". . . [T]he book is recommended reading, offering informative perspectives that will broaden understandings about what happened and what remains to be done in pursuing meaningful pathways towards reconciliation. It is a powerful reminder that it is imperative for us to continue to probe these issues so that the future actions (both collective and individual) are undertaken in a manner that is well-informed, open, and reflexive." - Terry Wotherspoon (Historical Studies in Education) "<i>Fragments of Truth</i> is a powerful story of one woman’s journey of looking at the IRS TRC, and the layers and fragments of meanings behind the concept of “truth.” For anyone hoping to earn a greater under-standing of both Indian residential schools and the path towards truth, <i>Fragments of Truth</i> is a must-read." - Jewel Cummins (American Indian Culture and Research Journal)
Acknowledgments / Marita Sturken and Faye Ginsburg xix
Introduction. Reconciliation and Remembrance 1
1. Reconciliation as a Way of Seeing: The History and Context of the Indian Residential School System 19
2. Images of Contact: Archival Photographs and the Work of Reconciliation in Canada 54
3. Nations Gather: Public Testimony and the Politics of Affect 90
4. Reconciliation as a Ghostly Encounter: Discourses of Haunting and Indian Residential Schools 125
Conclusion. Fragments of Truth: Concluding Gestures 160
Notes 167
Bibliography 189
Index 207
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Naomi Angel (1977–2014) completed her PhD in Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University in 2013.Dylan Robinson is Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Arts at Queen’s University.
Jamie Berthe is Lecturer at New York University.