La description

Récompenses

  • Winner, AUP Book, Jacket, and Journal Show (Jackets & Covers) 2014
  • Winner, Mary Scorer Award for Best Book by a Manitoba Publisher 2015

Reviews

Sanaaq begins abruptly and ends with a spiritual release, and everything in between carries the reader along the life journey of a small community tangling with the paradoxes, juxtapositions, and day-to-day realities of northern colonialism while also re-affirming the livelihoods and knowledge that people use to assert local ways of knowing upon colonial actors. This novel, now available in English, is important reading for anyone wishing to better understand the trajectories and ironies of mid-twentieth century state projects to furnish “welfare” to Canada’s northern peoples, and to understand how Inuit actors approached these new realities.”

- Zoe Todd

“Despite being a figure of great literary and cultural importance, Mitiarjuk and her work are almost entirely unknown in English-speaking Canada.... Sanaaq may be read as an ethnographic or historical document, but to do so would be to miss the skill and complexity of the storytelling. The novel is a creative and critical intervention into the process of representing Inuit experience.”

- Keavy Martin

"This simply told tale captures the stark and sometimes brutal reality of life in the Far North."

- Monique Polak