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The arts of Indigenous health and well-being

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    Publisher:
    University of Manitoba Press, 2021
    Note: Alberta Municipal Affairs' Public Library Services Branch

Details:

  • Contributor: Styvendale, Nancy Van; McDougall, j d; Henry, Robert; Innes, Robert Alexander
    Date:
    Created
    2021
    Summary:

    Drawing attention to the ways in which creative practices are essential to the health, well-being, and healing of Indigenous peoples, The Arts of Indigenous Health and Well-Being addresses the effects of artistic endeavour on the "good life", or mino-pimatisiwin in Cree, which can be described as the balanced interconnection of physical, emotional, spiritual, and mental well-being. In this interdisciplinary collection, Indigenous knowledges inform an approach to health as a wider set of relations that are central to well-being, wherein artistic expression furthers cultural continuity and resilience, community connection, and kinship to push back against forces of fracture and disruption imposed by colonialism. The need for healing-not only individuals but health systems and practices-is clear, especially as the trauma of colonialism is continually revealed and perpetuated within health systems. The field of Indigenous health has recently begun to recognize the fundamental connection between creative expression and well-being. This book brings together scholarship by humanities scholars, social scientists, artists, and those holding experiential knowledge from across Turtle Island to add urgently needed perspectives to this conversation. Contributors embrace a diverse range of research methods, including community-engaged scholarship with Indigenous youth, artists, Elders, and language keepers. The Arts of Indigenous Health and Well-Being demonstrates the healing possibilities of Indigenous works of art, literature, film, and music from a diversity of Indigenous peoples and arts traditions. This book will resonate with health practitioners, community members, and any who recognize the power of art as a window, an entryway to access a healthy and good life.

    Contents:
    • Chapter 1: What This Pouch Holds
    • Chapter 2: Baskets, Birchbark Scrolls, and Maps of Land: Indigenous Making Practices as Oral Historiography
    • Chapter 3: For Kaydence and her Cousins: Health and Happiness in Cultural Legacies and Contemporary Contexts
    • Chapter 4: Stories and Staying Power: Art-Making as (Re)Source of Cultural Resilience and Well-Being for Panniqtumiut
    • Chapter 5: Healthy Connections: Facilitators' Perceptions of Programming Linking Arts and Wellness with Indigenous Youth
    • Chapter 6: Narrating Relations: Genetic Ancestry Testing and Alternarratives of Queer Kinship
    • Chapter 7: The Doubleness of Sound in Canada's Indian Residential Schools
    • Chapter 8 Kissed by Lightning: Mediating Haudenosaunee Traditional Teachings through Film
    • Chapter 9: Minobimaadiziwinke (Creating a Good Life): Native Bodies Healing
    • Chapter 10: Body Counts: War, Pesticides and Queer Spirituality in Cherrie Moraga's Heroes and Saints
    • Chapter 11: "The Song of the Starved Soul"
    • Chapter 12 Sakihiwawin: Land's Overflow into the space-tial "Otherwise"
    Original Publisher: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, University of Manitoba Press
    Language(s): English
    ISBN: 9780887559419
    Collection(s)/Series: Prairie Indigenous eBook Collection