NISHGA: Kanata Classics Edition

Jordan Abel
Introduction David Chariandy
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NISHGA: Kanata Classics Edition

Jordan Abel
Introduction David Chariandy
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CHOIX DE HEATHERCANADA304 PAGESANGLAIS

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“With NISHGA, Jordan Abel has reinvented the memoir, incorporating personal anecdotes, archival footage, legal documentation, photos and concrete poetry to create an unforgettable portrait of an Indigenous artist trying to find his place in a world that insists Indigeneity can only ever be the things that he is not. Abel deftly shows us the devastating impact this gate-keeping has had on those who, through no decisions of their own, have been ripped from our communities and forced to claw their way back home, or to a semblance of home, often unassisted. This is a brave, vulnerable, brilliant work that will change the face of nonfiction, as well as the conversations around what constitutes Indigenous identity. It's a work I will return to again and again.”  —Alicia Elliott, author of A Mind Spread Out on the Ground
 
“In NISHGA, Jordan Abel puts to use the documentary impulse that has already established him as an artist of inimitable methodological flair. By way of a mixture of testimonial vignettes, recordings of academic talks, found text/art, and visual art/concrete poetry, Abel sculpts a narrative of dislocation and self-examination that pressurizes received notions of “Canada” and “history” and “art” and “literature” and “belonging” and “forgiveness.” Yes, it is a book of that magnitude, of that enormity and power. By its Afterword, NISHGA adds up to a work of personal and national reckoning that is by turns heartbreaking and scathing.” —Billy-Ray Belcourt, author of NDN Coping Mechanisms and A History of My Brief Body

"This is a heartshattering read, and will also be a blanket for others looking for home. NISHGA is a work of absolute courage and vulnerability. I am in complete awe of the sorrow here and the bravery. Mahsi cho, Jordan.” —Richard Van Camp, author of Moccasin Square Gardens

“Jordan Abel digs deeply into the questions we should all be asking. Questions that need no explanation but ones that require us to crawl back into our bones, back into the marrow of our understanding. NISHGA is a ceremony where we need to be silent. Where we need to listen.” —Gregory Scofield, author of Witness, I Am

"NISHGA
is a book that cascades across borders, genres, temporalities, and oralities. This book wounded me, but in a way that I felt seen and held. Here is a book, by which I mean a body of text, blown righteous with holes from behind which dispossessed and disenfranchised Indigenous historicities peek. This book is a masterpiece and a text direly needed for those in conversations of: reconciliation and decolonization, literature and literary practices, Indigeneity and its ability for survivability (or what you may call our 'resilience')—see here the embodied horror of the revenant that is Canadian legacy and the exhaustive work one undertakes to animate language as NISHGA." —Joshua Whitehead, author of Jonny Appleseed and full-metal indigiqueer

"NISHGA is a book of profound artistic, philosophic, and emotional power. Reading it, I was taught, heart-moved, and deeply humbled." —David Chariandy, author of Brother and I've Been Meaning to Tell You

Overall rating: 4.0 / 5 from 3 reviews.

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Niska - It let me to buy the book, and it led me down a different path than I was expecting

"This took me a while to get into, but the author led me through many native issues in this story"

Lyndi (5/5)

Eye-opening memoir

"This is told from an Indigenous point of view. Very revealing, also sad to consider how poorly white man has treated the native people."

Teddy C. (5/5)

Deeply Disappointed

"I am a white, male Canadian. I grew up in the Greater Toronto Area. My ancestry is British. I had never heard the term ""residential school"" until four years ago. When I began to learn about this horrid period of our history, which did not end until 1996, I hung my head in shame. I sincerely want to learn more about residential schools, and the impact they had on so many Indigenous people in Canada. I am not going to learn much from Nishga, I am afraid. The stories are mostly about Jordan Abel, his family, broken and dysfunctional, but hardly unique to Indigenous people. I will confess I did not read the whole book, but I did get through the first 100 pages or so, and all I learned was that Abel's father was a deadbeat Dad who committed sexual assault. The other thing that I found disappointing about the book is all the artwork, which I am sure is spectacular, is in black and white. Indigenous art, what little I have seen, is usually rich in color and that is part of the expression of the art. This is not a $12. 95 paperback. It is a hardbound book, with reasonably high-quality paper, so they could have printed color pictures. For Canadians who are reasonably ignorant about this historical blemish, you won't learn much from this book. I would recommend giving it a pass if you want to learn about residential schools."

BobP (2/5)

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  • Date de publication : Jul 15, 2025
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 304
  • Éditeur : McClelland & Stewart
  • ISBN : 9780771023491
  • Dimensions : 5.54" W x 0.8" L x 8.26" H
JORDAN ABEL is a queer Nisga’a writer from Vancouver. He is the author of The Place of Scraps (winner of the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize), Un/inhabited, Injun (winner of the Griffin Poetry Prize), and Empty Spaces (winner of the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction). NISHGA won the Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize and the VMI Betsy Warland Between Genres award, and was a finalist for the Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction, the Wilfrid Eggleston Award for Nonfiction, and the Roderick Haig-Brown Regional Prize. Abel’s work has been published in numerous journals and magazines—including Canadian Literature, The Capilano Review, and The Fiddlehead—and his work has been anthologized widely, including The Broadview Introduction to Literature. Abel completed a Ph.D. at Simon Fraser University in 2019, and is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of English and Film Studies at the University of Alberta where he teaches Indigenous Literatures, Research-Creation, and Creative Writing.

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