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A poison stronger than love : the destruction of an Ojibwa community  Cover Image Book Book

A poison stronger than love : the destruction of an Ojibwa community / Anastasia M. Shkilnyk ; foreword by Kai Erikson ; photographs by Hiro Miyamatsu.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0300029977 (alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0300033257 (pbk. : alk. paper)
  • Physical Description: xx, 275 p. : ill ; 25 cm.
  • Publisher: New Haven : Yale University Press, c1985.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Includes index.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Bibliography: p. 243-265.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
Donation (copy 2 only) ; 2006/10
Subject: Water > Pollution > Ontario.
Indigenous peoples > North America > Ontario > Social conditions.
Ojibwe > Social conditions.
English River Reserve No. 21 (Ont.)

Available copies

  • 2 of 2 copies available at Vancouver Island University Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 2 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Holdable? Status Due Date Courses
VIU Library - Cowichan Campus E 99 C6 S53 (Text) M011178094 STACKS Volume hold Available -
VIU Library - Nanaimo Campus E 99 C6 S53 (Text) M000983452 STACKS Volume hold Available -

  • Baker & Taylor
    Discusses the Ojibwas reserve with a poisoned water supply
  • Yale University
    ?I can’t explain it to you, because I can’t explain it to myself. The only thing I know is that alcohol is a stronger power than the love of children. It’s a poison, and we are a broken people. We suffer enough inside, and therefore we understand each other.”?Resident of Grassy Narrows
    Grassy Narrows is a small Ojibwa village in northwestern Ontario, Canada. It first captured national attention in 1970, when mercury pollution was discovered in the adjacent English-Wabigoon River. In the course of the assessment of environmental damage, an even more compelling tragedy came to light. For in little more than a decade, the Indian people had begun to self-destruct.
    This book documents the human costs of massive and extraordinarily rapid change in a people’s way of life. When well-intentioned bureaucrats relocated the Grassy Narrows band to a new reserve in 1963, the results were the unraveling of the tribe’s social fabric and a sharp deterioration in their personal morale ? dramatically reflected in Shkilnyk’s statistics on violent death, illness, and family breakdown. The book explores the origins and causes of the suffering in the community life and describes the devastating impacts of mercury contamination on the health and livelihood of the Indian people.
    In essence, this is an in-depth and comprehensive study of the forces and pressures that can rend a community apart. As such it is of interest not only to those particularly concerned with the fate of aboriginal peoples on the continent but also to those more broadly concerned with human collective response to unprecedented stress. This book, illustrated with remarkable photographs, is a powerful and important document.
    ?Meticulously documented and sensitively told.”?Nancy Oestreich Lurie, President, American Anthropological Association

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