1. I was walking in the woods yesterday and I had an epiphany. It wasnât one I wanted to have. I was thinking about todayâs class, where we are reading Kimmererâs âGathering Mossâ. Iâve taught Braiding Sweetgrass in multiple classes every year since 2016. Itâs eminently teachable
2. Both books are beautifully written. Students uniformly enjoy them as assigned reading. They do a great job communicating to non-Indigenous folks the contours of basic Indigenous relationships to more-than-human beings. Theyâre wildly popular with white readers.
3. Iâve found Braiding Sweetgrass to be a great entry point for non-Indigenous folks to Indigenous scholarship. But this is where yesterdayâs epiphany comes in. Neither Braiding Sweetgrass or Gathering Moss tends to the deep deep lineages of Indigenous scholarship in Canada or US
4. As the popularity of âBraiding Sweetgrassâ has soared, Iâve seen more and more white folks wax on about âbraiding knowledgeâ. But they often donât know any of the lineages of these concepts beyond what is presented in this one book. They confidently run with this.
5. Kimmerer does a commendable job of weaving in her own experiences, her family stories+nods to some very important knowledge keepers who deserve to be celebrated for their work. But Braiding Sweetgrass does not tend to the citational politics Sara Ahmed & others teach us about