AltaMira Press
Pages: 282
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7591-1118-9 • Hardback • September 2007 • $125.00 • (£96.00)
978-0-7591-1120-2 • Paperback • September 2007 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7591-1366-4 • eBook • September 2007 • $47.50 • (£37.00)
Lois Beardslee is the author of Rachel's Children (2004), a novel about the Ojibwe of northern Michigan, and the essay collection Lies to Live By (2003). She is an instructor in communications at Northwestern Michigan College and an Ojibwe artist whose works are in public and private collections around the world.
Part 1 Introduction
2 The Real Life Adventures of Ima Pipiig
3 Koolaid
4 Solstice
5 Indian Boarding School
6 Not Far Away
7 Falcon Clan Meets Indian Boarding School
8 Venn Diagrams
9 Educating Ima
10 Before I Offend Most of You, I Would Like to Thank You for Coming
11 Turtle TV
12 Public Education As a Form of Media
13 Racism 101
14 The Lecture They Want to Hear
15 Sweetgrass
16 The Play
17 Creation Stories
18 No Wait, I Know a Part That Comes Before the Beginning
19 The Lore of the Turtle
20 Book Reviews
21 The Lars Nederstadt Holocaust Museum
22 Men in Brown
23 Why Ima Pipiig Did Not Vote
24 Jim Crow- Culture of Convenience
25 The Chair
26 F-ed By the V-Monologues
27 The Throw-Away People
28 Laughing Man
29 I Wannabe a Delicacy
30 Dead Horses, and How to Beat Them
31 Toxins
32 Gambling for Dollars
33 Big Waldeau and Pork Patty
34 Shiigawk
35 On Warriors, Living and Dead
36 The Shirt
37 We Did Not Come Over Here on the Mayflower
38 The Ladies Sat There Patiently
Once again Lois Beardslee goes right to the heart, both figuratively and pointedly. Through her own voice and experiences, and through that of her semi-fictional, semi-autobiographical alter-ego, Ima Pipiig, she effectively makes abundantly clear the many forms that racism takes, permeating social institutions and every aspect of our daily lives. Her words, carefully considered, yet straight from the wounds of experience, speak powerfully to Native and non-Native readers alike. This book is highly recommended to the general reader and to every student seriously seeking insights into contemporary American society.
— Susan Lobo, University of Arizona
Lois Beardslee, notable scholar, storyteller, artist, philosopher, and writer, brings us Ima Pipiig, who brings us clarity in contemporary aboriginal living. The journey Ima Pipiig speaks of is the journey of reason, the journey of the just cause, the journey of Indigenous Northern Michigan. Ima Pipiig speaks of freedom at long last. She calls upon the mainstream to take the Indians of Sleeping Bear seriously; she calls on all of us to doubt the message of the mainstream until that stream converges and runs clear for all past generations and for all coming generations. Not Far Away calls upon us to renew, reclaim, and reinvigorate our place in the world. Lois Beardslee gives us ourselves in Ima Pipiig and Ima brings us home.
— Allison Hedge Coke, professor of poetry and creative wriitng, University of Nebraska, Kearney
Told in alternating voices—the author's and that of her fictional protagonist, Ima Pipiig—Not Far Away deals with the issues of racism, poverty, and struggles over the remaining natural resources in the Northern Great Lakes as well as access to public lands, jobs, education, and even social comfort. Unlike other scholars whose works emphasize individual responsibility for racism and environmental degradation, Beardslee unflinchingly points her finger directly at the educational system that willingly participates in the racist practices of America's “heartland.” Not Far Away appeals to educators and students of higher education, multiculturalism, women's studies, Native American studies, sociology, contemporary literature—and anyone else who is interested in understanding racism and ending it.
— Beverly Slapin, Oyate