On the first evening of the workshop, UBC Canada Research Chair, Cherokee scholar and fantasy writer gave a public lecture entitled Why Indigenous Literature Matters, from a book with the same name that he is under contract to write for Wilfrid Laurier University Press. He challenged and charmed the packed lecture hall with the charge that ignoring the full canon of Indigenous literaturesincluding works of orature and those recorded in material cultureis an act of erasure of Indigenous knowledge.
On Friday, February 28th, Canadas leading expert in Inuit literature, from the University of Alberta, suggested that the protocols of eating and sharing in Inuit cultures offers us a way to approach stories. Citing the short film Tungijuq in which eating, death, reincarnation and new life are interconnected, Martin challenged the squeamishness of eaters and readers in the south who use their lack of familiarity with Inuit culture as an excuse not to partake.