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Título
"Catherine Tekakwitha, who are you?" — The Indigenous Female Body in the Colonial and Post-Colonial
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Leonard Cohen
Catherine Tekakwitha
Beautiful Losers (novel)
Indigenous studies
post-colonialism
post-modernism
Canadian literature
Clasificación UNESCO
5101 Antropología Cultural
5701.07 Lengua y Literatura
Fecha de publicación
2022-10-21
Editor
Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca (España)
Citación
Weiher, E. C. (2022). “Catherine Tekakwitha, who are you?” — The Indigenous Female Body in the Colonial and Post-Colonial: Imagination of Leonard Cohen’s Beautiful Losers. Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies, 11, 53–75. https://doi.org/10.14201/candb.v11i53-75
Resumen
[EN] In 2012, the Mohawk saint Catherine Tekakwitha was finally canonized by the Catholic church. She has been the subject of many accounts and narratives —both historical and fictional—and figures as the main subject of Leonard Cohen's 1966 novel Beautiful Losers. While having been lauded for its post-modernist and presumably postcolonialism stance on Tekakwitha's figure, Cohen's novel remains controversial in its depiction and appropriation of Indigenous womanhood. Beautiful Losers relies heavily on missionaries' accounts of Tekakwitha and is entrenched in the male protagonist's sexual claim and fixation on her character. Given the significant status of women in Indigenous communities, I argue that Cohen's novel not only participates in an ongoing violation of the Indigenous female body but also denies the integrity of Indigenous family structures and their social as well as narrative authority. It hinders, rather than encourages, a shift in narrative authority pertaining to Canada's colonial heritage. While Cohen's text remains a necessary testament to the shortcomings and failures of history and its criticism, what is required in forthcoming scholarship and narratives dealing with Tekakwitha and figures similar to her is a narration originating in Indigenous communities. An emergence of such narratives requires a definite reckoning with Canada's violent history of mistreating Indigenous womanhood that continues to this day.
URI
ISSN
2254-1179
DOI
10.14201/candb.v11i53-75
Versión del editor
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