Growing up in Haines Junction, YT, artist Cole Pauls performed in a traditional song and dance group called the Dakwäkãda Dancers. During that time, Pauls encountered the ancestral language of Southern Tutchone. Driven by a desire to help revitalize the language, he created Dakwäkãda Warriors, a bilingual comic about two earth protectors saving the world from evil pioneers and cyborg sasquatches.
Pauls' Elders supported him throughout the creation process by offering consultation and translation. The resulting work is a whimsical young adult graphic novel that offers an accessible allegory of colonialism.
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COMICS & ZINES Dakwäkãda Warriors by Cole Pauls Deer Woman, an Anthology, edited by Elizabeth LaPensée and Weshoyot Alvitre Memorial Ride by Stephen Graham Jones and Maria Wolf Come Home, Indio: A Memoir by Jim Terry
Settler scholar. PhD in English, Postdoc at the University of Central Florida, works on Indigenous comics & visual rhetorics. Webmaster @asail_org & @cssorg.
Presenting in 1 hour on the massively brilliant Dakwäkãda Warriors by Cole Pauls. 3:30pm EST in Indigenous Languages and/as Literature. #MLA22
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quite taken by the art and storytelling of Cole Pauls, Southern Tutchone, and an alumni of the Yukon School of Visual Arts here in Dawson. check out this article on his ‘Dakwäkãda Warriors.’ https://t.co/22sj3yDpcz https://t.co/KOdxhmrppl