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Poetry Canadian

she walks for days inside a thousand eyes

(a two-spirit story)

by (author) Sharron Proulx-Turner

Publisher
Turnstone Press
Initial publish date
Jun 2008
Category
Canadian
Recommended Age
16
Recommended Grade
11
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780888013262
    Publish Date
    Jun 2008
    List Price
    $17.95

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Description

In she walks for days inside a thousand eyes (a two spirit story),Sharron Proulx-Turner combines poetry and history to delve into the little-known lives of two-spirit women. Regarded with both wonder and fear when first encountered by the West, First Nations women living with masculine and feminine principles in the same body had important roles to play in society, as healers and visionaries, before they were suppressed during the colonial invasion.she walks for days inside a thousand eye (a two-spirit story) creatively juxtaposes first-person narratives and traditional stories with the voices of contemporary two-spirit women, voices taken from nature, and the teachings of Water, Air, Fire and Mother Earth. The author restores the reputation of two- spirit women that had been long under attack from Western culture as she re-appropriates the lives of these individuals from the writings of Western anthropologists and missionaries.Sharron Proulx-Turner creates a new kind of epic as she bears witness to the past. With gracious concern for tradition, and sly, soaring language, she retells a vital chapter from the First Nations, and Canadian, story.

About the author

Sharron Proulx-Turner is a member of the Métis Nation of Alberta. Originally from the Ottawa river valley, Sharron is from Algonquin, Ojibwe, Mohawk, Wyandat, Mi'kmaw, French and Irish ancestry. She's a two-spirit nokomis, mom, writer and community worker. Where the Rivers Join (1995), a memoir (Beckylane), was a finalist for the Edna Staebler Award for creative non-fiction, and what the auntys say (2002), was a finalist for the Gerald Lampert Prize for poetry. Sharron's work appears in several anthologies, including Oxford Anthology of Canadian Native Literature in English, Crisp Blue Edges, Tales from Moccasin Avenue, Double Lives: Writing and Motherhood, and in literary journals, including Gatherings, Yellow Medicine Review and West Coast Line. Sharron has two more recent books, a mixed-genre-historical-fiction called, she walks for days/ inside a thousand eyes/ a two-spirit story (2008), and a book of dedication poems called, she is reading her blanket with her hands (2008). She is currently transcribing the recorded lifestory of Lakota Elder Beverly Little Thunder, who, together with her daughter Lushanya Echeverria, leads the only all-women's Sundance on Turtle Island. the trees are still bending south is Sharron's fifth book.

Sharron Proulx-Turner's profile page

Librarian Reviews

she walks for days inside a thousand eyes

Told from several perspectives, including that of ‘young crow’, this unique book offers an empowering and sweeping presentation of First Nations histories. Using both prose and poetry, the author weaves a tale that encompasses the breadth of tradition from the origin of the Pleiades to the removal of the Cherokee people from their lands in Oklahoma. Overall, the book reads as if it is an extended story/lesson from an elder. Although the language is poetic, it is approachable and could provide inspiration for student-generated writing or passages for oral interpretation.

Caution: Some may be concerned by the book’s open (but not overtly sexual) discussion of what Proulx-Turner calls “two-spirit women” – women living with masculine and feminine aspects in the same body.

Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. Canadian Aboriginal Books for Schools. 2009-2010.