kiyam

By Naomi McIlwraith
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Indigenous Literature, Poetry
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781771991025, 178 pages, May 2012
Paperback : 9781926836690, 148 pages, April 2012
Ebook (PDF) : 9781926836706, 178 pages, May 2012
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781926836713, 178 pages, May 2012

Table of contents

Foreword Jenna Butler

The Sounds of Plains Cree: A Guide to Pronunciation
Family Poems
ReclamationPoems
A Few Ideas from amiskwacî-wâskahikanihk
The Young Linguist
History Poems

Notes on the Poems
Cree-English correspondences
Bibliography
Publication Credits
Acknowledgements

Description

Through poems that move between the two languages, McIlwraith explores the beauty of the intersection between nêhiyawêwin, the Plains Cree language, and English, âkayâsîmowin. Written to honour her father’s facility in nêhiyawêwin and her mother’s beauty and generosity as an inheritor of Cree, Ojibwe, Scottish, and English, kiyâm articulates a powerful yearning for family, history, peace, and love.

Reviews

“McIlwraith’s emotionally honest verse doesn’t feel as though she’s playing at being Indian. Instead, she’s giving fresh vital voice to an ancient tongue, telling her family’s unique multicultural story as authentically as possible. Just as importantly, she’s starting a fresh vital conversation about the painful, complicated history we share.”

- Edmonton Journal

“[McIlwraith] detours around historical attitudes, attempting to write in both [English and Cree], in a pilgrimage of transcribing and transliteration, circumventing the many obstacles of self and society in order to do so.”

- The Prairie Journal

“In a clear and engaging voice, McIlwraith provides an intriguing view of a woman and a
writer navigating the pathways between the European literary tradition and the oral tradition of the First Nations and Métis, negotiating these two vastly different linguistic worlds.”

- Jenna Butler, MacEwan University