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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Drumming Our Way Home

Intergenerational Learning, Teaching, and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

With a Foreword by Jo-ann Archibald

Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Drumming Our Way Home

Intergenerational Learning, Teaching, and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

With a Foreword by Jo-ann Archibald
Takes readers on an autobiographical journey to recover Indigenous identity, demonstrating how storytelling can open up a new world of pedagogy and culture-based learning.

Drumming Our Way Home demonstrates how telling, retelling, and re-storying lived experiences not only pass on traditional ways but also open up a world of culture-based learning.

Georgina Martin was taken from her mother not long after birth in a tuberculosis hospital. Her experience is representative of the intergenerational trauma inflicted by the Canadian state on Indigenous peoples. Here she tells her story and invites Elder Jean William and youth Colten Wycotte to reflect critically on their own family and community experiences. Throughout, she is guided by her hand drum, reflecting on its use as a way to uphold community protocols and honor teachings. Her journey provides a powerful example of reconnection to culture through healing, affirmation, and intergenerational learning.

Drumming Our Way Home is evidence of the value of using storytelling as a tool for teaching, learning, and making meaning.

168 pages | 7 halftones, 1 map | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Education: Curriculum and Methodology

Native American Studies


Reviews

"By expertly weaving her personal and lived experiences with that of an Elder and a youth, Georgina Martin’s book is a step toward our own sense of validation and healing. Especially in light of the Truth and Reconciliation report and the 94 Calls to Action, this is critical work."

Sheila Cote-Meek, director, Indigenous Educational Studies Programs, Brock University

"Georgina Martin’s voice, hand drumming, and ideas about individual and collective cultural identity, intergenerational learning and healing, and reconciliation are vibrant, far-reaching, and need to be shared widely ... [Drumming My Way Home] offers hope and possibility for finding one’s way to a meaningful concept of home and for contributing to concrete actions of reconciliation."

From the foreword by Jo-ann Archibald, author of Indigenous Storywork: Educating the Heart, Mind, Body, and Spirit

Table of Contents

Foreword / Jo-Ann Archibald

Preface

1 Drumming as Metaphor

2 The Drum Reverberates against the Intergenerational Aspects of Colonialism

3 Honouring the Drummer: Embodied Knowledge from within my community

4 Passing the Drum Forward to the Next Generation

5 Colten’s Stories: Memories and Values

6 Intergenerational Knowledge Transmission

Notes; References; Index

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