Here.
Guests are Bill Castanier and Matthew Fletcher.
Here.
Guests are Bill Castanier and Matthew Fletcher.
Here.
Here, from Bill Castinier [for more on People v. Hildabridle, see this — People v Hildabridle]:
John D. Voelker, former Michigan Supreme Court justice (1956-1960) and author of The New York Times bestseller Anatomy of a Murder, called his book Laughing Whitefish “the toughest job of writing I ever tackled.”
First published in 1965 and out of print for decades, Whitefish also has been one of the toughest of Voelker’s 10 books to find. Writing under his pen name, Robert Traver, Voelker wrote five novels, three books on fishing and two books of essays and short stories.
But thanks to a chance meeting between Grace Voelker Wood, one Voelker’s sisters, and a board member of the MSU Press during a celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Anatomy, a new edition of Whitefish will be published in June by the Press.
The new edition also contains an introduction written by Matthew L. M. Fletcher, associate professor of law and director of the Indigenous Law & Policy Center at Michigan State University’s College of Law, that puts the seminal historical fiction novel in context by detailing how the book was based on actual Michigan Supreme Court cases regarding Indian property rights and tribal law and customs. Fletcher is a member of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians.
In a presentation to the Michigan Historical Society in 1970 about the novel, Voelker called the “basic story…rather simple.” He continued, “Most simply put, it was all about iron ore, Indians and infidelity to one’s promises.”
In the book, Voelker, writing as Traver, told the story of Charlotte Kawbawgam (in real life Kobogum), whose father, Marji Gesick, had been promised a “wee fractional interest” for his assistance in leading a group of businessmen to North America’s largest iron ore deposit. Problems resulted when neither Gesick nor Gesick’s heirs were compensated as promised.
Voelker told how he had learned of the fascinating story, which involves tribal customs, including polygamy, long before he wrote his blockbuster. But he had been derailed by his successful career and the amazing success of Anatomy, which was made into a movie shot on location in Marquette and Ishpeming.
Voelker said he adopted a pen name while he was a prosecuting attorney (1935-50) in Marquette. He was often quoted as saying, “I didn’t want the voters to think I was an author on company time.”
The lawyer and author had spent most of his life in the Upper Peninsula, when in 1957 he was tapped by Governor G. Mennen Williams to be a Supreme Court justice. He became noted for his literary-like decisions and dissents. His writing for the Court was also punctuated with his trademark sense of humor (if there is any doubt, read his writing inPeople vs Hildabride about police invading a nudist camp).
He later wrote that his “neglected Indian story receded even farther into the background.”
Friday, at 3:30 in Parlor A of the MSU Union here on MSU’s campus, Gordon Henry, Paul Stebleton, and I will be doing a reading at the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature. Conference agenda here.
Here is the lineup:
Gordon Henry (Michigan State University) “Minogeeshig Recollections: Abstracts, Short Tales and Long
Winded Speakers”
Matthew L. M. Fletcher (Michigan State University) “Apocalypse Dreams”
Paul Stebleton (Lake Ann, MI) “Born with Plastic Spoons in Our Mouths”
Last year, we read poetry, and Paul won the annual award for best poem.
From Turnip Legal News:
A Nebraska lawyer recently used the doctrine of res judicata to prevent him from having to do the dishes, the Lincoln Legal TImes reported over the weekend. Calvin J. Palentine, a lawyer who practices family law in Lincoln, Nebraska, said his wife was making the same argument again and “using the same exact facts, and it just struck me, this is res judicata.” Palentine said he put up his hand and said res judicata and “that was the end of it.”
Res judicata is a latin term meaning “the matter has been decided.” It bars claims that had already been previously determined or that could have been asserted in prior court proceedings. Palentine’s use of res judicata at home is the first recorded incident of it being applied in domestic matters outside of the law.
“Frankly, in my thirty years of practice I’ve rarely been successful with res judicata,” Palentine said. “But to do so at home is really fulfilling, especially since I didn’t have to do the dishes.”
Palentine’s daughter, however, quickly invoked the equitable doctrine of “one who seeks equity must do equity.” Because her father had eaten off the dishes and had specifically requested that his wife make his favorite meal of spaghetti and meatballs, “he should not then benefit with a windfall by sitting on his ass. Honestly, dad,” his daughter said. “Equity abhors ass-sitting.”
Here is that article:
DECATUR, IL, THE YEAR 2083—According to students in Mr. Bernard’s fourth-period U.S. history class, it’s “really pathetic” how long it took for early-21st-century Americans to finally legalize gay marriage.
The classroom of 15-year-olds at MacArthur High School—all of whom were born in the late 2060s and grew up never questioning the obvious fact that homosexual couples deserve the right to get married—were reportedly “amazed” to learn in their Modern U.S. History: 2081 Edition textbooks that as late as the 2020s, gays and lesbians actually had to fight for the constitutional right to wed.
“Wow, that is nuts,” said student Jeremy Golliver, who claimed he knew gay rights was a struggle “like, a hundred years ago” but didn’t realize it lasted so long. “It’s really embarrassing, when you think about it. Just the fact that people in this century were actually saying things like, ‘No, gays should not be allowed to marry,’ and were getting all up in arms about it, as if homosexuals weren’t full citizens or something. It’s insane.”
“I mean, was everybody just a huge bigot back then or what?” Golliver added.
From the Onion:
WASHINGTON—After waiting in the wings of the U.S. Supreme Court for three long years, understudy Albert Dorchester, 28, finally got a chance to fill in for Justice Antonin Scalia Tuesday when a sudden illness kept the veteran jurist from his usual duties. “This could be my big break,” said Dorchester, who since 2007 has studied every nuance of Scalia’s diction and mannerisms, as well as his trademark textualist jurisprudence. “I just wanted to get out there, let my talents shine, and show that I, too, can be a constitutional originalist and claim strict adherence to the intent of those who framed our nation’s founding document, thereby advancing a conservative agenda. Pretty sure I nailed it, too.” Dorchester added that he hoped the rumors that there was a president in the audience were true.
CALL FOR PAPERS AND READINGS
The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature invites you to participate in its 41st Annual Symposium
Writing the Midwest: A Symposium of Scholars and Creative Writers
May 12-14, 2011 Michigan State University Union, East Lansing, Michigan
The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature is devoted to the study and production of Midwestern literature in whatever directions the insight, imagination, and curiosity of the members may lead. The annual symposium brings together writers, scholars, and filmmakers to present criticism, poetry, fiction, one-act drama, and creative nonfiction.
The Society offers $250 prizes for the best poem, creative prose piece, and literary criticism read at the conference. There is also a $250 prize for student work in any genre, and winning entries are published in MidAmerica. Critical work presented at the conference may be also submitted for inclusion in one of the Society’s two refereed publications, MidAmerica and Midwestern Miscellany.
From Shit My Dads Says:
“Engagement rings are pointless. Indians gave cows…Oh sorry, congrats on proposing. We good now? Can I finish my indian story?”
From the Guardian:
Alison Flood
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Sherman Alexie takes the $15,000 PEN/Faulkner prize for fiction, beating Lorrie Moore and Barbara Kingsolver with War Dances, a short story collection described by judge Al Young as a ‘rollicking, bittersweet gem’
Sherman Alexie’s War Dances: about ‘all the hearbreaking ways we don’t live now’ Photograph: Ulf Andersen/Getty Images Europe
Native American poet and author Sherman Alexie has beaten writers including Lorrie Moore and Barbara Kingsolver to win the PEN/Faulkner award for fiction.
Alexie won the $15,000 award for War Dances, a collection of short stories about ordinary people on the brink of change, interspersed with poems. From the story of a famous author whose father is dying a “natural Indian death” from alcohol and diabetes, to the tale of a young boy writing for his local newspaper’s obituaries pages, judge Al Young — California’s poet laureate — called it a “rollicking, bittersweet gem of a book”.
“War Dances taps every vein and nerve, every tissue, every issue that quickens the current blood-pulse: parenthood, divorce, broken links, sex, gender and racial conflict, substance abuse, medical neglect, 9/11, Official Narrative vs What Really Happened, settler religion vs native spirituality; marketing, shopping, and war, war, war,” said Young. “All the heartbreaking ways we don’t live now — this is the caring, eye-opening beauty of [War Dances].”
Almost 350 novels and short story collections were considered for this year’s PEN/Faulkner award, America’s largest peer-juried prize. Established with money donated by William Faulkner from his Nobel prize winnings, former winners include EL Doctorow, John Updike, Philip Roth and Ann Patchett. The four finalists — Kingsolver, Moore, Lorraine M López and Colson Whitehead — all receive $5,000.
Alexie, author of four novels, three previous short story collections and many books of poetry, has previously won a National Book Award for young people’s literature and the Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas lifetime achievement award.
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