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Drew Hayden Taylor is reclaiming Indigenous culture with the APTN show Going Native
The Anishnawbe author and journalist explores the ways in which Indigenous people are shaping food, movies, music, architecture and more By Norman Wilner
Courtesy Ice River Films.
Drew Hayden Taylor is looking to expand your understanding of Indigenous culture.
With his new documentary series Going Native – which is now airing Saturdays at 8:30 pm on APTN, and streaming on the network’s APTN lumi platform – the Anishinaabe author, journalist and former NOW writer illuminates the ways in which Indigenous people are shaping and reclaiming their culture.
Taylor tells me all about it on the latest episode of the
How Jeff VanderMeer Prevents Writerâs Block
Credit.Jillian Tamaki
April 15, 2021
âI get superstitious,â says the author, whose latest novel is âHummingbird Salamanderâ: âI once had a book sent to me that was disrupting my ability to write a novel because of a superficial similarity between the two. I took that book and dug a hole and buried it deep in the backyard.â
What books are on your night stand?
I chose the night stand for its stalwart qualities and it is currently holding up well under the eclectic weight of an advance copy of John Paul Brammerâs â¡Hola Papi!,â B. R. Yeagerâs âNegative Space,â Bernard Rudofskyâs âThe Prodigious Builders,â Eley Williamsâs âThe Liarâs Dictionary,â Rita Indianaâs âTentacle,â Stephen Graham Jonesâs âThe Only Good Indians,â Julienne Fordâs âParadigms and Fairy Tales,â Angelo Maria Ripellinoâs
Jennifer David, Waubgeshig Rice
Storykeepers, a new monthly podcast about Indigenous literature by co-hosts and authors Waubgeshig Rice and Jennifer David, aims to bring conversations about Indigenous books to a wider audience in an audio book-club format.
“We are all story keepers in various senses,” says Rice, the Sudbury-based author of
Moon of the Crusted Snow (ECW Press) and a member of the Wasauksing First Nation near Parry Sound, Ont. “It’s our responsibility collectively, as readers and as writers, to make sure that those stories go forth for future generations.”
David, the Ottawa-based author of
Original People, Original Television: The Launching of the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network and a member of the Chapleau Cree First Nation in northern Ontario, first raised the idea of teaming up on a podcast about Indigenous books years ago when Rice was also living in Ottawa, but the timing wasn’t quite right.