Indians Don't Cry - Gaawiin Mawisiiwag Anishinaabeg placeholder

Indians Don't Cry

Gaawiin Mawisiiwag Anishinaabeg

By George Kenny
Afterword by Renate Eigenbrod
Translated by Patricia M. Ningewance
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Indigenous Literature, Indigenous Studies
Series: First Voices, First Texts
Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
Hardcover : 9780887552113, 210 pages, September 2019
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780887554742, 208 pages, October 2014
Ebook (PDF) : 9780887554766, 208 pages, October 2014
Paperback : 9780887557699, 190 pages, October 2014

Table of contents

Translator’s Note
by Patricia Ningewance

INDIANS DON’T CRY

Rain Dance
Rubbie at Central Park

Indians Don't Cry

Poor J.W.

Lost Friendship

The Bullfrogs Got Theirs

On the Shooting of a Beaver

How He Served

Welcome

Death Bird

The Drowning

I Don't Know this October Stranger

Just Another Bureaucrat

Second Beauty

Summer Dawn on Loon Lake

Folk Hero: Gerald Bannatyne

Track Star

Death Is No Stranger

Legacy

Broken, I Knew a Man

To: My Friend, the Painter

Sunset on Portage

Old Daniel

Kenora Bus Depot

Pine Tree

In-Family Tribal Warfare

Mahkwa

Soft and Trembling Cry

Bottles

Gulls

Dirty Indian

Picture of my Father

Ojibway Girl

Think on

For Most of Thirteen Years

Afterword

George Kenny – Anishinaabe, son, and writer

by Renate Eigenbrod

Bibliography

Description

George Kenny is an Anishinaabe poet and playwright who learned traditional ways from his parents before being sent to residential school in 1958. When Kenny published his first book, 1982’s Indians Don’t Cry, he joined the ranks of Indigenous writers such as Maria Campbell, Basil Johnston, and Rita Joe whose work melded art and political action. Hailed as a landmark in the history of Indigenous literature in Canada, this new edition is expected to inspire a new generation of Anishinaabe writers with poems and stories that depict the challenges of Indigenous people confronting and finding ways to live within urban settler society.
Indians Don’t Cry: Gaawin Mawisiiwag Anishinaabeg is the second book in the First Voices, First Texts series, which publishes lost or underappreciated texts by Indigenous artists. This new bi-lingual edition includes a translation of Kenny’s poems and stories into Anishinaabemowin by Pat Ningewance and an afterword by literary scholar Renate Eigenbrod.

Reviews

“Indians Don’t Cry ultimately reflects the thoughts and feelings of George Kenny, a man who has lived both on a reserve and in an urban setting – a man possessed some would say – but a man who, more than many, accurately reflects the alienation, frustration, hopes and dreams of urban natives in this small but important book.”

- Nick Ternette