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Summary (also available through PDF flier): Through elements of memoir, history, and philosophy of land use, a lover of her Mennonite farm childhood looks critically at farming’s impact on the land, comparing settler values of land ownership to those of first peoples who see themselves as owned by the sacred homeland. Here is praise for this second Cascadia volume from Raylene Hinz-Penner, author also of the acclaimed Searching for Sacred Ground: The Journey of Chief Lawrence Hart, Mennonite: "Beautiful
and deeply researched, this meditation on a farm on the Oklahoma
panhandle took a lifetime to write. From the Inland Sea, to Coronado’s
exploits, to Comancheria, to the Dust Bowl, to her parents bent on
farming after World War II, it is a love song to place and the story of
one thoughtful person’s change of heart and mind. Structured by the
seasons—like the liturgy or life on the land—this book is made to
savor. See if it doesn’t change you too.” —Julia Spicher Kasdorf, Author, As
Is “Hinz-Penner
offers an engaging personal and political narrative that explores the
contradictions, myths, and resilience of what we call her landlines,
bloodlines, and songlines. Her memoir includes helpful distillations of
significant historical periods and patterns of Mennonite migrations and
Indigenous and settler histories. I hope it will inspire other settlers
to venture their own decolonial re-memberings.” —Elaine Enns, Co-Author, Healing
Haunted Histories: A Settler Discipleship of Decolonization “This book is so rich—as we have come to expect from Raylene's pen. From her youthful perch atop the perfectly stacked alfalfa bales, Penner looks over the sandy soil of the family’s dairy farm to the horizons and ponders the mysteries, the spirits of former residents. In rich prose and poetry, the author explores her places of origin and dares to probe the mythologies that have long sustained her people.” —John Sharp, Author, My Calling to Fulfill: The Orie O. Miller Story Market: Anyone interested in a memoir about having, as Hinz-Penner puts it, “mythologized my heritage as the legacy of a people purified by the fires of martyrdom, simple hardworking farmers looking for refuge from the state. The story is not that simple.” Shelving: Memoir,
autobiography—Mennonite/Anabaptist; Indigenous Peoples; History of
Kansas, BISAC: Autobiography; History, Religion. RTM: 170
Autobiography; 690 Religion/Ethics. Publisher: Cascadia
Publishing House LLC |
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