Where the Language Lives
149 pages
English

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149 pages
English

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Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

  • Prepublication buzz campaign
  • Digital galley distribution on Edelweiss and NetGalley
  • Trade advertising
  • Target outreach to blogs and websites
  • Social media influencer campaign
  • Targeted online advertising
  • Listing and pricing promotions run through GFB’s Aerio store
  • Social media posts to support pre-order, book launch, and book reviews

  • Author draws on her recorded interviews with Vi as they talked about the cultural significance of canoes, baskets, blankets, the bone game, naming ceremonies, stories, story places, the ritual burning of Vi’s parents’ house to send it to them in the spirit world, and how Vi came to commission the Healing Heart Symphony.​
  • This collection of essays spotlights the author and Hilbert’s travels in Indian Country to attend naming ceremonies, memorials, and the observance of Treaty Day in the Tulalip Longhouse, and travels to attend Salish language conferences.
  • A culturally significant resource for historians.
  • A valuable compilation of information, interviews, and stories that may be of use to cultural and historical scholars.
  • Teachers and professors may incorporate the book or certain essays into local educational syllabi.
  • This book will appeal to Pacific Northwest readers interested in local history.
    <p>Foreword</p> 
     
    <p>Introduction</p> 
     
    <p>Where the Language Lives</p> 
     
    <p>Ten Things I Learned from Vi Hilbert</p> 
     
    <p>Vi Hilbert and the Gift of Lushootseed</p> 
     
    <p>Right Work</p> 
     
    <p>River Talk</p> 
     
    <p>The Old Canoe Is the New Canoe</p> 
     
    <p>The Brain Room</p> 
     
    <p>Healing Heart Symphony</p> 
     
    <p>Rich Old Indian</p> 
     
    <p>Lushootseed Is Written</p> 
     
    <p>Lady Louse Lived There</p> 
     
    <p>The Bone Game</p> 
     
    <p>Becoming an Elder</p> 
     
    <p>Burning at Nooksack</p> 
     
    <p>On Tape / Off Tape</p> 
     
    <p>Story Places</p> 
     
    <p>Finding Spirit</p> 
     
    <p>Wrapped in a Blanket</p> 
     
    <p>On the Outs</p> 
     
    <p>Elvis Sings and We Talk of Love</p> 
     
    <p>Vi’s Memory Is Her Treasure</p> 
     
    <p>Carrying a Name</p> 
     
    <p>Lost and Found</p> 
     
    <p>Basket Song</p> 
     
    <p>The Other Side</p> 
     
    <p>Lushootseed Continues</p> 
     
    <p>A Few Resources</p> 
     
    <p>Citations</p> 
     
    <p>Acknowledgments</p> 
     
    <p>In Memoriam</p> 
     
    <p>About the Author</p> 
  • Sujets

    Informations

    Publié par
    Date de parution 24 mai 2022
    Nombre de lectures 0
    EAN13 9781954854512
    Langue English
    Poids de l'ouvrage 11 Mo

    Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

    Extrait

    Praise for Where the Language Lives
    “Heartfelt and honest, Yoder vividly portrays the remarkable life of this astounding woman with style and determination.”
    —Jay Miller, author of Lushootseed Culture and the Shamanic Odyssey: An Anchored Radiance
    “Reading Where the Language Lives is like taking a long drive into Skagit Country with Vi Hilbert. I raise my hands to Janet Yoder for sharing her intimate visits with a beloved elder. Each essay is a beautifully- crafted treasure, and together they resonate as musically as an olivella shell necklace. Happiness, indeed.”
    —Katie Jennings, filmmaker, Huchoosedah, Traditions of the Heart and The Healing Heart of Lushootseed
    “ Where the Language Lives is a masterful presentation of the beauty and depth of Coast Salish lifeways, marvelously embodied in the life and teachings of Vi Hilbert. It is written in a flowing style, one revelation after another given just when the time is right.”
    —Patrick Twohy, author of Beginnings—A Meditation on Coast Salish Lifeways
    “This book arrives like a comet, bright and beautiful, illuminating a world of wonders in the life and work of Upper Skagit elder Vi Hilbert. It should be required reading for every resident of Puget Sound Country. It is a delightful and intimate look into the life and culture of one of the most respected elders of Coast Salish territory.”
    —Lynda Mapes, author of Breaking Ground: The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and the Unearthing of Tse-whit-zen Village
    “ Where the Language Lives is a profound and stunning book that captures the spirit of the treasured Upper Skagit elder Vi Hilbert with love and richness of detail. [. . .] Written with grace and insight [. . .] it chronicles the Indigenous culture that Vi Hilbert helped to preserve, which she shared over three decades with author Janet Yoder, among many others. If you live anywhere in the Pacific Northwest, you must read this book.”
    —Priscilla Long, author of Fire and Stone: Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?
    “Janet Yoder’s writing captures the spirit of this honorable and mischievous elder. In Lushootseed culture, words are spoken and stories are told without explanation. Words mean what the listener hears. You learned to be careful what you said in the presence of taqʷšəblu [Vi Hilbert]—you may have just made her a promise. A tribute to the life of a revered elder on a mission to save her language—all that is missing are more of taqʷšəblu ’s ‘R-rated’ stories.”
    — dxʷtuk kʷi at kǝn (Jack Fiander), taqʷšəblu ’s longtime attorney and former student
    “In Where the Language Lives , Janet Yoder weaves a strong, beautiful basket filled with stories of Upper Skagit elder Vi ( taqʷšəblu ) Hilbert’s remarkable life and work. [. . .] These essays (and photos) reveal Vi’s warmth, determination, and generosity and show her single-minded focus on resurrecting Lushootseed, the language of many of the Pacific Coast First People. [. . .] If you never had the good fortune to meet Vi, to hear her tell the story of Lady Louse, or to feel the warmth of her welcome, this generous book will introduce you to her and her work. For those of us who did know her, it is a shining testament to an extraordinary woman.”
    —Sylvia Byrne Pollack, author of Risking It
    “Vi Hilbert was a wisdom keeper and cultural treasure. If she’d had a mantra, it would have been ‘Stand up and speak.’ Janet Yoder stood side by side with Vi for decades, as her sometimes driver and frequent chronicler. Yoder vividly brings Vi’s generous spirt alive and magnifies her timeless work to keep Indigenous language and culture strong and enduring.”
    —Ward Serrill, filmmaker and author of To Crack the World Open: Solitude, Alaska, and a Dog Named Woody
    “ Where the Language Lives is a warm woven blanket of a book. With rich and reverent storytelling, Janet Yoder gifts us with stories of Upper Skagit tribal elder Vi Hilbert, continuing Vi’s tradition of deep generosity while sharing lessons of language and life, community and connection, family and faith. This book lifted my spirits, held my heart, and spoke to me in a universal language—love.”
    —Kira Jane Buxton, author of Hollow Kingdom and Feral Creatures



    Copyright © 2022 by Janet Yoder
    All rights reserved.
    No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

    Published by Girl Friday Books™, Seattle www.girlfridaybooks.com
    Produced by Girl Friday Productions
    Development & editorial: Devon Fredericksen Editorial production: Jaye Whitney Debber Cover design: Danielle Christopher
    All photos courtesy of Lushootseed Research, unless otherwise noted:
    Brad Burns: 95
    Chris Duenas / Puyallup Tribal Language Program: 203
    Paul Eubanks: Cover , 43 (portrait of Vi Hilbert), 48 , 49 (top), 84 , 140 , 188
    Eugene H. Field / University of Washington Libraries: 106 (bottom)
    Ron Hilbert: 37 (bottom)
    Sasha La Pointe: 173
    Chris Leman / EastlakeInfo.Net : 150 (bottom)
    Carolyn Michael: xi , 172 , 193 , 207
    Jay Miller: 72 (bottom), 106 (top)
    Robby Rudine: iii (based on photo by Paul Eubanks), 12 , 33 (top), 43 , 60 , 61 , 62 , 83 (bottom), 129 , 135 (used with permission from the artist Susan A. Point), 154
    Jay Samson: 120 - 122
    Kenneth Greg Watson: 94 , 150 (top), 216
    Janet Yoder: 63 (top)
    ISBN (paperback): 978-1-954854-26-0 ISBN (e-book): 978-1-954854-51-2
    Library of Congress Control Number: 2021925827
    First edition

    Contents
    Foreword
    Introduction
    Where the Language Lives
    Ten Things I Learned from Vi Hilbert
    Vi Hilbert and the Gift of Lushootseed
    Right Work
    River Talk
    The Old Canoe Is the New Canoe
    The Brain Room
    Healing Heart Symphony
    Rich Old Indian
    Lushootseed Is Written
    Lady Louse Lived There
    The Bone Game
    Becoming an Elder
    Burning at Nooksack
    On Tape / Off Tape
    Story Places
    Finding Spirit
    Wrapped in a Blanket
    On the Outs
    Elvis Sings and We Talk of Love
    Vi’s Memory Is Her Treasure
    Carrying a Name
    Lost and Found
    Basket Song
    The Other Side
    Lushootseed Continues
    Acknowledgments
    A Few Resources
    Citations
    In Memoriam
    About the Author

    Foreword
    This collection of essays beautifully chronicles the thirty-year friendship between the author and my grandmother, which started in a classroom and grew into a lifelong familial connection. Janet Yoder takes us on a visual journey with each of her essays, recounting experiences so vividly that at times it feels as though we are right there experiencing them alongside her.
    The stories shared in this collection wrap us in a colorful and vibrant tapestry of topics centered around the rich cultural life of taqʷšəblu , Vi Hilbert. taqʷšəblu was a distinguished member of the Upper Skagit Indian Tribe in northwest Washington State. She was a great-great-grandmother, a teacher, a scholar, and an internationally renowned storyteller. She was beloved and revered by many, both in Indigenous tribal communities and in broader diverse communities throughout the world. taqʷšəblu has been credited for saving her nearly dormant Indigenous language—Lushootseed—though she would give credit to the wonderful elders, scholars, and volunteers who contributed to her life’s work in a multitude of ways. It has been said that nearly everyone who can speak Lushootseed today either learned it directly from taqʷšəblu or learned it from one of her students.
    The essays capture both humorous and subtle teachings about traditional wisdoms and expectations designed to help us navigate our ever-changing world. The cultural lessons and values embedded throughout this collection demonstrate the author’s profound and intimate appreciation for taqʷšəblu ’s culture and her unwavering commitment to her work.
    For taqʷšəblu , preservation of the language, culture, and ancestral wisdom was foremost in all her endeavors. She carried herself in a way that her elders would have approved of. She strove to embody the traditional teachings she was entrusted to carry and share by example. Even when the old family home she had grown up in at Nooksack was destroyed by a fire decades later, she was compelled to call upon traditional healers to take care of the home in a spiritual manner, as described in the essay “Burning at Nooksack.”
    While many of Janet’s essays illuminate taqʷšəblu ’s public persona, others more intimately capture taqʷšəblu ’s vulnerable and human frailties, which were visible neither to her general audiences nor to her adoring students. She was not immune to all the heartaches and disappointments of this world—and she endured her fair share—yet she remained strong and resilient. Her strength and determination were a testament to her parents, who raised her with the tremendous expectation—which she consistently rose to—that she was the best, but no better than anyone else.
    Jill La Pointe, tsisqʷux̌ʷaʔɬ

    To read these essays was a gift. As taqʷšəblu ’s great-granddaughter, I was touched to feel her presence in these pages. Janet truly knew my great-grandmother, and through the closeness the two of them shared over decades of friendship comes an honest and intimate portrait of a woman who meant so much to so many. I am honored to have known Janet for nearly my entire life. My great-grandmother embraced her as family, and throughout the years I’ve had the pleasure of getting to know Janet at intimate family gatherings as well as Lushootseed Research events. Whether enjoying salmon baked in my great-grandparents’ backyard or devoting her time to language events, Janet has been a part of our family

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