White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family
A moving, unflinching exploration of life in Prince Albert, SK, as told through one family’s multigenerational story

Robert Boschman grew up in the living quarters of the King Koin Launderette in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, sandwiched between a residential school and a jail built in the aftermath of the Riel Resistance of 1885. White Coal City is the story of this hard hockey-obsessed white-settler town on Treaty Six territory and Boschman’s troubled family who lived within it.

Trauma was palpable but never spoken of in the family, and this silence hounded the psychology of their men and boys. Years later, Boschman discovered the reason behind it: the devastating fate of his grandmother, killed by a hit-and-run driver while she was six months pregnant. Her husband, who saw it happen, was plagued by the crime. Their story is gently shared through letters, journal entries, newspaper clippings, and accounts from the coroner’s inquest.

With its penitentiary, sanatorium, pulp mill, and half-built hydro-electric dam, Boschman describes the city of Prince Albert as a “circle of pain”—one felt by white settlers but more so for the generations of First Nations and Métis people in the city and surrounding lands who were forcibly removed, incarcerated, or abducted. The harms of colonialism touched Boschman’s own family; his Cree sister Crystal was adopted by his parents during the Sixties Scoop when she was just a baby. Careful to tell his own story, not hers, Boschman accounts for his family’s own part in Canada’s shameful past.

White Coal City is a poetic, necessary exploration of the painful landscapes of colonial cities in Canada.

1137918079
White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family
A moving, unflinching exploration of life in Prince Albert, SK, as told through one family’s multigenerational story

Robert Boschman grew up in the living quarters of the King Koin Launderette in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, sandwiched between a residential school and a jail built in the aftermath of the Riel Resistance of 1885. White Coal City is the story of this hard hockey-obsessed white-settler town on Treaty Six territory and Boschman’s troubled family who lived within it.

Trauma was palpable but never spoken of in the family, and this silence hounded the psychology of their men and boys. Years later, Boschman discovered the reason behind it: the devastating fate of his grandmother, killed by a hit-and-run driver while she was six months pregnant. Her husband, who saw it happen, was plagued by the crime. Their story is gently shared through letters, journal entries, newspaper clippings, and accounts from the coroner’s inquest.

With its penitentiary, sanatorium, pulp mill, and half-built hydro-electric dam, Boschman describes the city of Prince Albert as a “circle of pain”—one felt by white settlers but more so for the generations of First Nations and Métis people in the city and surrounding lands who were forcibly removed, incarcerated, or abducted. The harms of colonialism touched Boschman’s own family; his Cree sister Crystal was adopted by his parents during the Sixties Scoop when she was just a baby. Careful to tell his own story, not hers, Boschman accounts for his family’s own part in Canada’s shameful past.

White Coal City is a poetic, necessary exploration of the painful landscapes of colonial cities in Canada.

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White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family

White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family

by Robert Boschman
White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family

White Coal City: A Memoir of Place and Family

by Robert Boschman

Paperback

$18.95 
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Overview

A moving, unflinching exploration of life in Prince Albert, SK, as told through one family’s multigenerational story

Robert Boschman grew up in the living quarters of the King Koin Launderette in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, sandwiched between a residential school and a jail built in the aftermath of the Riel Resistance of 1885. White Coal City is the story of this hard hockey-obsessed white-settler town on Treaty Six territory and Boschman’s troubled family who lived within it.

Trauma was palpable but never spoken of in the family, and this silence hounded the psychology of their men and boys. Years later, Boschman discovered the reason behind it: the devastating fate of his grandmother, killed by a hit-and-run driver while she was six months pregnant. Her husband, who saw it happen, was plagued by the crime. Their story is gently shared through letters, journal entries, newspaper clippings, and accounts from the coroner’s inquest.

With its penitentiary, sanatorium, pulp mill, and half-built hydro-electric dam, Boschman describes the city of Prince Albert as a “circle of pain”—one felt by white settlers but more so for the generations of First Nations and Métis people in the city and surrounding lands who were forcibly removed, incarcerated, or abducted. The harms of colonialism touched Boschman’s own family; his Cree sister Crystal was adopted by his parents during the Sixties Scoop when she was just a baby. Careful to tell his own story, not hers, Boschman accounts for his family’s own part in Canada’s shameful past.

White Coal City is a poetic, necessary exploration of the painful landscapes of colonial cities in Canada.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780889777965
Publisher: University of Regina Press
Publication date: 02/13/2021
Series: Regina Collection , #2
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 4.75(w) x 7.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Robert Boschman specializes in ecocritical approaches to American literature, with emphasis on the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. His monograph, In the Way of Nature, was published by McFarland in 2009. Found in Alberta: Environmental Themes for the Anthropocene (co-edited with Mario Trono) was published in 2014 by Wilfrid Laurier University Press. Dr. Boschman is founder and co-convener of the award-winning Under Western Skies biennial conference series on the environment held at Mount Royal since 2010 . He is also a past president of the Association for Literature, Environment, and Culture in Canada.
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