1. “DREAMS GET CAUGHT IN THE WEBS WOVEN IN YOUR BONES”: STORYTELLING AND RESISTANCE IN CHERIE DIMALINE’S THE MARROW THIEVES.
- Author
-
STOICA, Laura-Victoria
- Subjects
STORYTELLING ,CLIMATE change ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,ENVIRONMENTAL disasters - Abstract
Set around 2050 in a Canada ravaged by environmental depletion and subsequent climate change, Cherie Dimaline’s The Marrow Thieves features a post-apocalyptic world where Indigenous people are the only population who has managed to preserve the ability to dream. In the guise of speculative fiction, the novel seeks to foreground the Indigenous practices of dreaming and storytelling and thus imagine a future predicated on Indigenous terms. Relying on survivance and rhetorical sovereignty, I aim to illustrate that the community of storytellers depicted in the novel does not struggle for mere survival against colonial powers, but for the continual refashioning of Indigenous narratives of personal and collective identity. By analyzing instances of both dreaming and storytelling, I will foreground the idea that Indigenous dreaming represents an extension of storytelling, which furthers Indigenous ways of life and seeks to revive ancestral knowledge by enabling the connection between present, individual experience, and past, collective experience. Thus, I will seek to reinforce Dimaline’s assertion that contemporary society is a society of children, and address storytelling as a form of education which deconstructs colonial hierarchies and notions of otherness and empowers Indigenous youth to overcome colonial and environmental disaster and reclaim the future of Indigeneity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF