
Book Review: Memory Serves: Oratories
Author(s) -
Lzz Johnk
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of critical indigenous studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1837-0144
DOI - 10.5204/ijcis.v11i1.561
Subject(s) - selection (genetic algorithm) , cultural memory , indigenous , personality , psychology , linguistics , cognitive science , computer science , sociology , psychoanalysis , artificial intelligence , anthropology , philosophy , ecology , biology
In Memory Serves, Stó:lō (Coast Salish) rememberer and storyteller Lee Maracle weaves together a selection of her speeches and lectures into a single volume of oratories. In the preface, Maracle expresses the worry that in the process of converting these spoken pieces into written form, “the words can lose much of the personality of the speaker” (xii). Her voice as a storyteller, however, coheres beautifully on the page, carrying the rhythm and consonance of her original orations. The recurrence of several themes (decoloniality, sovereignty, direction, memory) that arise throughout the text also gives us a powerful sense of her memory and personality as an Indigenous woman, elder, and rememberer who is anchored by the cultural values of her people.