Ruby Slipperjack
From NativeWiki
Ruby Slipperjack-Farrell (1952-), Ojibwe writer and painter, is a Professor and the Chair of the Department of Indigenous Learning at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario. Dr. Slipperjack-Farrell spent her formative years on her father's trap line on Whitewater Lake. Her family later moved to a community along the railway mainline. She went to residential school for several years, finished high-school in Thunder Bay. After graduating from high school Dr. Farrell successfully completed a B.A. (History) in 1988; a B.Ed in 1989; and a Master of Education in 1993. In 2005 she completed a Doctoral program at the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. Slipperjack-Farrell has retained much of the traditional religion and heritage of her people, all of which inform her writing. Her first novel, Honour the Sun, about a young girl growing up in a tiny Ojibwa community in northern Ontario, earned rave reviews and is widely used schools. Dr. Slipperjack-Farrell is also an accomplished visual artist and a certified First Nations hunter. Her work discusses traditional religious and social customs of the Ojibwe in northern Ontario, as well as the incursion of modernity on their culture.
[edit] Books
Honour the Sun, Pemmican Pub., 1987.
Silent Words, Fifth House Books, 1992.
Weesquachak and the Lost Ones, Theytus Books, 1998.
Little Voice, Coteau Books, 2001.
[edit] Reference
Kratzert, M. "Native American Literature: Expanding the Canon", Collection Building Vol. 17, 1, 1998, p. 4

