British Columbia History

Books with the Most Impact

The books and digital media profiled in this issue of “Refracting History” will incite many readers to think differently about history. Some reposition historical narratives on the experiences of Indigenous peoples and other racialized communities in British Columbia or voices that share memories and reflections on the impact of residential schools, loss of land, and the revitalization of Indigenous cultures.

Spílәx . m: A Weaving of Recovery, Resilience, and Resurgence by Nicola I. Campbell (Winnipeg, MB: HighWater Press, 2021) $32

Nicola I. Campbell, likely best known for her bestselling children’s books including Shi-shietko, Shin-chi’s Canoe, and A Day with Yayah, has written an extraordinary memoir that combines poetry and prose with memories that speak about what it means to be an intergeneration survivor of residential schools. Nicola I. Campbell is Nłe kepmx (Nlaka’pamux), Sylix, and Métis, from British Columbia

This excerpt from her memoir is from the section called “Porcupine’s Song”:

What does it mean to have multiple generations of children taken away for part or all of their childhoods to Indian Residential School or into the foster care system? “Imagine a community without children.” Imagine an entire country where every single Indigenous baby and child is taken away from their family. Imagine a country where every single child is raised in an environment where love, patience, compassion, and affection do not exist. Imagine a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from British Columbia History

British Columbia History4 min read
Discovering Ginger Goodwin
Labour history is difficult to access. Essentially, the story of working people is the story of their day-to-day work. Only when there is a departure from daily routine—perhaps loss of life, a bitter strike—will newspapers and other media typically t
British Columbia History5 min read
Glimpses Of The Christian Community Of Universal Brotherhood In British Columbia
Born in 1859 in Russia, Peter Vasil'evich Verigin assumed leadership of Doukhobors in the Caucasus in 1886. Exiled to North Russia and Siberia for 16 years, he rejoined his followers in Canada in 1902. After a substantial loss of homestead lands in S
British Columbia History1 min read
Book Marked! Marked!
This new book authored by Dayna Obbema and published by the BC Forest Discovery Centre (BCFDC) outlines the history of the property on which the museum now stands. First acknowledging the Quw'utsun peoples’ presence on the land for centuries, Obbema

Related