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Wednesday, 1st January 2003, 6:37am
An opinion by: Rascal
 

Arctic Dreams and Nightmares by Alootook Ipellie

The title of this book jumped at me from the shelves of Arctic Ventures general store in Iqaluit. It was in the early days of my first trip to the arctic, and at the time I was harbouring a secret wish that I would dream my own stunning, revelatory, inspiring, arctic dreams. I bought it because Ipellie had a cool idea - to draw and write his dreams/visions/fantasies of himself in a past incarnation, as a powerful shaman in a much wilder time.

I like the way he uses traditional inuit imagery, it must be fundamental in his own consciouness. But imagine your big brother, or a young uncle is making up drawings and telling you stories in his usual slangy way, and he's not afraid to mention the raunchy bits neither. He writes and draws in fluent modern, is another way to put it, and I think it translates his storytelling tradition quite well.

    "In a matter of seconds, The lethal harpoon weapons were hurled while the deadly arrows sprung from their bows. They travelled through the air with a definite purpose, expending their given force toward the sham of the camp!

    It was the first, and the last, public execution of a hermaphrodite shaman in the long history of the arctic people.

    Ukjuarlak's wonderful, passion-filled, sexual encounter with the beautiful, virginal young woman had put a price-tag on him. Public execution. Nothing less. Nothing more."

I like his pen and ink drawings, except sometimes they remind me of those macho drawings all the boys in my class drew during their drawing phase - you know, starting with Iron Man and Fantastic Four and over the years evolved into cool hallucinogenic Pink Floyd-y type things with boobs? Well, I have to live with the discomfort of that, because the book kept me interested right to the end, which is what counts after all.




Readers have left 1 comments

Arctic Dreams and Nightmares straddles cultural worlds of shamans and celebrities such as Brigitte Bardot without missing its footing. Its raunchy forwardness floats on the surface of deeply rooted and profound Arctic beliefs. Provocative retellings and refashionings of ancient tales by Ipellie leave a smile playing about the lips, long after the covers are closed.

One of the mini stories in the book entitled "Summit with Sedna, the Mother of Sea Beasts" chronicles the adventures of a shaman who conspires with his fellow shamans to urge the sea goddess to release her captive sea creatures which are life-giving to the people. This tale fuses the tragic and sordid history of a woman's experience of incest as a child with mythology, exuberant orgasm, release, and renewal.
Kathy Shankar on Friday, 30th September 2005, 3:56am

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