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SUMMARY:Honouring Indigenous Writers - Author Reading and Conversation with Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm and Dallas Hunt
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a reading and conversation with Kateri 
 Akiwenzie-Damm and Dallas Hunt presenting on Akiwenzie-Damm’s recently 
 released poetry anthology\,  (Re)Generation: The Poetry of Kateri 
 Akiwenzie-Damm\, edited with an introduction by Hunt. Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm 
 is a profoundly influential figure in Indigneous literature\, founding 
 Kegedonce Press. Kegedonce has published and been supporting Indigenous 
 authors\, illustrators\, editors\, and designers since 1993. 
 Akiwenzie-Damm’s own writing\, both critical and creative\, is similarly 
 path-clearing\, throwing into relief the nuances and complexities of 
 Indigenous erotica and inviting Indigneous conversation on a global scale 
 (well before global Indigenous literatures was an established part of the 
 field. Akiwenzie-Damm’s latest collection\,\n\n(Re)Generation\, edited 
 with an introduction by Cree poet and scholar\, Dallas Hunt\, contains 
 selected poetry exploring a range of issues: from violence against 
 Indigenous women and lands to Indigenous erotica and the joyous intimate 
 encounters between bodies. The introduction by Hunt locates her work within 
 the field of Indigenous literature and meditates on her influence on the 
 field of Indigenous erotica.   \n\nHunt and Akiwenzie-Damm will join David 
 Gaertner in conversation about their collaboration and some of the themes 
 that stretch across Akiwenzie-Damm’s distinguished career as a poet\, 
 publisher\, and cultural worker. Resilience\, love\, sexuality\, anger\, 
 and Indigenous brilliance are just some of the themes that will resonate 
 throughout this event.   \n\nSpeakers\n\nKateri Akiwenzie-Damm is a member 
 of the Saugeen Ojibway Nation\, Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation\, 
 on the Saugeen Peninsula in Ontario. Kateri is a poet\, writer\, spoken 
 word artist\, Indigenous arts advocate\, publisher\, and educator. She is 
 an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto Scarborough\, teaching 
 creative writing\, Indigenous literatures\, and oral traditions in the 
 English Department. Previously\, she has taught creative writing and 
 Indigenous literatures at the University of Manitoba\, the Banff Centre’s 
 Aboriginal Arts Program\, and the En’owkin International School of 
 Writing in partnership with the University of Victoria. Her publications 
 encompass fiction\, non-fiction\, radio plays\, television and film\, 
 libretti\, a graphic novel\, spoken word CDs\, and two collections of 
 poetry. Her teaching and creative work is firmly decolonial\, a practice of 
 cultural resurgence\, affirmation and survivance. Kateri is a nominee for 
 the 2021 Ontario Arts Council Indigenous Arts Award and a recipient of a 
 2016 Hnatyshyn Foundation REVEAL Indigenous Arts Award for writing. Her 
 2015 book of short stories\, The Stone Collection\, was a finalist for the 
 Sarton Literary Book Awards\, and her collaborative recording A 
 Constellation of Bones was a nominee for a 2008 Canadian Aboriginal Music 
 Award. Kateri was the 2011–2012 Poet Laureate for Owen Sound and North 
 Grey. She initiated and was a co-organizer of the first Indigenous Comics 
 Symposium in 2021 and founded and co- ordinated the first Honouring Words: 
 International Indigenous Authors Celebration Tour in 2003. She is the 
 founder and publisher of Kegedonce Press\, Ontario’s longest-running 
 Indigenous literary publisher. Recently\, Kateri recorded the audiobook for 
 The Stone Collection and completed Reconciling the Books\, a new collection 
 of poetry. She is currently working on a collection of humorous short 
 stories and her second graphic novel. Kateri lives with her mother Julie 
 and the two loves of her life\, her sons Kegedonce and Gaadoohn.\n\nDallas 
 Hunt is Cree and a member of Wapsewsipi (Swan River First Nation) in Treaty 
 Eight territory in northern Alberta. He has had creative work published in 
 Contemporary Verse 2\, Prairie Fire\, PRISM international and Arc Poetry. 
 His first children’s book\, Awâsis and the World-famous Bannock\, was 
 published through Highwater Press in 2018. His new book\, CREELAND\, is out 
 through Nightwood Editions. Hunt is an assistant professor of Indigenous 
 literatures at the University of British Columbia.\n\n \n\nLocation 
 Details\n\n\n	Location:\n	*ONLINE*\n\n\nIf you have any questions\, 
 concerns\, or accessibility needs please email open.ubc@ubc.ca.\n\nThis 
 event is part of the Honouring Indigenous Writers series\, which seeks to 
 increase awareness of Indigenous authors.  This year we have put together a 
 schedule of author readings and workshops throughout the month of March\, 
 as well as asynchronous Wikipedia increase awareness of Indigenous 
 literature\, and improve the coverage of Indigenous writers on 
 Wikipedia.\n\nThis event is online. Registrants receive the link 24 hours 
 before the event.
ORGANIZER;CN="Scholarly Communications Unit":MAILTO:scholarly.communications@ubc.ca
CATEGORIES:Open Education Week , Open Scholarship, Research Commons
CONTACT;CN="Scholarly Communications Unit":MAILTO:scholarly.communications@ubc.ca
STATUS:CONFIRMED
UID:LibCal-3662908
URL:https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3662908
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