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Genocidal Love: A Life After Residential School by Bevann Fox

 

How can we heal in the face of trauma? How can we transform intergenerational pain into a passion for community and healing?
 

Genocidal Love is a powerful confirmation of the long-lasting consequences of residential school violence -and a moving story of finding a path towards healing.

 

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Genocidal Love: A Life After Residential School by Bevann Fox

C$21.95Price
  • Format: Paperback

    Condition: New

    Product dimensions: 256 pages, 7 X 5 X 0.8

    Publishing Info: University of Regina Press, 2020

    Language: English

    ISBN - 13: 9780889777415

     

    Ships within 1 - 2 weeks

     

    "Fox tears beauty from the jaws of genocide, daring to claim love beyond settler imaginings-love that nurtures decolonial futures and makes possible a more just world."-Sam McKegney, author of Magic Weapons and Masculindians

    How can we heal in the face of trauma? How can we transform intergenerational pain into a passion for community and healing?

    Presenting herself as "Myrtle," residential school survivor and Indigenous television personality Bevann Fox explores essential questions by recounting her life through fiction. She shares memories of an early childhood filled with love with her grandparents-until she is sent to residential school at the age of seven. Her horrific experiences of abuse there left her without a voice, timid and nervous, never sure, never trusting, affecting her romantic relationships and family bonds for years to come.

    This is the story of Myrtle battling to recover her voice. Genocidal Love is a powerful confirmation of the long-lasting consequences of residential school violence -and a moving story of finding a path towards healing.

     "A riveting, often difficult, brave, important book." -Deanna Reder, Chair, Department of Indigenous Studies, Simon Fraser University

    "A riveting and courageous reflection. . . . Genocidal Love is unique in its detailed account of the often re-traumatizing effects of the legal and bureaucratic barriers of compensation programs predating the Truth and Reconciliation Commission." -Jesse Rae Archibald-Barber, editor of kisiskâciwan and co-editor of Performing Turtle Island

     

    About the Author: Bevann Fox is a member of Pasqua First Nation, originally from Piapot First Nation. In 2012 she received her Bachelor of Arts in Arts and Culture, and in 2018 her Master in Business Administration, Leadership from the University of Regina. In 2014, she was honoured with the YWCA Women of Distinction Award for Arts, Culture and Heritage. She is the founder, producer, and co-host of Access TV's The Four and also works as Manager for Community-Based Prevention at Yellow Thunderbird Lodge/YTCCFS (Yorkton Tribal Council Child Family Services). She is a certified yoga teacher and an artist in sculpture and acrylics.

     

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