Saturday, July 1, 2017

Dear Teachers Do You Teach Joseph Boydens THREE DAY ROAD

Dear Teachers Do You Teach Joseph Boydens THREE DAY ROAD


Editors note: Saturday, January 13, 2017. Scroll down to the very bottom of this post to see links to reviews of Boydens books, written by Native people from the communities a book is about.  

January 7, 2017

Dear Teachers,

I know that some of you assign Joseph Boydens Three Day Road to students in your high school classes. Some of you may be doing author studies of him. This letter and information I share beneath the letter, in two parts, is for you, and for anyone who is interested in discussions of Boydens identity. It is an archive of items about Joseph Boydens identity.

Im a former school teacher, too. I particularly enjoyed reading aloud to the kindergarten and first graders I taught in the 90s, and teaching kids about the authors and other books they wrote. Im not teaching anymore. Now, I research and write articles and book chapters about the ways Native peoples are depicted in childrens and young adult books. And, I publish this site, American Indians in Childrens Literature, which is now in its eleventh year.

In 2014, I learned about a writer named Joseph Boyden. A novel hed written, The Orenda, was in Canada Reads, which is an annual battle-of-the-books competition. The Orenda was being defended by Wab Kinew. Id become familiar with Kinews work via social media. Always on the look-out for books I can recommend, I looked into Boyden and saw that his first book, Three Day Road was in the Canada Reads competition in 2006, when it came out. He was being put forth as a Native writer. I got Three Day Road. I was drawn into the story and thought I might write about it here on AICL. I wanted to know more about Boyden. So, I read Hayden Kings review of Orenda. He had concerns with Boydens depictions of the Haudenosaunee. I started looking around some more and talking with colleagues. I learned that there were a lot of questions about Boydens claim to Native identity. What I saw was enough for me to set aside Three Day Road. I didnt finish it and didnt write about it.

On December 22, 2016, I saw a series of tweets from the IndigenousXca account. That week, the IndigenousXca host was Robert Jago. I learn a lot by following that account. Each week, theres a new host. I was the host in March. Jagos tweets that night were about Joseph Boydens identity. The next day, Jorge Barrera, a reporter with Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, published a news article about Boyden. Jago and Barreras work prompted many discussions on social media, and, many more articles and news segments.

This "Dear Teachers" letter is a place for me to archive what Ive seen about Boyden and identity.

Part One of my archive started as a thread on Twitter that I added to whenever I saw something that added to the discussion. Rather than re-create the thread, Im pasting it directly from a Storify I did. I hope that all the links work, though some may not. People delete tweets, and sometimes their entire account. Beneath the Storify is part two.

Part Two is items Im entering as I see them. It is "in process" -- because new items are published in the media, or on social media (primarily Facebook and Twitter), almost daily.

I hope it is useful. If you see something somewhere that you wish to share, please submit it via the comments option at the bottom.

Thank you,
Debbie Reese
American Indians in Childrens Literature

_______________

An Archive: 

Joseph Boydens Claims to Indigenous Identity


Part One: A Storify by @debreese, from Dec 24, 2016 through Jan 3, 2017 (apologies for formatting errors that occurred when I pasted the storify)

by Debbie_Reese
23 minutes ago

Joseph Boyden: Native? Or not?

On Christmas Eve 2016, Jorge Barrera of APTN published an article on Joseph Boydens identity. I began tweeting my thoughts, and links to threads/posts/articles on Boyden. Ill add to this Storify as additional items appear. (Last update: Jan 1, 2016, 8:25 AM)
  1. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Did you read @APTN article on Joseph Boydens identity and are you seeking more rdgs to help you understand Native views on identity?

    14 DAYS AGO
  2. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    This is, in kid/YA lit, what is called #OwnVoices. It gets very complicated, quickly, for many peoples, including us (Native ppl).

    14 DAYS AGO
  3. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Take a look at @justicedanielhs post at FB:  https://www.facebook.com/daniel.justice.7393/posts/716714078504628?pnref=story 

    14 DAYS AGO
  4. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Heres the APTN article, for those who havent seen it: "Joseph Boydens Shape-Shifting Identity"  http://aptn.ca/news/2016/12/23/author-joseph-boydens-shape-shifting-indigenous-identity/ 

    14 DAYS AGO
  5. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Yesterday and today, many Native ppl on Twitter are talking about Boyden and identity. Read their convos but pls refrain from jumping in.

    14 DAYS AGO
  6. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Read, listen, think, to what theyre saying. See @apihtawikosisans TL; heres two of her tweets:  https://twitter.com/apihtawikosisan/status/812384479675371520 

    14 DAYS AGO
  7. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    See ongoing convo between @MrHWM, @Hayden_King, and @damienlee  https://twitter.com/MrHWM/status/812657180922888193 

    14 DAYS AGO
  8. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    See Robert Jagos video (tweeting this week from @IndigenousXca) which kicked off the APTN article:  https://twitter.com/IndigenousXca/status/812105288300056582 

    14 DAYS AGO
  9. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    See @adamgaudrys TL, too.  https://twitter.com/adamgaudry/status/812396944156979200 

    14 DAYS AGO
  10. debreese
    Debbie Reese@debreese
    Another person on Twitter who is tweeting about Joseph Boyden is Darryl Leroux.  https://twitter.com/DarrylLeroux/status/812353859926577152 

    14 DAYS AGO

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