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Bad Indians
Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir | Deborah A. Miranda
3 posts | 5 read | 4 to read
This book leads readers through a troubled past using the authors family circle as a touch point and resource for discovery of much more. Personal and strong, these stories present an evocative new view of the shaping of California. and the role of the Mission period in the lives of all California Indians. The result is a work of literary art that is wise, angry, and playful all at once
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andioop
Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir | Deborah A. Miranda
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This got me. Multi-genre, images, graphs, fictionalized imaginings and quotes from 100+ year-old articles. Personal history is also the history of a people.

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JSW
Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir | Deborah A. Miranda
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Truly stunning memoir. As much a history of California's Mission Indians as it is a story of Miranda's family, and of herself. Miranda is a wry, well-researched, and thoughtful writer who tackles the joys and traumas of life with clear eyes and descriptive prose. (And she makes excellent arguments for doing away with the bullshit CA mission projects for elementary schoolers.)

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laurenesalisbury
Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir | Deborah A. Miranda
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"...who we are is where we are from...Our bodies, like compasses, still know the way" (208).

Miranda's book is funny AND sincere about #storytelling as pain and healing.

"I think that's the visceral response of the human body to inescapable pain: forget about it" (196). Miranda offers us an alternative: talk about it. Share those stories and laugh about them and cry about them and theorize them. As Thomas King says, we are all made of stories.