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May 5, 2026 - 00:54:07
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Driftpile Cree poet Billy-Ray Belcourt's favourite place in the world is his mother's house. It's marked with a horrible, dark past — built for nuns who ran the local residential school in Northern Alberta. Belcourt grew...
Defying haunting colonial history with literary imagination is an episode from Ideas by CBC. Driftpile Cree poet Billy-Ray Belcourt's favourite place in the world is his mother's house. It's marked with a horrible, dark past — built for nun...
This episode belongs to Ideas.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Apr 23, 2026, 00:54:08 long, audio available.
Driftpile Cree poet Billy-Ray Belcourt's favourite place in the world is his mother's house. It's marked with a horrible, dark past — built for nuns who ran the local residential school in Northern Alberta. Belcourt grew up in the shadow of that school. But his mom drenched this home with love so powerful it surpassed the haunted context. Belcourt's mother's house provokes questions reconciliation couldn't quite answer: what does it mean to live inside history and how do you imagine your way out? In this lecture for Vancouver Island University’s Indigenous Speaker’s Series, he makes the case for literature as a more honest reckoning.
You can listen to Defying haunting colonial history with literary imagination online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Defying haunting colonial history with literary imagination is an episode from Ideas by CBC.
This episode is 00:54:08 long.
This episode was published on Apr 23, 2026.
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