We Survived the Night: An Indigenous Reckoning
Autor Julian Brave NoiseCaten Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 oct 2025
Preț: 111.59 lei
Preț vechi: 138.64 lei
-20%
Puncte Express: 167
Preț estimativ în valută:
19.75€ • 22.98$ • 17.13£
19.75€ • 22.98$ • 17.13£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 07-21 februarie
Livrare express 27-31 ianuarie pentru 60.86 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781788169370
ISBN-10: 1788169379
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: maps, handful of integrated illustrations
Dimensiuni: 138 x 220 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1788169379
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: maps, handful of integrated illustrations
Dimensiuni: 138 x 220 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Julian Brave NoiseCat is a writer, Academy Award-nominated filmmaker and champion powwow dancer. His award-winning journalism has appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post and New Yorker. He is the co-director of Sugarcane, which won the Sundance Film FestivalGrand Jury award for Directing and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film. NoiseCat is a proud member of the Canim Lake Band Tsq'escen and descendant of the Lil'Wat Nation of Mount Currie. We Survived the Night is his first book.
Recenzii
NoiseCat's decision to shift his talents from documentary to literature has given us a gift; a narrative that is ambitious and inventive and that asks readers to step inside Indigenous traditions around archives and memory keeping. We Survived the Night is a tremendous homage to the complexities of Indigenous life and culture and simultaneously a continuation of them. This is a fantastic book ... it's extraordinary
Julian Brave NoiseCat seamlessly connects true tales of identity and betrayal, love and abandonment, clarity and confusion. We Survived the Night is a whirling, radiant gift to the reader
An extraordinary read ... far-reaching, ever-surprising, funny, tragic, and written in what is almost certainly an unprecedented format
This powerful book is a journey by torchlight through Julian's own family story, and the torches are coyote stories and broader histories of Indigenous North America. Braided together, the three become one narrative of suffering, survival, love and its failures and successes, continuities and ruptures, so that most of all it's a book of loss and recovery. It's a beautiful, wrenching, important masterpiece, both a memoir and something that reaches far beyond the personal.
In this rousing book, NoiseCat deepens and expands the work of Sugarcane, exploring how Indigenous peoples have persisted despite centuries of attempted erasure by North American settlers. He weaves together lexéy'em (oral histories), tspetékwll (legends), memoir and on-the-ground reporting in a fascinating multifaceted restoration of Indigenous history and a celebration of contemporary Indigenous life
Written in gorgeous, sparse prose, We Survived the Night reads like a novel. Told with a blistering honesty, the truth and grit create a beautifully woven coyote story we haven't heard before. This is a love letter to Oakland, to the Canim Lake Band Tsq'secen of the Secwepemc Nation, to a father from his son, to the act of being a Native person in the twenty first century finding ways to love even through all that wounds have opened and wrought. With this, Julian Brave NoiseCat has written a book I've been waiting my whole life to read.
We Survived the Night is filled with that thing I look for in all great art - love deepened by sorrow, sorrow widened by love. Survival, yes. NoiseCat is one of our great new Scheherazades - he keeps people alive in his stories. And people will want to stay alive because of them
From its chilling opening pages, We Survived the Night grips the reader with a story that must be told: of crime and loss, of heartbreak and wonder, of death and survival, and of startling and inspiring resilience
Part mythopoetic yet literal memoir, part history, part cartography of vast and intricate cosmologies - interlaced with human wrongs-part love story and story of self-discovery-this gorgeously written, deeply courageous mini epic by Julian Brave NoiseCat is an essential guide to waking up in our new, yet ancient, human emergency. It's not easy. It's not always possible. But We Survived The Night is the book we need to read right now if we hope to survive this night
Invigorating and soul-stirring, We Survived the Night is a book whose epic scale - encompassing explorations of history, language, land, and politics, as well as of family bonds, artmaking, and storytelling - astonishes me. It is a tribute, in the end, to love which is intimate and clear-eyed enough to see one's own father and mother, and capacious enough to hold the whole world
The book takes its name from the Secwepemctsín morning greeting and the acknowledgement that to still be here can never be taken for granted. Bringing the same rigour to the page as he did to his Oscar-nominated documentary Sugarcane about the Canadian Indian residential school system, We Survived The Night interweaves oral history with hard-hitting journalism and a deeply personal father-son journey into a searing portrait of Indigenous survival, love, and resurgence
An extraordinary read ... an odyssey that is far-reaching , ever-surprising, funny, tragic, and written in what is almost certainly an unprecedented format. It is at once a memoir, a long- form journalistic study of indigenous history and resurgence in North America, and a wild , glorious series of sean nós yarns originating in First Nation creation myths. Within this latter framework, the author tells his own personal story and that of his father (which is moving and a little bit heartbreaking). These traditional stories intersperse with a meticulously researched testimony of the contemporary achievements, challenges and hopes of First Nation peoples - a powerful book.
Oscar-nominated filmmaker NoiseCat blends journalism with memoir in this powerful book about the First Peoples of North America. Setting out across the country, he delivers a cultural epic that chronicles the intimate stories of different communities - from the movement fighting against the Dakota Access Pipeline to the activists leading the campaign to change the name of Washington's American football team - all the while finding the thread that connects to his own personal history
Praise for NoiseCat
'His words and images take us to places of greater understanding, places where we are invited into the lives, journeys, joys, and sorrows of amazing people who might otherwise go unseen. We are, all of us, broadened and connected by his vital work.'
NoiseCat stands where the currents of climate journalism, advocacy and policy meet. His writing on the environment crackles with reported stories and historical context.
Praise for Sugarcane
Immersive and incredibly beautiful'
Has a stomach-churning potency
NoiseCat's is possibly the most compelling of the four entwined narratives that the movie follows
Julian Brave NoiseCat seamlessly connects true tales of identity and betrayal, love and abandonment, clarity and confusion. We Survived the Night is a whirling, radiant gift to the reader
An extraordinary read ... far-reaching, ever-surprising, funny, tragic, and written in what is almost certainly an unprecedented format
This powerful book is a journey by torchlight through Julian's own family story, and the torches are coyote stories and broader histories of Indigenous North America. Braided together, the three become one narrative of suffering, survival, love and its failures and successes, continuities and ruptures, so that most of all it's a book of loss and recovery. It's a beautiful, wrenching, important masterpiece, both a memoir and something that reaches far beyond the personal.
In this rousing book, NoiseCat deepens and expands the work of Sugarcane, exploring how Indigenous peoples have persisted despite centuries of attempted erasure by North American settlers. He weaves together lexéy'em (oral histories), tspetékwll (legends), memoir and on-the-ground reporting in a fascinating multifaceted restoration of Indigenous history and a celebration of contemporary Indigenous life
Written in gorgeous, sparse prose, We Survived the Night reads like a novel. Told with a blistering honesty, the truth and grit create a beautifully woven coyote story we haven't heard before. This is a love letter to Oakland, to the Canim Lake Band Tsq'secen of the Secwepemc Nation, to a father from his son, to the act of being a Native person in the twenty first century finding ways to love even through all that wounds have opened and wrought. With this, Julian Brave NoiseCat has written a book I've been waiting my whole life to read.
We Survived the Night is filled with that thing I look for in all great art - love deepened by sorrow, sorrow widened by love. Survival, yes. NoiseCat is one of our great new Scheherazades - he keeps people alive in his stories. And people will want to stay alive because of them
From its chilling opening pages, We Survived the Night grips the reader with a story that must be told: of crime and loss, of heartbreak and wonder, of death and survival, and of startling and inspiring resilience
Part mythopoetic yet literal memoir, part history, part cartography of vast and intricate cosmologies - interlaced with human wrongs-part love story and story of self-discovery-this gorgeously written, deeply courageous mini epic by Julian Brave NoiseCat is an essential guide to waking up in our new, yet ancient, human emergency. It's not easy. It's not always possible. But We Survived The Night is the book we need to read right now if we hope to survive this night
Invigorating and soul-stirring, We Survived the Night is a book whose epic scale - encompassing explorations of history, language, land, and politics, as well as of family bonds, artmaking, and storytelling - astonishes me. It is a tribute, in the end, to love which is intimate and clear-eyed enough to see one's own father and mother, and capacious enough to hold the whole world
The book takes its name from the Secwepemctsín morning greeting and the acknowledgement that to still be here can never be taken for granted. Bringing the same rigour to the page as he did to his Oscar-nominated documentary Sugarcane about the Canadian Indian residential school system, We Survived The Night interweaves oral history with hard-hitting journalism and a deeply personal father-son journey into a searing portrait of Indigenous survival, love, and resurgence
An extraordinary read ... an odyssey that is far-reaching , ever-surprising, funny, tragic, and written in what is almost certainly an unprecedented format. It is at once a memoir, a long- form journalistic study of indigenous history and resurgence in North America, and a wild , glorious series of sean nós yarns originating in First Nation creation myths. Within this latter framework, the author tells his own personal story and that of his father (which is moving and a little bit heartbreaking). These traditional stories intersperse with a meticulously researched testimony of the contemporary achievements, challenges and hopes of First Nation peoples - a powerful book.
Oscar-nominated filmmaker NoiseCat blends journalism with memoir in this powerful book about the First Peoples of North America. Setting out across the country, he delivers a cultural epic that chronicles the intimate stories of different communities - from the movement fighting against the Dakota Access Pipeline to the activists leading the campaign to change the name of Washington's American football team - all the while finding the thread that connects to his own personal history
Praise for NoiseCat
'His words and images take us to places of greater understanding, places where we are invited into the lives, journeys, joys, and sorrows of amazing people who might otherwise go unseen. We are, all of us, broadened and connected by his vital work.'
NoiseCat stands where the currents of climate journalism, advocacy and policy meet. His writing on the environment crackles with reported stories and historical context.
Praise for Sugarcane
Immersive and incredibly beautiful'
Has a stomach-churning potency
NoiseCat's is possibly the most compelling of the four entwined narratives that the movie follows