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Hugh Brody is renowned for his work with indigenous peoples.
In the 80s he was engaged in a lawsuit brought by the Inuit people of the Arctic against the Canadian government.
Brody lived with the Inuit, learned their language, recorded all their stories, which were then used as evidence in the court case - which the Inuit won.
In his new book, he returns to the Arctic and is confronted by the deterioration of the situation there.
The Inuit now possess the land, but the government has pressured them into living in settlements rather than out on the land.
Their children are forced
…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Hugh Brody is renowned for his work with indigenous peoples.
In the 80s he was engaged in a lawsuit brought by the Inuit people of the Arctic against the Canadian government.
Brody lived with the Inuit, learned their language, recorded all their stories, which were then used as evidence in the court case - which the Inuit won.

In his new book, he returns to the Arctic and is confronted by the deterioration of the situation there.
The Inuit now possess the land, but the government has pressured them into living in settlements rather than out on the land.
Their children are forced to go to school where they learn to speak English, losing their own language, which is the element that ties them to their land.
Sexual abuse by the treachers intimidates the children into a silence that results in widespread suicide among the young.

This silence ties in with Brody's own story - a mother hounded out of her home in Vienna by the Nazis, causing her to retreat into the same kind of silence that Tom Stoppard experienced from his mother, who also fled from the Nazis.

As a writer and anthropologist, Brody's concern has always been with the human condition, arguing for the need to safeguard the most vulnerable from the depredations of the modern word.


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Autorenporträt
Hugh Brody was born in 1943 and educated at Trinity College, Oxford. He taught social anthropology at Queen's University, Belfast. He is an Honorary Associate of the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge, and an Associate of the School for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto.$$$In the 1970s he worked with the Canadian Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, and then with Inuit and Indian organisations, mapping hunter-gatherer territories and researching Land Claims and indigenous rights in many parts of Canada. He was an adviser to the Mackenzie Pipeline Inquiry, a member of the World Bank's famous Morse Commission and chairman of the Snake River Independent Review, all of which took him to the encounter between large-scale development and indigenous communities. Since 1997 he has worked with the South African San Institute on Bushman history and land rights in the Southern Kalahari.