Indigenous Storywork: Educating the Heart, Mind, Body, and Spirit

Jo-Ann Archibald
4.49
90 ratings 7 reviews
Jo-ann Archibald worked closely with Coast Salish Elders and storytellers, who shared both traditional and personal life-experience stories, in order to develop ways of bringing storytelling into educational contexts. Indigenous Storywork is the result of this research and it demonstrates how stories have the power to educate and heal the heart, mind, body, and spirit. It builds on the seven principles of respect, responsibility, reciprocity, reverence, holism, interrelatedness, and synergy that form a framework for understanding the characteristics of stories, appreciating the process of storytelling, establishing a receptive learning context, and engaging in holistic meaning-making.
Genres: IndigenousEducationNonfictionHistoryAnthropologyResearch
192 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
53 (59%)
4 star
30 (33%)
3 star
6 (7%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Jo-Ann Archibald

Lists with this book

Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples
Research Is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods
Indigenous Methodologies: Characteristics, Conversations, and Contexts
Indigenous Research
12 books4 voters
Black Skin, White Masks
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
The Wretched of the Earth
Decolonize Art and Academy
41 books6 voters
Folk-Tales of the Coast Salish
Explore the River Educational Project (2-book, 1-DVD Set): Bull Trout, Tribal People, and the Jocko River
Rights Remembered: A Salish Grandmother Speaks on American Indian History and the Future
Coast Salish Indigenous Peoples
102 books2 voters