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  1. 8 de mai. de 2017 · Sarah de Leeuw. Where It Hurts is a highly charged collection of personal essays, haunted by loss, evoking turbulent physical and emotional Canadian landscapes. Sarah de Leeuw's creative ...

  2. Sarah de Leeuw, ‘Alice Through the Looking Glass: Emotion, Personal Connection, and Reading Colonial Archives along the Grain’, Journal of Historical Geography 38, no. 3 (2012): 273–81. Carole Pateman, ‘The Settler Contract’, in Contract and Domination, ed. Carole Pateman and Charles Mills (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2007), 73.

  3. Sarah De Leeuw is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Sarah De Leeuw and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected.

  4. 10 de jun. de 2022 · In Lot , award-winning poet and essayist Sarah de Leeuw returns to the landscape of her early girlhood to consider the racial complexities of colonial violence in those spaces. Following loosely as a companion to Skeena (Caitlin Press, 2015), Lot is written entirely of couplets, mirroring the two main islands of Haida Gwaii, and draws on lyric ...

  5. caitlinpress.com › Books › LLot | Caitlin Press

    Sarah de Leeuw’s poetic voice does this and so much more in her new collection of poetry, Lot. ‘It is light and dark;’ it is ‘intellectually, and moral(ly) superior to any others.’ The command de Leeuw has with poetic language and insight is astounding.

  6. 28 de fev. de 2023 · Grounded in Indigenous epistemologies and relational ontologies, Indigenous models of determinants of health identify Indigenous-specific determinants that go beyond the “social” and emphasise the deep interconnections that exist between the physical, spiritual, emotional, and mental dimensions of health and wellbeing (see for example, Greenwood and de Leeuw ; Manitowaabi and Maar ...

  7. 24 de ago. de 2022 · Sarah de Leeuw is an award-winning creative writer and Canada Research Chair in Humanities and Health Inequities with the University of Northern British Columbia’s Northern Medical Program in the Faculty of Medicine. Roberta Stout is a Research Associate with the National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health.