Reading for the love of it

Hosted by the East York-Scarborough Reading Association

Sessions

Writing as Social Activism

Presented by David A. Robertson

Date, Time, and Room

Friday, February 20, 202612:15 PM – 2:00 PMGrand Ballroom West (max. 400)

Description

The road to reconciliation is paved with Story. The phrase “Truth & Reconciliation” means the two are inextricably linked. While the definition and understanding of what reconciliation means and what it entails are up for discussion — at its most basic, albeit still complex form, it is the act of building community — truth means what really happened, and what is still happening, on Turtle Island. For too long, our stories, as Indigenous peoples, have been told by others. Only recently, within the last fifteen years, we have been able to reclaim our truth and share it with others through Story. This storytelling resurgence has created a revolutionary change that has ripped apart the fabric of what we thought this country was and has stitched together a new understanding of Canada. Every form of writing — from blog posts to novels — is distinct but shares the goal of knowledge transfer. Story ought, as well, to motivate the reader to utilize the knowledge they have been gifted with to take meaningful action so that we can do better than has been done in the past. This is the work of social change: understanding what has been so we can clearly understand what can be.

Presented in EnglishGeneralAuthor, DEI, Indigenous Studies

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