Épisodes

  • Introduction & Lee Maracle
    Jan 5 2021
    Week 1: January 11-15, 2021

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    18 min
  • Week 2: Poetry Nolan Natasha and Tanya Davis with Andrea Dorfman
    Jan 12 2021
    Do you hate poetry? Do you love poetry? Let's talk about it

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    20 min
  • Week 3: Writing & Grammar
    Jan 21 2021
    Spelling is important to all types of writing, whether it's texting a friend, or sending an email, but most certainly spelling is critical when it comes to handing in your final assignments, and in your future professional life. Tune in to also hear songs from Tanya Davis with her ode to the "Thesaurus," from her album Gorgeous Morning (2008), and shake off all your spelling woes dancing to Rich Aucoin's "Undead" from his EP Public Publication (2010).

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    27 min
  • Week 4: Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
    Jan 28 2021

    Leanne Betasamosake Simpson is a Michi Saagig Nishnaabeg writer, scholar, and musician, and is a member of Alderville Frist Nation. She is the author of five previous books, including: This Accident of Being Lost. She has released two albums including f(l)ight, which is a companion piece to This Accident of Being Lost, and  is an excellent example of what musician Jeremy Dutcher, member of Tobique First Nation one of the six Wolastoqiyik reserves in New Brunswick, calls “Indigenous excellence.”


    In this episode, we will examine both the short stories and songs in order to understand the relationship between text, body, and sound. We will read and listen to: “under your always light,” “the oldest tree in the world,” and “I am graffiti.” 


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    19 min
  • Week 5: Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
    Feb 3 2021

    Leanne Betasamosake Simpson is a Michi Saagig Nishnaabeg writer, scholar, and musician, and is a member of Alderville Frist Nation. She is the author of five previous books, including: This Accident of Being Lost. She has released two albums including f(l)ight, which is a companion piece to This Accident of Being Lost, and  is an excellent example of what musician Jeremy Dutcher, member of Tobique First Nation one of the six Wolastoqiyik reserves in New Brunswick, calls “Indigenous excellence.”


    In this week's episode, we will discuss "caribou ghosts & untold stories," "constellation," "this accident of being lost," and watch the videos for "road salt," and "how to steal a canoe," for our virtual salon.


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    17 min
  • Week 6: Michelle Porter & Douglas Walbourne-Gough
    Feb 9 2021

    Metis poet Michelle Porter believes all poetry is inquiry. A journalist by trade, and an academic by training, Porter’s debut poetry collection, Inquiries (Breakwater 2019), beautifully illustrates how she questions herself, her place, and her family through the poetic, and brings us all back to the river. 


    Mixed/adopted Mi’kmaq Newfoundland poet Douglas Walbourne-Gough’s debut collection, Crow Gulch (Goose Lane 2019) unearths an almost forgotten history of a community known as Crow Gulch, a mostly shaded and stigmatized area around Corner Brook built when the newsprint mill was constructed in the 1920s. 


    In this week's episode, you will hear some of the “Red River Jig,” by the Metis Fiddler Quartet, and we will dive into Porter's poem "Childhood, Remembered," and hear an exclusive recording of Walbourne-Gough's "Geraldine Winnifred Walbourne," in order to connect with place, memory, and ancestry through poetry.



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    25 min
  • Week 7: Shauntay Grant & Tanya Evanson
    Feb 22 2021

    What is spoken word poetry? A broad designation for poetry intended for performance. Spoken word poetry has its roots in oral traditions, fusing elements of rap, hip-hop, storytelling, theatre, jazz, rock, blues, and folk music.


    In celebration of Black History Month, I want to share the work of two amazing spoken word artists: Shauntay Grant, a writer and storyteller from Kjipuktuk (Halifax, Nova Scotia), who served as the third poet laureate for Halifax Regional Municipality from 2009 to 2011, and Tanya Evanson, who has published two poetry collections are Bothism (Ekstasis 2017) and Nouveau Griot (Frontenac 2018). Her first novel Book of Wings (2021) is published by Véhicule Press.



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    25 min
  • Week 8: Essentials of Research: Planning, Writing and Documenting Sources
    Mar 8 2021

    In this week's podcast we kick off the second of the half of the semester with Mitski's "Nobody," because spring is just around the corner, and you'll be cracking your windows to hear the world outside while working on your research papers. The secret to your academic success as a writer can be found in the following three essentials of research: planning, writing and documenting sources.


    Begin with a research plan, a strategy of how you are going to approach your topic. Formulate research questions, which should be interesting to you and your reader. Create a timeline to help keep you on track, and how you will strategize searching for sources, evaluating and reading sources, and note-taking. From planning your first draft to writing and revising your second draft, and finally, editing and polishing your final draft.


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    20 min