Right to Be Cold

One Woman's Fight to Protect the Arctic and Save the Planet from Climate Change

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Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Bill McKibben: Right to Be Cold (2018, University of Minnesota Press)

English language

Published Nov. 17, 2018 by University of Minnesota Press.

ISBN:
978-1-4529-5796-8
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"A "courageous and revelatory memoir" (Naomi Klein) chronicling the life of the leading Indigenous climate change, cultural, and human rights advocate For the first ten years of her life, Sheila Watt-Cloutier traveled only by dog team. Today there are more snow machines than dogs in her native Nunavik, a region that is part of the homeland of the Inuit in Canada. In Inuktitut, the language of Inuit, the elders say that the weather is Uggianaqtuq--behaving in strange and unexpected ways. The Right to Be Cold is Watt-Cloutier's memoir of growing up in the Arctic reaches of Quebec during these unsettling times. It is the story of an Inuk woman finding her place in the world, only to find her native land giving way to the inexorable warming of the planet. She decides to take a stand against its destruction. The Right to Be Cold is the human story of life …

4 editions

Subjects

  • Environmentalists
  • Canada, biography
  • Inuit women
  • Canada, social conditions
  • Environmental protection
  • Climatic changes
  • Arctic regions