

When my wife first noticed what book I was reading, she asked "so what makes indigenous erotica different than any other erotica?"
It was asked without challenge or judgment, but the question certainly embedded in my brain-- especially since I was about a quarter of the way into it and I didn't have an answer for her. It became at once a distraction and a focus.
"Well," I stumbled, "there seems to be more references to nature, for one. You know: trees, animals, and stuff."
But was there really? I haven't read a lot of erotica, that's for sure, so what was I comparing it to? Sure I've come across the occasional erotic poem or prose passage, but certainly not anything that claimed its status as "erotic" as loudly as this collection did. Maybe those nature images are just as common in non-Indigenous erotica. In one of Akiwenzie-Damm's own poems, for instance, she needlessly gives us another poem that uses "plums" for sexual imagery. William Carlos Williams did that long ago (and better) and he wasn't indigenous. So maybe the supposed abundance of nature imagery was merely the result of my stereotyping of indigenous people. Or maybe it was more common and it actually is a cultural commonality between indigenous peoples. I find it hard to trust my own perceptions sometimes. Am I hypo or hyper culturally sensitive?
Believe it or not, I respect the book more for forcing me to confront myself this way. Though I don't have answers, it must be a good thing to have these reflections from time to time, right?
Still, these are hardly the erotic thoughts I'm sure Akiwenzie-Damm and other contributors had in mind for their readers. This is the way I ruin parties.
So what did they have in mind? Smut? Sure. Some of these read like Penthouse Forum letters. Thom E. Hawke's poem "Pow Wow Letters" comes to mind. But how about romantic? Sure. Try Beth Brant's short story "So Generously." Beautiful? Gregory Scofield's poem "
Ceremonies." And some are also philosophical and some are also silly. All of which, in a nutshell, sums up sex for just about everyone, indigenous or not. Hey, maybe that was the point.
Oh and some were good and some were not so good. But I guess that's also pretty accurate.
Here's one of my favourites. It's by Randy Lundy and probably fits under the "philosophical" banner:
A Treatise Upon the Nature of the SoulFirst of all, the word soulit just will not dowith its implicationits insinuationits outright declarationthat the body is a tomb!(Read the rest
here.)
Without Reservation, featuring erotic short stories and poetry from Canada, the U.S., Australia, and Aotearoa (New Zealand), is published in Canada by Kegedonce Press and available for purchase
here.
Labels: 3rd Canadian Book Challenge, Erotica, Gregory Scofield, Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm, Kegedonce Press, Native Poetry, Randy Lundy
I'm so happy Ayn Rand lost!
I hate that friggin' novel!!!
Let's see this week...I hate to leave Dorothy and the gang (and Toto, too), but I have always thought Mary Shelley was cool. Her mom was Mary Wollstonecraft, who wrote one of the greatest essays in the English language. Furthermore, and more to the point, when Mary Shelley was just a teenager, she kicked Lord Byron's and Percy Bysshe Shelley's respective a.. butts in a ghost-story writing contest which produced the book I'm voting for this week: Frankenstein. Go, Mary!
I'll have to take the monster on this one.
Frankenstein!
I love Frankenstein!
Be my Frankenstein- a little Alice Cooper for you. Mary Shelley all the way!
Oops Feed My Frankenstein. It's been awhile. I'm not such a metal chick anymore.
Frankenstein, with its different narrators, always reminds me of [{(x)}].
One of the better classics, that lives up to the legend, but not at all like the movie depictions.
I vote for Frankenstein (but The Wizard of Oz is also a classic that stands up really well, and it suitable and readable for children. I wish I could vote for both.)
Well, I only vote for the Wizard because you left me no choice, John. But this time I'm wholeheartedly behind my vote .... Frankenstein!
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Joan Stepsen
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