Arsenal Pulp Press Spring 2013 Canada Catalogue

Page 18

S IE D ST U L

THE IMAGINARY INDIAN

10th Anniversary Edition Bridget Moran

The Image of the Indian in Canadian Culture Daniel Francis

A valuable and moving biography. —Books in Canada

2011 release

over 40,000 copies sold

A revealing history of the “Indian” image mythologized by popular Canadian culture since 1850, propagating stereotypes that exist to this day. Includes new material by the author.

20th anniversary edition

fall

The captivating story of the late Mary John, a pioneering Carrier Native whose life on the Stoney Creek reserve in central British ­Columbia is a capsule history of First ­Nations life from a unique woman’s perspective.

Francis has done an amazing job of tracing down through Canadian history the perceptions … that the dominant culture had and has of this country’s Aboriginal people. —Drew Hayden Taylor

fifteenth printing

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STONEY CREEK WOMAN

aboriginal studies

aboriginal studies

isbn 978-1-55152-047-6 • e-isbn 978-1-55152-336-1

isbn 978-1-55152-425-2 • e-isbn 978-1-55152-450-4

$19.95 • $18.95 us

$23.95 • $23.95 us

A LITTLE REBELLION

JUDGEMENT AT STONEY CREEK New Edition Bridget Moran

Bridget Moran’s followup to Stoney Creek Woman (above): an Aboriginal studies classic, hailed for its moving and deeply personal depiction of how the justice system has failed Canada’s Aboriginal people.

third printing

This moving autobiography of the late Bridget Moran, author of Stoney Creek Woman and Judgement at Stoney Creek (both on this page), and her astonishing life as a social worker in British Columbia unafraid to take on the powers that be.

A well-crafted book that sensitively captures the many conflicting sentiments brought out by the inquiry. —Books In Canada

fifth printing

Bridget Moran

biography / aboriginal studies

aboriginal studies

isbn 978-0-88978-252-5 • e-isbn 978-1-55152-327-9

isbn 978-1-55152-053-7 • e-isbn 978-1-55152-325-5

$14.95 • $12.95 us

$14.95 • $12.95 us

RESISTANCE AND RENEWAL

VICTIMS OF BENEVOLENCE

The Dark Legacy of the Williams Lake Residential School Elizabeth Furniss

roderick haig-brown book prize winner

An unsettling and moving study of two tragic events at an Indian residential school in British Columbia which serve as a microcosm of the profound impact the residential school system had on Aboriginal communities in Canada throughout this century.

third printing

One of the first books published to deal with the phenomenon of residential schools in Canada, this is an insightful collection of Native perspectives on the Kamloops Indian Residential School in the BC interior, based on interviews with former residents of the school.

A solid addition to the historical record. —BCLA Reporter

Demonstrates that the experiences of the past, however painful, are valuable for future generations. —Northeast Indian Quarterly

eighth printing

Surviving the Indian Residential School Celia Haig-Brown

aboriginal studies isbn 978-0-88978-189-4

aboriginal studies

• e-isbn 978-1-55152-335-4 $16.95 • $13.95 us

isbn 978-1-551520-015-5 • e-isbn 978-1-55152-337-8

spring 2013  page 16

$18.95 • $17.95 us


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