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How We Go Home

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How We Go Home shares contemporary Indigenous stories in the long and ongoing fight to protect Native land and life.
  • 06 October 2020
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In myriad ways, each narrator’s life has been shaped by loss, injustice, and resilience—and by the struggle of how to share space with settler nations whose essential aim is to take all that is Indigenous.

 Hear from Jasilyn Charger, one of the first five people to set up camp at Standing Rock, which kickstarted a movement of Water Protectors that roused the world; Gladys Radek, a survivor of sexual violence whose niece disappeared along Canada’s Highway of Tears, who became a family advocate for the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls; and Marian Naranjo, herself the subject of a secret radiation test while in high school, who went on to drive Santa Clara Pueblo toward compiling an environmental impact statement on the consequences of living next to Los Alamos National Laboratory. Theirs are stories among many of the ongoing contemporary struggles to preserve Native lands and lives—and of how we go home.

Download the corresponding lesson plans on the Voice of Witness website.

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Price: $50.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Voice of Witness
Publication Date: 06 October 2020
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781642594089
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies, Indigenous peoples / Indigeneity, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Essays, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Genocide & War Crimes, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, Society and culture: general, Colonialism and imperialism, Politics and government, War crimes, Genocide and ethnic cleansing, Environmental policy and protocols
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Sara Sinclair is an oral historian of Cree-Ojibwa and German-Jewish descent. Sara was the lead interviewer for Columbia Center for Oral History Research’s Robert Rauschenberg Oral History Project, and coedited a book from these narratives, published by Columbia University Press in August 2019.