
Unreconciled (Signed Edition) Family, Truth, and Indigenous Resistance
Reviews

"... the acknowledgment that 'reconciliation' is the wrong word for both the situation and the goal. To reconcile in this context would be to repair a once-functional relationship. No such thing has ever meaningfully existed between Indigenous nations and the state of Canada."

This was solid. I think it is particularly smart at weaving pop culture into this, with his vast knowledge of the subject of visual media and representation of indigenous people in it. I also appreciated that he speaks frankly about systemic issues and white guilt surrounding these complex issues; most of which go completely acknowledged at an institutional level. He says there aren’t two sides of an issue. There are facts and an alternate, ahistorical narrative that permeates Canada still, and that’s absolutely true. It was what we learned in school, despite the fact that literally as we sat there hearing that there was a peaceful land transition and residential schools were a good effort, now defunct—there were still schools in operation, at that very moment. Smarter still, I think, is tying each of the issues to personal history and academic knowledge, making this an unabashedly, unapologetically political memoir that succinctly tackles the standard objections people usually have to how indigenous peoples have been treated in Canada. Of which, he has been outspoken about for some time, so should be a surprise to anyone picking this up. Not that marginalized people have even the luxury of not being political.







