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The Red Files

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

This debut poetry collection from Lisa Bird-Wilson reflects on the legacy of the residential school system: the fragmentation of families and histories, with blows that resonate through the generations.
Inspired by family and archival sources, Bird-Wilson assembles scraps of a history torn apart by colonial violence. The collection takes its name from the federal government's complex organizational structure of residential schools archives, which are divided into “black files" and “red files." In vignettes as clear as glass beads, her poems offer affection to generations of children whose presence within the historic record is ghostlike, anonymous and ephemeral.
The collection also explores the larger political context driving the mechanisms that tore apart families and cultures, including the Sixties Scoop. It depicts moments of resistance, both personal and political, as well as official attempts at reconciliation: “I can hold in the palm of my right hand / all that I have left: one story-gift from an uncle, / a father's surname, treaty card, Cree accent echo, metal bits, grit— / and I will still have room to cock a fist."
The Red Files concludes with a fierce hopefulness, embracing the various types of love that can begin to heal the traumas inflicted by a legacy of violence.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 19, 2016
      This poetry debut from Bird-Wilson, who previously published Just Pretending, a book of short stories and nonfiction, is a haunting, beautiful collection. With poems drawing on personal experiences and historical sources, Bird-Wilson tackles the long violence of residential schools, the history that preceded them, growing up Métis in the aftermath of Canada’s attempted cultural genocide, and the small, quiet moments in a life. There is warmth, connection, and seeking in these pages, too. Bird-Wilson primarily employs free verse and prose poetry, also using formal flourishes and experimental forms to excellent effect. This is a hard read, and should be: Bird-Wilson has cracked open both her own story and the Canadian colonialist and expansionist history the country tries so hard to ignore and bury, or addresses grudgingly. Readers can hear the weight of the book’s foci in the opening of “Sweep”: “I can hold in the palm of my right hand/ all that I have left: one story-gift from an uncle,/ a father’s surname, treaty card, Cree accent echo, metal bits, grit—/ and I will still have room to cock a fist.” In many ways, Bird-Wilson has crafted a book of ghosts, both personal and communal, but, far more importantly, her collection is about the living.

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  • English

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