autobiography, particularly as it consciously seeks to restore the author's agency and original intents--with her permission and input. --Laura M. Furlan Studies in American Indian Literatures More than a candid look at our culture, the book is a vivid account of [Mini Aodla Freeman's] childhood and adolescence, of Inuit customs, of the rules which ensure their physical and emotional survival.--Carole Corbeil Globe and Mail Author InformationKeavy Martin is an associate professor in the Department of English and Film Studies at the University of Alberta. Mini Aodla Freeman was born in 1936 on Cape Hope Island in James Bay. At the age of sixteen, she began nurse's training at Ste. Therese School in Fort George, Quebec, and in 1957 she moved to Ottawa to work as a translator for the then Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources. Her memoir, Life Among the Qallunaat, was published in 1978 and has been translated into French, German, and Greenlandic. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |