Holding Home Together: Katherene Vermette’s The Break

Abstract:

This article reads Métis writer Katherena Vermette's 2016 novel The Break in order to examine urban Indigenous women's resilience in relation to understanding of home. As the women in this text gather around young Emily, who has endured a violent sexual attack, they embody a strength that resides in their kinship as well as in interconnected conceptions of home. This reading is significant given the issue of violence against Indigenous women and girls in Canada, as well as the growing numbers of Indigenous people finding home in cities. As a Métis woman, I also read this text through my own experience. Through these analyses, this paper contends that portrayals of strong Indigenous women can help to shift dominant understandings of Indigenous people, making space for Indigenous women's well-being in urban spaces. This article offers a timely and Métis-focused consideration of Vermette's novel.


This article “Holding Home Together: Katherene Vermette’s The Break” originally appeared in House, Home, Hospitality Spec. issue of Canadian Literature 237 (2019): 27-45.

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