Invisible Lives

Invisible Lives chronicles cycles of dysfunction and domestic violence. Using experimental hybrid poetry, Cristalle Smith breaks generational silence in lyric resonance, reflecting on a childhood rife with upheaval and poverty, the invisibility of single motherhood, and the silence of domestic violence. These poems sing memory across divides of time and space, breaking the patterns of absence and denial and challenging what is kept unseen.

Associative leaps chronicle the daughter of a family always on the move. Family secrets thaw in spring mud. Invisible Lives delivers poetic meditations collaged with pop culture and impossibly colliding landscapes. The prairies of Alberta collapse into the sinkholes of northern Florida in a cacophony of lyric layering.

Smith’s fierce and electric voice breaks taboos and challenges the status quo. She sings poor and working class lives, young lives, the lives of mothers, grandmothers, and daughters, the lives of veterans, lives that have endured layers of intersecting trauma and violence. Invisible Lives is an interrogation of power and intimacy that gives a new voice to the people who survive.

1144305333
Invisible Lives

Invisible Lives chronicles cycles of dysfunction and domestic violence. Using experimental hybrid poetry, Cristalle Smith breaks generational silence in lyric resonance, reflecting on a childhood rife with upheaval and poverty, the invisibility of single motherhood, and the silence of domestic violence. These poems sing memory across divides of time and space, breaking the patterns of absence and denial and challenging what is kept unseen.

Associative leaps chronicle the daughter of a family always on the move. Family secrets thaw in spring mud. Invisible Lives delivers poetic meditations collaged with pop culture and impossibly colliding landscapes. The prairies of Alberta collapse into the sinkholes of northern Florida in a cacophony of lyric layering.

Smith’s fierce and electric voice breaks taboos and challenges the status quo. She sings poor and working class lives, young lives, the lives of mothers, grandmothers, and daughters, the lives of veterans, lives that have endured layers of intersecting trauma and violence. Invisible Lives is an interrogation of power and intimacy that gives a new voice to the people who survive.

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Invisible Lives

Invisible Lives

by Cristalle Smith
Invisible Lives

Invisible Lives

by Cristalle Smith

eBookRevised and updated with of-the-moment readings and scholarship. (Revised and updated with of-the-moment readings and scholarship.)

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Overview

Invisible Lives chronicles cycles of dysfunction and domestic violence. Using experimental hybrid poetry, Cristalle Smith breaks generational silence in lyric resonance, reflecting on a childhood rife with upheaval and poverty, the invisibility of single motherhood, and the silence of domestic violence. These poems sing memory across divides of time and space, breaking the patterns of absence and denial and challenging what is kept unseen.

Associative leaps chronicle the daughter of a family always on the move. Family secrets thaw in spring mud. Invisible Lives delivers poetic meditations collaged with pop culture and impossibly colliding landscapes. The prairies of Alberta collapse into the sinkholes of northern Florida in a cacophony of lyric layering.

Smith’s fierce and electric voice breaks taboos and challenges the status quo. She sings poor and working class lives, young lives, the lives of mothers, grandmothers, and daughters, the lives of veterans, lives that have endured layers of intersecting trauma and violence. Invisible Lives is an interrogation of power and intimacy that gives a new voice to the people who survive.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781773855165
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Publication date: 07/15/2024
Series: Brave & Brilliant
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 114
File size: 590 KB

About the Author

Cristalle Smith has been published in ARC Poetry, CV2, subTerrain, and more. She won the Lush Triumphant Award for Creative Nonfiction in 2020 and has a chapbook with Frog Hollow Press. She lives in Calgary, Alberta with her son. Invisible Lives is her debut poetry collection.

Table of Contents

Preface

1. The Rule of Law in the Canadian Constitution

1.1 Roncarelli v. Duplessis

1.2 John Locke, “Of the Extent of the Legislative Power”

1.3 Thomas Jefferson, “The Declaration of Independence”

1.4 A.V. Dicey, “The Rule of Law”

1.5 Rainer Knopff, Rhonda Evans, Dennis Baker and Dave Snow, “Strong- and Weak-Form

Judicial Review”

1.6 Andrew David Irvine, “Principles to Ensure the Rule of Law is Not Abused in Canada”

1.7 Thomas M.J. Bateman, “Liberal versus Post-Liberal Constitutionalism: Applying the Charter to Civil Society”

1.8 Key Terms

2. The Canadian Judicial System

2.1 Chief Justice Bora Laskin, “The Role and Functions of Final Appellate Courts: The Supreme Court of Canada”

2.2 Constitution Act, 1867, Sections 96–101

2.3 The Canadian Judicial System

2.4 The Criminal and Civil Court Processes

2.5 Key Terms

3. Precedents, Legal Reasoning, and Judicial Decision Making

3.1 Paul Weiler, “Two Models of Judicial Decision-Making”

3.2 Harrison v. Carswell

3.3 C. Gordon Post, “Stare Decisis: The Use of Precedents”

3.4 Paul Weiler, “Architect of the Common Law”

3.5 Donald L. Horowitz, “Fact Finding in Adjudication”

3.6 F.L. Morton, “Judicial Review and Civil Liberties”

3.7 Justice Marshall Rothstein, “Checks and Balances in Constitutional Interpretation”

3.8 Leonid Sirota, “Originalism: It’s Not What You Think”

3.9 Justice Bertha Wilson, “Decision-Making in the Supreme Court of Canada”

3.10 Emmett Macfarlane, “Studying Judicial Behaviour”

3.11 Key Terms

4. Judicial Recruitment and Selection

4.1 Rainer Knopff, “The Politics of Reforming Judicial Appointments”

4.2 Erin Crandall, “A Reflection of Canadian Society? An Analysis of Federal Appointments to Provincial Superior Courts by the Liberal Government of Justin Trudeau”

4.3 Howard Anglin, “Elevating language over all other forms of diversity”

4.4 François Larocque and Stéphanie Chouinard, “Bilingualism and diversity: The Supreme Court can — and should — have both”

4.5 The Honourable Michelle O’Bonsawin’s Questionnaire

4.6 Justice Bertha Wilson, “Will Women Judges Really Make a Difference?”

4.7 Key Terms

5. Judicial Independence, Ethics, and Discipline

5.1 W.R. Lederman, “The Independence of the Judiciary”

5.2 The McClung Affair

5.3 R. Lee Akazaki, “A Self-Harming of Judicial Independence: The Legacy of the Inquiry into Lori Douglas”

5.4 The Inquiry into Justice Robin Camp

5.5 Brenda Cossman, “For Judge ‘knees together’ Camp: Education is power”

5.6 Lauren Heuser, “Bad People Make Bad Judges”

5.7 The Resignation of Supreme Court Justice Russell Brown

5.8 Eric M. Adams, “The Challenge of Judging Supreme Court of Canada Judges”

5.9 Brendan Dell, “The Use of Former Supreme Court Justices by Governments: Assessing the Dangers”

5.10 Peter L. Biro, “By Staying on Hong Kong Court, Beverley McLachlin Follows the Wrong ‘Principle’”

5.11 Key Terms

6. Interest Groups and Access to Judicial Power

6.1 Kate Puddister, “The Canadian Reference Power”

6.2 Alan Borovoy, “Interventions and the Public Interest”

6.3 Sherene Razack, “The Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund”

6.4 Christopher P. Manfredi, “The Policy Consequences of LEAF’s Legal Mobilization”

6.5 Eleni Nicolaides, “Interventions at the Supreme Court of Canada”

6.6 Carissima Mathen and Kyle Kirkup, “Defending the Court Challenges Program”

6.7 Ian Brodie, “The Court Challenges Program Rises Once Again”

6.8 Kent W. Roach, “The SNC Lavalin Controversy: The Shawcross Principle and Prosecutorial Independence”

6.9 Glenn Blackett, “Wokeness Captures Alberta’s Law Society”

6.10 Daniel Song, “Shameful backlash to lawyers’ Indigenous culture course shows why we need it”

6.11 Key Terms

7. Judicial Review and Federalism

7.1 Lord Sankey, “The ‘Living Tree’ Approach to Interpreting the BNA Act”

7.2 Lord Atkin, “The ‘Watertight Compartments’ Approach to Interpreting the BNA Act”

7.3 Peter H. Russell, “The Anti-Inflation Case: The Anatomy of a Constitutional Decision”

7.4 Michael Mandel, “Re Constitution of Canada, 1981: The Patriation Reference”

7.5 Robert Schertzer, “The Exemplar of the Secession Reference”

7.6 Dave Snow, “Criminal Law, Federalism, and Assisted Reproduction”

7.7 F.L. Morton, “What the Supreme Court’s Carbon Tax Ruling Means”

7.8 Asher Honickman, “R. v. Comeau: The Scope of Trade Between Provinces and s. 121”

7.9 Key Terms

8. Indigenous Law and the Judicial Process

8.1 Kirsten Matoy Carlson, “Political Failure, Judicial Opportunity: The Supreme Court of Canada and Aboriginal and Treaty Rights”

8.2 John Borrows, “The Durability of Terra Nullius: Tsilhqot’in v. British Columbia”

8.3 Dwight Newman, “Is the Sky the Limit? Aboriginal Legal Rights in Resource Development”

8.4 Minh Do, “The Duty to Consult and Reconciliation: The Supreme Court’s Idea of the Purpose and Practice of Consulting Indigenous Peoples”

8.5 Daniel Voth, “Her Majesty’s Justice Be Done: Métis Legal Mobilization and the Pitfalls to Indigenous Political Movement Building”

8.6 Jeremy Patzer and Kiera Ladner, “Charting Unknown Waters: Indigenous Rights and the Charter at Forty”

8.7 Key Terms

9. Courts, Partisanship, and Politics

9.1 Jamie Cameron, “Packing the Supreme Court”

9.2 Emmett Macfarlane, “Much Ado About Little”

9.3 Thomas M.J. Bateman, “Marc Nadon and the New Politics of Judicial Appointment”

9.4 Stephen Harper v. Beverley McLachlin

9.5 Mark Harding, “Is the Liberal Party the Charter Party?”

9.6 Sean Fine, “Canada’s Supreme Court is off-balance as ‘large and liberal’ consensus on the Charter falls apart”

9.7 Gerard Kennedy, “Why ‘Liberal’ and ‘Conservative’ are unhelpful terms in Canadian courts”

9.8 Key Terms

10. Reconciling Judicial Review and Constitutional Democracy

10.1 Donald Smiley, “Courts, Legislatures, and the Protection of Human Rights”

10.2 F.L. Morton and Rainer Knopff, “What’s Wrong with the Charter Revolution and the Court Party?”

10.3 Mark Harding, “The Charter Revolution and the Clash of Constitutionalisms”

10.4 Robert Leckey, “Robust public debate needed on use of notwithstanding clause”

10.5 Geoffrey Sigalet, “Notwithstanding Judicial Benediction: Why We Need to Dispel the Myths around Section 33 of the Charter”

10.6 Dialogue or Monologue? Hogg and Thornton versus Morton

10.7 Dennis Baker, “Checking the Court: Justifying Parliament’s Role in Constitutional Interpretation”

10.8 Richard Albert, “40 years on, Canada’s Charter of Rights is a beacon to the world”

10.9 F.L. Morton, “After 40 years, the Charter is still one of the worst bargains in Canadian history”

10.10 Chief Justice Glenn D. Joyal, “The Charter and Canada’s New Political Culture: Are We All Ambassadors Now?”

10.11 Key Terms

Appendices

A Constitution Act, 1867, ss. 91–95, 133

B Canadian Bill of Rights, 1960

C Constitution Act, 1982

Sections 1–34. Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms

Section 35. Rights of the Aboriginal Peoples of Canada

Sections 38–49. Procedure for Amending the Constitution of Canada

Section 52. Supremacy Clause

D Online Resources

Index

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