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Picturing Transformation: Nexw-ayanstut

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Picturing Transformation: Nexw-ayanstut

Contributors:

By (Author) Nancy Bleck
By (author) Katherine Dodds
By (author) Chief Bill Williams

ISBN:

9780991858804

Publisher:

Figure 1 Publishing

Imprint:

Figure 1 Publishing

Publication Date:

12th August 2014

Country:

Canada

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

304.209711

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

160

Dimensions:

Width 222mm, Height 304mm

Weight:

1289g

Description

The history of the Pacific Northwest is rife with stories of conflict between loggers and environmentalists, indigenous peoples and government-backed corporations. Many of them have ended in violence, arrests, and clear-cutting. Farm License 38, which encompasses Sims Creek in the upper Elaho Valley, became the site of a wholly different kind of protest between 1997 and 2007. Because of the actions of ten thousand people brought together by Squamish Nation Hereditary Chief Bill Williams, artist Nancy Bleck, and the late mountaineer John Clarke, this land a 50,000-hectare section of the Squamish First Nation now known as Wild Spirit Places was saved. Picturing Transformation is the story of Uts'am/Witness, a series of camping weekends held at Sims Creek that brought together indigenous and non-indigenous people to walk, sleep, eat, make art, have conversations, and participate in ceremonies on this disputed land. Through the words and photos of those who attended, this beautiful book pays homage to the power that people with strong vision and a common purpose can play in honoring tradition, safeguarding land, and changing policy. It is a lesson in the possibilities for resolving conflict peacefully, now and in the future.

Author Bio

Nancy Bleck is an artist, photographer, educator, and cofounder of Uts'am/Witness project. A teacher at Emily Carr University and a recipient of the YMCA's Women of Distinction Award, she lives in Vancouver. Katherine Dodds began her advertising career with Adbusters and is a recipient of the Women in Film Woman of Vision Award. She lives in Vancouver. Chief Bill Williams has served as an elected member of the Squamish First Nation Council since 1980 and as a member of the community's Hereditary Council since 1995. He lives in his traditional territory of Squamish Nation, British Columbia.

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