Toni Jensen est une autrice dont les essais et les récits explorent l'impact profond de la violence armée. Son œuvre, profondément enracinée dans les traditions autochtones, examine les liens complexes entre les personnes, la terre et l'histoire. Jensen mêle magistralement l'expérience personnelle à des thèmes sociétaux plus larges, créant une prose à la fois brute et lyrique, qui résonne profondément auprès des lecteurs. Son écriture témoigne du pouvoir de la narration pour traiter les traumatismes et favoriser la connexion.
For readers of Jesmyn Ward and Terese Marie Mailhot, 'Carrie' is a poetic memoir about what it means to exist as an indigenous woman in America, told in snapshots of the authors encounters with gun violence. Toni Jenson is Metis and teaches in the MFA program at the Institute of American Indian Arts.
Toni Jensen grew up in the Midwest around guns: As a girl, she learned how to shoot birds with her father, a card-carrying member of the NRA. As an adult, she's had guns waved in her face in the fracklands around Standing Rock, and felt their silent threat on the concealed-carry campus where she teaches. And she has always known she is not alone. As a Métis woman, she is no stranger to the violence enacted on the bodies of indigenous women, on indigenous land, and the ways it is hidden, ignored, forgotten. In Carry, Jensen maps her personal experience onto the historical, exploring how history is lived in the body and redefining the language we use to speak about violence in America. In the title chapter, Jensen recalls the discrimination she faced in college as a Native American student from her roommate to her faculty adviser. "The Worry Line" explores the gun and gang violence in her neighborhood the year her daughter was born. "At the Workshop" focuses on her graduate school years, during which a classmate repeatedly wrote stories in which he killed thinly veiled versions of her. In "Women in the Fracklands," Jensen takes the reader inside Standing Rock during the Dakota Access pipeline protests, as well as the peril faced by women, in regions overcome by the fracking boom. In prose at once forensic and deeply emotional, Toni Jensen shows herself to be a brave new voice and a fearless witness to her own difficult history--as well as to the violent cultural landscape in which she finds her coordinates as a Native American woman. With each chapter, Carry reminds us that surviving in one's country is not the same as surviving one's country
For the characters we meet in Toni Jensen’s stories, the past is very much the present. Theirs are American Indian lives off the reservation, lives lived beyond the usual boundaries set for American Indian migratory, often overlooked, yet carrying tradition with them into a future of difference and possibility. Drawing on American Indian oral traditions and her own Métis upbringing, Jensen tells stories that mix many lives and voices to offer fleeting perspectives on a world that reconfigures the tragedy and disconnection often found in narratives of American Indian life. A brother falls off the roof of an abandoned hotel, a young bride tries to connect with a family she’s never met, and an adopted teenage girl seeks acceptance where she is viewed as an outsider. The reader also encounters a kidnapped nephew, strangers in a hotel, and even a stray these are the souls that populate Jensen’s stories, finding tentative connections with the past, the future, one another, and finally us.