preview

Review Of The Book 'Broken Circle : The Dark Legacy Of Indian Residential Schools'

Better Essays

BOOK REVIEW: BROKEN CIRCLE: THE DARK LEGACY OF INDIAN RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS A MEMOIR BY THEODORE FONTAINE Clea Curnew-Stewart Dr. R. Robson INDI 1100 Oct 4th 2017 Theodore Fontaine is one of the thousands of young aboriginal peoples who were subjected through the early Canadian system of the Indian residential schools, was physically tortured. Originally speaking Ojibwe, Theodore relates the encounters of a young man deprived of his culture and parents, who were taken away from him at the age of seven, during which he would no longer be free to choose what to say, how to say it, with whom to live and even what culture to embrace. Theodore would then spend the next twelve years undoing what had been done to him since birth, and the rest of his life attempting a reversal of his elementary education culture shock, traumatization, and indoctrination of ethnicity and Canadian supremacy. Out of these experiences, he wrote the “Broken Circle: The Dark Legacy of Indian Residential Schools-A Memoir” and in this review, I considered the Heritage House Publishing Company Ltd publication. The book is an ideal text for those who want to gain a higher understanding of, sociologists trying to concept the cultural erosion from the schools, the religious supremacy of the schools, and the traumatic experiences of the schools and the dark ages of the school’s effects on the students. Psychiatrists in this field will find it very helpful, written with first-hand information by

Get Access