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Les récits de notre terre : Les Innus (BAnQ)

Les récits de notre terre : Les Innus (BAnQ)

This book offers corpus of oral accounts collected from representatives of the Innu people and anthropologists. Some are unpublished. The stories are divided into ten sections: “The origins”, “Stories of the Receiver”, “Tshakapesh”, “Atshen”, “Other heroes”, “Unusual couples”, “The masters of animals”, “Animals”, “In contact with other nations” and “Various stories”.

Subjects: Innu, Innu-aitun, Oral narratives

  • Kind
    • Printed document
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
    • Reserved Access
  • Access
    • Print Document
    • Reserved Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
Nipimanitu : l’esprit de l’eau

Nipimanitu : l’esprit de l’eau

This philosophical poetry collection by sociologist Pierrot Ross-Tremblay, Innu of the Essipit community, proposes a change of course in our relationship with the environment and nature, a reorientation for the future, otherwise we would head straight into a reef. Rather, the author lets nature speak for itself and recalls the urgency to act and get back to basics.

Subjects: Cosmogonic narratives, Indigenous authors, Indigenous literature, Innu-aitun, Poetry

  • Kind
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
    • Reserved Access
    • Printed document
  • Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
    • Print Document
    • Reserved Access
  • Domain
    • Natural Sciences
Photographic serie: Montagnais and Naskapi communities of the Côte-Nord and Labrador (BAnQ)

Photographic serie: Montagnais and Naskapi communities of the Côte-Nord and Labrador (BAnQ)

This photographic series was taken by Paul Provencher and bears witness to his career as a forest engineer for the Quebec North Shore company between 1929 and 1963. During this period, he explored, surveyed and inventoried the boreal forest of the Côte-Nord and du Labrador. He meets and accompanies the Innu along the Manicouagan and Toulnustouc rivers and visits the communities of Betsiamites (Pessamit), Sept-Îles (Uashat Mak Mani-Utenam), La Romaine (Unamen Shipi), Moisie Fort Mackenzie (Kawawachikamach, Matimekosh). His photographs bear witness to the Innu-aitun culture and promote the recognition of ancestral aboriginal practices that have been tested and proven for centuries.

Subjects: Innu territory, Cultural identity, Forestry, Innu, Labrador, Innu-aitun, Forests, Côte-Nord, Natural Resources

  • Kind
    • Free - Open Access
  • Access
    • Open Access
  • Domain
    • Natural Sciences
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
S’agripper aux fleurs : collectif de femmes innues

S’agripper aux fleurs : collectif de femmes innues

Three Innu women (Louise Canapé, Louve Mathieu and Shan dak/Jeanne’Arc Vollant), natives of the North Shore (Quebec), sign this collection imbued with a typically Aboriginal flavor. Their haikus reveal the naked truth of a people of the great outdoors confined to the “reserve”, a reserve which perhaps has the merit of protecting the identity, but which nevertheless cuts wings.

Subjects: Indigenous authors, Indigenous literature, Innu, Innu-aitun, Poetry

  • Kind
    • Printed document
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
  • Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
    • Print Document
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
Uashtessiu : lumière d’automne

Uashtessiu : lumière d’automne

Jean Désy, Rita Mestokosho

In this book, two nomads, poets, healers, one Innu, the other from Quebec, share a love for the same territory: the North Shore and, beyond, the North. Rita Mestokosho is the first Innu poet to have published a collection in Quebec, while Jean Désy is a traveling poet who sails between the South and the North and the worlds of autochthony. Two sensibilities intersect in the space of this poetic exchange which will have lasted four seasons.

Subjects: Indigenous authors, Indigenous literature, Innu, Innu-aimun, Innu-aitun, Poetry

  • Kind
    • Printed document
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
  • Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
    • Print Document
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
Uiesh : Quelque part

Uiesh : Quelque part

Joséphine Bacon

This bilingual French-Innu aimum collection of poetry chronicles the life of a city-dweller whose soul and heart have remained in a lost land. Being a tribute to the territory of her ancestors, this book won Joséphine Bacon the Prix des libraires 2019.

Subjects: Indigenous authors, Indigenous literature, Innu territory, Innu-aitun, Poetry

  • Kind
    • Printed document
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
  • Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
    • Print Document
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
    • Natural Sciences
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