Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Naanabozho was the first tribal trickster on the earth.
Mixed-bloods loosen the seams in the shrouds of identities.
Life is a chance, a story is a chance. That I am here is a chance.
The first Western teacher of English in Japan was a Native American.
Even the earliest cave paintings in France and Spain had natural motion.
The great liberation of imaginative writing is that you're not held back by the facts.
I use not casual phrases but imagistic phrases that create a rhythm of natural presence.
There is a sense of motion and a concise, immediate image in haikus and Anishinaabe dream songs.
It's so difficult to write in motion and get rid of the past tense, and also to create a sense of impermanence.
If you desecrate a white grave, you wind up sitting in prison. But desecrate an Indian grave, and you get a Ph.D.
Race is an invention, not a noticeable genetic presence, and cultural traits are brute concoctions of the social sciences.
Confucius would give his seat to an old woman. Communist cadres, on the other hand, took the best seats and called it a cultural revolution.
W. P. Kinsella, who was born on a farm near Edmunton, Alberta, has earned wide recognition for his wild imagination and rash humor as a writer.
There are 13 stories in 'The Fencepost Chronicles' about corrupt tribal leaders, trouble on the reserve, survival schemes, and communal drinking.
I'm a visual thinker. With almost all of my writing, I start with something that's visual: either the way someone says something that is visual or an actual visual description of a scene and color.
Indians are usually seen as capsulized: limited to one environment, with the illusion of stability in that environment. But Indians have been engaged all over the world for centuries, in Europe, even in Asia.
Trickster stories are pleasurable, contradictory, annoying, abrasive. They're powerful, transformational acts of liberation because they are not nailed down to the real, to the representation of something in the world.
The idea of victimage is a dreadful thing, a product of a safe middle-class perspective. What people who are not safe develop is a tragic wisdom, a wisdom that embraces contradiction and seeks a sense of balance rather than going to extremes.