Write It on Your Heart is a celebration of the late Harry Robinson, one of the great storytellers of the Interior Salish people of North America.
Collected over a ten-year period, the stories selected for this volume tell from a First Nations point of view about the origin of the world; the time of the animal people; the time before the coming of the white man; the stories of power; the prophet cult and its predictions of profound cultural and economic change; and the post-contact world. The collection ends with Robinson’s own version of “Puss in Boots,” true in every psychological detail to the European story, but set in the ranching country of the Similkameen Valley.
This collection is unique in that it chronicles not only the treasure house of a vibrant First Nations culture, but also the sweeping changes which took place in that culture as it began to interact with the new colonists who introduced a foreign language and writing to the mythic world of Coyote, Fox and Owl. As more and more of his listeners, First Nations included, understood only English, Robinson began to tell his old stories in this new language in order to keep them alive. By the time Wendy Wickwire met him in 1977, he had become as skilled a storyteller in English as he had been in his mother tongue. Robinson knew that the profound cultural changes which had taken place in his lifetime would continue and took to heart the matter of preserving the storytelling tradition. With his approval, Wickwire recorded his stories and brought them together in this critically acclaimed collection. Write It on Your Heart stands as a monument to the epic world of Harry Robinson, ensuring its survival in the many generations to come.
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Born in 1900 on a potato farm in Oyama in the Okanagan Valley, Harry Robinson grew up in a small village in the Similkameen Valley of south-central B.C. as a member of the Lower Similkameen Band of the Interior Salish people. A rancher for most of his life, Robinson also looked upon himself as one of the last storytellers of his people. In his boyhood, he spent long hours in the company of his grandmother and other elders, who told him numerous stories that would later become central to his life. He attended a local day school when he was thirteen but soon quit because of the twelve-mile travelling distance.
Nonetheless, he was determined to learn to read and write, and, at the age of twenty-two, he enlisted the help of a friend, Margaret Holding, in his quest to master these skills. In the early 1970s, after the death of his wife, Robinson began to reflect upon the hundreds of stories that he had learned in childhood. As he came to realize fully the importance of the storytelling tradition in his community, he began telling stories in the Okanagan language and became as skilled in English storytelling by his mid-seventies. Wendy Wickwire met Robinson while working on her doctoral thesis and recognized what, as Thomas King would later suggest, may well be “the most powerful storytelling voice in North America.” She began recording the stories in 1977, with Robinson’s approval, and brought them together in the award-winning collection Write It on Your Heart.
Robinson took his role as a storyteller very seriously and worried about the survival of the oral tradition and his stories. “I’m going to disappear”, he told one reporter, “and there’ll be no more telling stories.” He passed away in 1990―shortly after the publication of Write It on Your Heart, the first of three story collections which will ensure the survival of the epic world of Harry Robinson in many generations to come.”
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Anbieter: Better World Books: West, Reno, NV, USA
Zustand: Very Good. Pages intact with possible writing/highlighting. Binding strong with minor wear. Dust jackets/supplements may not be included. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 11820643-6
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Anbieter: Wagon Tongue Books, Linden, AB, Kanada
Soft cover. Zustand: Very Good +. B/W Photographs (illustrator). SUBTITLED : `The Epic World of an Okanagan Storyteller '. Harry's story on page 119 is called ` Coyote Challenges God '. Read more about : Oyama, Chopaka, Keremeos, Athapaskan-speaking, Ashnola, Selina Timoyakin, Alex Skeuce, Felix Johnny, Margaret Holding, Omak rodeo, smoke, coyote, and Similkameen Valley. Wendy Wickwire is responsible for the editing of these 319 pages of First Nations oral history. She presents 28 pages of preliminary information ahead of the traditional stories. A few b/w photographs accompany text. Cond : Paper wrapper is orange to buckskin in colour - a photo from the wilds of B.C. A young Harry and his friend Margaret Holding appear on the cover. .Colours bright, binding tight. Wear at bottom fore corner. Flies open slightly. Clean, no names nor marks. Excellent reading copy ! ! QUote (p. 194) : " That's the way they want, the Indian was. Supposing they figure, if they let the young people know, and nowadays, that they could tell the white people, and they could sell it. They going to get the money from the white people for that rock They might ask $500 or something ._._._. ." Size: 8vo. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 011535
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Anbieter: SHIMEDIA, Brooklyn, NY, USA
Zustand: New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 0889225028