Celia s song by lee maracle biography
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Lee Maracle
Indigenous Canadian writer and academic (–)
Bobbi Lee MaracleOC (born Marguerite Aline Carter; July 2, November 11, ) was an Indigenous Canadian writer and academic of the Stó꞉lō nation. Born in North Vancouver, British Columbia, she left formal education after grade 8 to travel across North America, attending Simon Fraser University on her return to Canada. Her first book, an autobiography called Bobbi Lee: Indian Rebel, was published in She wrote fiction, non-fiction, and criticism and held various academic positions. Maracle's work focused on the lives of Indigenous people, particularly women, in contemporary North America. As an influential writer and speaker, Maracle fought for those oppressed by sexism, racism, and capitalist exploitation.
Early life and education
[edit]The granddaughter of Tsleil-WaututhChief Dan George,[1] Marguerite Aline Carter was born on July 2, , in North Vancouver, British Columbia.[2][3 •Celia's Song
The characters in this novel inhabit a landscape where past, present and future, and physical and spiritual realms exist simultaneously. It is historical in scope; from the beginnings of time for this group of indigenous people, through to the disasters of first contact with white people and on to residential schools, and the fallout in the present from all that. A two headed snake is out to devour the people. Mink, the transforming witness, views the world from a first person perspective while the rest of the story is told in 3rd person. Celia is a seer and it is primarily through her eyes, those of Mink’s, and eventually, Celia's nephew Jacob, that these other ways of understanding the world are revealed.
It’s a matrilineal world. Celia, her mother, and sisters become empowered as they learn wh