Telling Animals: Animacies in Dene Narratives
By (Author) Jasmine Spencer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
27th June 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cultural studies: customs and traditions
Indigenous peoples / Indigeneity
398.2089972
Hardback
202
Width 159mm, Height 229mm, Spine 21mm
481g
In Telling Animals, Jasmine Spencer offers a comparative yet personal approach to Dene/Athabaskan stories, both Northern and Southern. It examines the animating effects of animal stories, the transformative power of animacies in Dene stories, and the effects of narrative revitalization through animal grammar. It takes as its first premise the teachings of many Elders, who have shared that the stories are alive. Jasmine Spencer's comparative approach combines literary, linguistic, anthropological, and philosophical theories and methods using a deictic framework for closely reading the stories in both their Dene languages and in English translation. The narrative epistemologies enacted by Dene stories counterbalance many of the ethical problems inherent within Euro-Western approaches to ontology and experience. These stories revive those who listen and read, offering hope.
Telling Animals is a sophisticated, accessible, and engaging study of textualized Dene orature, showing how Indigenous animal stories demonstrate much-needed respect for the entire more-than-human world. Written from a linguistic and ethnographic perspective, this book has much to offer scholars of critical animal studies and ecocriticism, helping us to understand the language of and about animals.
-- Scott Slovic, University of IdahoJasmine Spencer is assistant professor of English at Dixie State University.