|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
Overview2022 High Plains Book Award Finalist ""Eye-opening and compelling...required reading for those who would call this land home."" --KIRKUS REVIEWS The Bundy takeover of Oregon's Malheur Wildlife Refuge and the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe's standoff against an oil pipeline in North Dakota are two sides of the same story that created America and its deep-rooted cultural conflicts. Through a compelling comparison of conflicting beliefs and legal systems, Keeler explores whether the West has really been won--and for whom. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jacqueline KeelerPublisher: Torrey House Press Imprint: Torrey House Press Dimensions: Width: 13.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.10cm Weight: 0.295kg ISBN: 9781948814270ISBN 10: 1948814277 Pages: 236 Publication Date: 20 April 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback 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 ContentsReviewsPraise for Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for the Bears Ears, edited by Jacqueline Keeler Encompassing wisdom and grace, Edge of Morning is a finessed articulation of respect and the simplicity of being human...thoughtful, sobering, and expansive. --FOREWORD REVIEWS An important new collection of Native American writers essaying the cultural significance of Utah's Bears Ears landscape...Edge of Morning includes works from members of different tribes, as well as different levels of expertise...scholars and grassroots activists, and from poets as well as prose writers. --THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE This beautiful collection presents Native American expressions in poems, essays, reflections and interviews. While all the pieces focus on Bears Ears, it's their illumination of Native Americans' kinship to land that make these texts such an important read...The native voices of this collection offer their timely wisdom with a grace and power that offers peace to our planet and to ourselves. --THE DESERET NEWS Edge of Morning will...invigorate the public policy details of environmental issues and natural conservation with new voices that not only inspire emotionally but also lay out the significant cultural case that compels a new point of view about the stewardship of public lands. --THE UTAH REVIEW This anthology seeks to tell stories by native writers about the Bears Ears and its importance. Storytelling is a way of making sure the importance of the land is known, and can help spread awareness...a worthy project. --THE SEATTLE REVIEW OF BOOKS ""Eye-opening and compelling...required reading for those who would call this land home."" --KIRKUS REVIEWS ""Keeler makes a compelling case...her elucidation of how the domination of the written word over oral storytelling contributes to the unequal application of justice adds fascinating context."" --MINNESOTA STAR TRIBUNE ""Rigorous analysis and personal storytelling invigorate Jacqueline Keeler's examination of Indigenous vs. colonial land tenure. Standoff recounts the historic legacy of treaty rights and sacred space underpinning Standing Rock's case against the Dakota Access Pipeline, and contrasts this legacy with the white entitlement as well as cultural land desecrations of the Bundy movement. Standoff is a powerful, illuminating book."" --LOUISE ERDRICH, author of The Night Watchman ""Jacqueline Keeler weaves personal experience, cultural awareness, and journalistic acumen to tell a compelling story that compares and contrasts two modern and historic Western encounters between federal land policy and the people who inhabit these lands. 'Whose land is it anyway?' Keeler ultimately asks, and finding the answer is a task that requires deep reflection from all of us who share these magnificent vistas."" --CHRIS LA TRAY, author of Becoming Little Shell ""Environmental activists, Indigenous rights activists, and allies should take note of the challenging, unjust, and at times beautiful accounts shared here, which illuminate the complexity of what it means to stand in solidarity in a colonial state."" --MARISA ELENA DUARTE, Assistant Professor, Arizona State University School of Social Transformation ""Jacqueline Keeler, a master storyteller and reporter, crafts a knotty skein, twining together family traditions, Native and colonial histories, personal experiences, and crackerjack journalism. Standoff explores inequity and entitlement, seeking answers to what American land means to cultures with divergent values and uneven advantages."" --BETSY GAINES QUAMMEN, author of American Zion and True West ""Standoff has the potential to launch a trend of orderly and pertinent analysis of the societal, cultural and structural issues that provide the context within which today's Indian Movement(s) operate and presents a challenge to Indian people whether we continue to play the game of accepting our 'place' in America or define who we are and what we want to be."" --SAM DELORIA, law professor emeritus, University of New Mexico ""This is the kind of book we owe to young Indigenous kids. They deserve the truth, even if it hurts, and this brave, well-sourced journalism deserves to be named for what it will go down in history as: perhaps the most in-depth look at the #NoDAPL movement, coming from where it should: your nation and from within Indian country."" --DESIREE KANE, journalist Jacqueline Keeler weaves personal experience, cultural awareness, and journalistic acumen to tell a compelling story that compares and contrasts two modern and historic Western encounters between federal land policy and the people who inhabit these lands. 'Whose land is it anyway?' Keeler ultimately asks, and finding the answer is a task that requires deep reflection from all of us who share these magnificent vistas. --CHRIS LA TRAY, author of Becoming Little Shell Environmental activists, Indigenous rights activists, and allies should take note of the challenging, unjust, and at times beautiful accounts shared here, which illuminate the complexity of what it means to stand in solidarity in a colonial state. --MARISA ELENA DUARTE, Assistant Professor, Arizona State University School of Social Transformation Jacqueline Keeler, a master storyteller and reporter, crafts a knotty skein, twining together family traditions, Native and colonial histories, personal experiences, and crackerjack journalism. Standoff explores inequity and entitlement, seeking answers to what American land means to cultures with divergent values and uneven advantages. --BETSY GAINES QUAMMEN, author of American Zion Standoff has the potential to launch a trend of orderly and pertinent analysis of the societal, cultural and structural issues that provide the context within which today's Indian Movement(s) operate and presents a challenge to Indian people whether we continue to play the game of accepting our 'place' in America or define who we are and what we want to be. --SAM DELORIA, law professor emeritus, University of New Mexico This is the kind of book we owe to young Indigenous kids. They deserve the truth, even if it hurts, and this brave, well-sourced journalism deserves to be named for what it will go down in history as: perhaps the most in-depth look at the #NoDAPL movement, coming from where it should: your nation and from within Indian country. --DESIREE KANE, journalist Author InformationJACQUELINE KEELER is a Dine/Ihanktonwan Dakota writer living in Portland, Oregon. She is editor of the anthology Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for the Bears Ears and has contributed to many publications including The Nation, Yes! magazine, and Salon. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |