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How Do We Hold Our Heroes? A Personal Essay on Lessons From Lee Maracle, by Riley Yesno (2023)
Reading, Writing, and Thinking Alongside Lee Maracle, by Glen Coulthard (2023)
The Operation Was Successful, But the Patient Died, by Lee Maracle (2003)
Gratitude for Lee Maracle, by Hiromi Goto, Rita Wong and Larissa Lai
Lee Maracle a fierce champion of Indigenous women’s stories (North Shore News)
UBCIC Remembers Lee Maracle, Beloved Indigenous Activist and Acclaimed Writer and Poet
Lee Maracle, revolutionary Indigenous author and poet, dead at 71 – CBC BC
Celebrated Sto:lo writer and activist Lee Maracle dead at 71 – CBC Books
Indigenous author and poet Lee Maracle remembered as trailblazing writer and teacher – Globe & Mail
Celebrated Indigenous author Lee Maracle dead at 71 – Toronto Star
Writer, teacher, âknowledge carrierâ: U of T joins country in remembering Lee Maracle
In Memory of Lee Maracle – Canada Palestine Association
Canada puts Indigenous women last, says poet Lee Maracle – CBC Ideas
Scent Of Burning Cedar, by Lee Maracle
Lee Maracle stormed CanLit stages to make sure her story was heard – CBC Radio
Conversation with Lee Maracle – North Shore News
Activist Lee Maracle On Why Every Question Is Worth Answering – Chatelaine
Lee Maracleâs tale – Quill & Quire
Lee Maracle on her exchange with the Chhara
Lee Maracle’s Support Letter for John Graham
The Lost Days of Columbus, by Lee Maracle
Lee Maracle: The Raven – Toronto Public Library
Lee Maracle reading/launching her book “I Am Woman” in 1988
Capitalism, the Final Stage of Exploitation â Lee Carter (1970)
Native Alliance for Red Power â Eight Point Program (1969)
Land Back: The matrilineal descent of modern Indigenous land reclamation â M. Gouldhawke (2020), with quotes from an interview by Hartmut Lutz with Lee Maracle
Lee Maracle – The People and the Text
Lee Maracle – The Canadian Encyclopedia
Lee Maracle – Literary Landmarks (Vancouver Public Library)
Support Lee Maracle’s family with her memorial
âBut I also revived our old stories as a means to frame modern stories like myth-making. The first time I ever saw that done I was about ten or eleven and someone gave me a copy of âTales of Vancouverâ by E. Pauline Johnson and Capilano who was a direct relative of mine was retelling the story of the sea serpent, but he was predicting what is happening now, the industrialization of Canada, and that was 1880. I thought, thatâs what I want to do. I want to retell these stories as if they were happening now.â
â Lee Maracle (StĂł:lĹ), interviewed by Tania Willard (Secwepemc), Redwire Magazine (April 2003)
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