Unreconciled: Family, Truth, and Indigenous Resistance

Jesse Wente
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Unreconciled: Family, Truth, and Indigenous Resistance

Jesse Wente
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Trouvé dans : Community & Culture, Indigenous Voices

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Overall rating: 4.866667 / 5 from 15 reviews.

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Review topics: [book, read, memoir, advice, look, experience].

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Reviews

Indigenous Canadian content help

"Excellent perspectives on Truth and Reconciliation. I recommend for educators especially those teaching Indigenous content courses."

Jen K. (5/5)

Recommended

"Such a great book, really eye opening and captivating"

Heather (5/5)

Amazing book!

"Jesse is an amazing author! He does not shy away from anything in this book! It illustrates his life as an Indigenous person in Toronto struggling with his identity. This book is thought provoking in a way that makes the reader think about the continuing impacts of colonialism within Canada and how there is still much work needs to be done."

Ashlynhughes (5/5)

Important read!

"This is an important read that touches on some of the many layers of colonialism and racism across generations. Beautifully written in a way that is informative and will capture your attention. Wente weaves his own personal struggles of his past with problems today and points to a direction of moving forward. Touches on media representation of Indigenous people that is embedded in our culture that continues to reinforce colonialism and racism. As well as tokenism and the complicated relationship with Canada that has always wanted to be seen as peacemakers and peacekeepers. Wente also explores the connection between colonialism, capitalism and police. The history and origin of policing in Canada is based on racism and white supremacy. Policing was ultimately designed to reinforce the status quo, protect property and to assert and maintain colonial sovereignty."

Kayla (5/5)

Great Book!

"I loved reading this book. Very insightful. I found I needed breaks while reading to fully digest the content. A must read for anyone wanting to learn and better understand how to work with and for Indigenous communities."

Ashlyn (5/5)

Must read!

"An unforgettable look at the horrors of the residential school system"

Barbara (5/5)

Read It!!!

"Amazing!! Reading this opened some eyes that sort of was only shown half truths"

Stacy (5/5)

Must-read compelling memoir!

"Such a compelling memoir! Wente delivers a profoundly unvarnished, engaging and urgent portrait. I have gifted this to many other friends as it is a must-read."

Kaye (5/5)

Fabulous read

"Jesse Wente knows what he talks of but fixing this ingrained prejudice is going to require a total conscious and unconscious thought revolution for everybody. I fervently hope some day we will all live in peace with respect for each other although that may not happen in my lifetime."

Marianne (5/5)

More questions than answers

"Wente gives valuable lessons straight from the shoulder of his lived experience as an Indigenous Canadian including the real meaning of such issues as cultural appropriation. I also appreciated his positive advice to his own community for moving out of their long standing oppression: "". . . one of the simplest ways to decolonize is to create"". However, his analysis of the Indigenous situation in Canada I found confusing: (a) He admits his own confusion/contradiction in speaking as an activist against the poverty of his own people from a position of privilege in the society of the oppressors; he laments his grandparents having to cut their hair to fit into a foreign society but objects to being asked to grow his own hair to show his true identify; (b) he confuses the racial issue of the oppression brought on by White vs Indigenous racism with the non-racial issues of oppression brought on by privileged vs, disadvantaged, including the education system, the policing system and even capitalism; He also appears to fall into the simplistic analysis of the controversial ""woke"" ideology and stereotypes: White people are power hungry oppressors; Indigenous people are their helpless victims. Serpent River, the innocents vs Toronto the bad. I agree with his movie review of Avatar with its vacuous plot and stereotypes. I would like to have heard his review of a more nuanced view of the two ""societies"", such as Geronimo,which teaches us that reconciliation comes not from political movements but from a grass-roots building of individual relationships of trust and mutual respect."

Martin (3/5)

Q&A

  • Date de publication : Jun 14, 2022
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 208
  • Éditeur : Penguin Canada
  • ISBN : 9780735235755
  • Dimensions : 5.18" W x 0.55" L x 8.0" H
NATIONAL BESTSELLER

WINNER of the 2022 Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize for Non-Fiction
SHORTLISTED for the 2023 Speaker's Book Award

A GLOBE AND MAIL BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

Praise for Unreconciled:


"Unreconciled is one hell of a good book. Jesse Wente’s narrative moves effortlessly from the personal to the historical to the contemporary. Very powerful, and a joy to read."
—Thomas King, author of The Inconvenient Indian and Sufferance

“With Unreconciled, Jesse Wente proves himself to be one of the most influential Anishinaabe thinkers of our time. By telling his own story, Jesse provides Canada with an essential roadmap of how to move forward  through the myth of reconciliation towards the possibility of a just country. There is much work to be done but reading Jesse’s words, soaking them in and letting them settle in your mind, will set us all on the right path.”
—Tanya Talaga, bestselling author of Seven Fallen Feathers

Mahsi cho, Jesse Wente, for illuminating the biggest issue facing Canada’s relationship with Indigenous people: Canada fears Indigenous people because Canada is terrified of our power. Each language class, culture camp, graduation ceremony, each Supreme Court Ruling, each Treaty (that wasn't forged), each feast and naming ceremony… is part of the incredible Reclaiming happening right now. Please read this book. It's an infuriating read but a necessary one.”
—Richard Van Camp, author of The Lesser Blessed and Moccasin Square Gardens

"With Unreconciled, Jesse Wente proves he's a storyteller through and through—one who is unafraid of telling hard but necessary truths, yes, but also one who knows that vulnerability is the quickest way to the heart. Wente shares so generously with his readers in this book, braiding together his own past with the problems of the present, ultimately offering us a way forward, together."
—Alicia Elliott, author of A Mind Spread Out on the Ground

“Part biography, part social and cultural manifesto, and part film analysis, Wente’s book tells us of his journey as a mixed blood kid in Toronto facing everyday racism, to becoming the face (actually more like the voice) of Indigenous film appreciation and criticism. A slim book but heavy in what it says, Unreconciled shows how the best journeys in life are derived from the obstacles the hero overcomes.”
—Drew Hayden Taylor, author of Chasing Painted Horses and Take Us to Your Chief and Other Stories

“[A] must-read.”
The Globe and Mail
JESSE WENTE is an Anishinaabe writer, broadcaster, and arts leader. Born and raised in Toronto, his family comes from Chicago and Genaabaajing Anishinaabek and he is a member of the Serpent River First Nation. Best known for more than two decades spent as a columnist for CBC Radio’s Metro Morning, he also worked at the Toronto International Film Festival for eleven years. In February 2018 he was named the first Executive Director of the Indigenous Screen Office. Wente was appointed Chair of the Canada Council for the Arts in 2020, the only First Nations person to ever hold the position.

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