A Metaphoric Mind

Selected Writings of Joseph Couture

Edited by Ruth Couture & Virginia McGowan
By Joseph Couture
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Auto/biography & Memoir, Indigenous Studies, Education, Religious Studies
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781771990677, 329 pages, August 2013
Ebook (PDF) : 9781926836539, 329 pages, September 2013
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781926836546, 329 pages, September 2013

Table of contents

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgements

ONE Personal Encounter and Ancestral Ways of Knowing
1. Indian Spirituality: A Personal Experience
2. Native and Non-Native Encounter: A Personal Experience
3. Natives and the Earth

TWO Encountering Elders
4. Next Time, Try an Elder!
5. The Role of Native Elders: Emergent Issues
6. Explorations in Native Knowing

THREE Education as Encounter
7. Native Training and Political Change: A Personal Reflection
8. Native Studies and the Academy
9. What Is Fundamental to Native Education? Some Thoughts on the Relationship Between Thinking, Feeling and Learning

FOUR Restorative Justice as Encounter
10. Aboriginal Healing Programs and Plans: Basic Teachings, Concepts, and Core Values for Restorative Justice
11. Aboriginal Behavioural Trauma: Towards a Taxonomy
12. A Window on Traditional Healer Activity: Elements of Healing

FIVE Cornerstone Teachings
On Women and the Woman’s Circle
Excerpts from “Dialogues Between Western and Indigenous Scientists”
Recidivism and the Need for Community-Based Healing
Where Are the Stories?
Comments from the Fourth Little Red River Workshop

“My Friend Joe”

Bibliography of Joseph Couture’s Works / Acknowledgements / About the Editors

Description

Dr. Joseph Couture (1930–2007), known affectionately as "Dr. Joe," stood at the centre of some of the greatest political, social, and intellectual struggles of Aboriginal peoples in contemporary Canada. A profound thinker and writer, as well as a gifted orator, he easily walked two paths, as a respected Elder and traditional healer and as an educational psychologist, one of the first Aboriginal people in Canada to receive a PhD. His work challenged and transformed long-held views of Canada's Indigenous peoples, and his vision and leadership gave direction to many of the current fields of Aboriginal scholarship. His influence extended into numerous areas—education, addictions and mental health treatment, community development, restorative justice, and federal correctional programming for Aboriginal peoples.

With a foreword by Lewis Cardinal, A Metaphoric Mind brings together for the first time key works selected from among Dr. Joe's writings, published and unpublished. Spanning nearly thirty years, the essays invite us to share in his transformative legacy through a series of encounters, with Aboriginal spirituality and ancestral ways of knowing, with Elders and their teachings, with education and its role in politicization, self-determination, and social change, and with the restorative process and the meaning of Native healing.

Reviews

“Joe’s encouragement was an important force in my own engagement with Indigenous issues. His writings strike me the way he did: they tell difficult truths in hopeful ways. You find yourself drawn into his vision—that the Northern European spirit of individualism will be able to join with the communal Native spiritualities to create an altogether new society.”

- Rupert Ross, author of Returning to the Teachings: Exploring Aboriginal Justice