Search
My feed

Curated News

Collection · 851 items
Curated news 3 Jun, 2024

New exhibit lets audiences walk with the Road Allowance Métis people – Windspeaker.com

In her debut exhibition Apples & Train Tracks, author Arnolda Dufour Bowes has created a multi-sensory art installation that draws the audience into the complex history of the Road Allowance Métis in Saskatchewan. Apples & Train Tracks combines original artwork, photography, film, historical artifacts and narration from Bowes’ award-winning book 20.12m: A Short Story Collection of a Life Lived as a Road Allowance Métis.

Source: New exhibit lets audiences walk with the Road Allowance Métis people – Windspeaker.com

Submitted by: Babak Fakhamzadeh

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

nuddle

Back in the 1500s, nuddle had a few meanings that congregated low to the ground: To nuddle was to push something along with your nose or nudge forward in some other horizontal manner. By the 1800s, nuddle started referring to stooped walking, the kind of non-jaunty mosey in which someone’s head is hanging low. You can hear a touch of contempt in a phrase from an 1854 glossary by A. E. Baker: “How he goes nuddling along.” Credits to Mark Peters.

Added by Geert Vermeire

Encountered a problem? Report it to let us know.

  • Include the page on which you encountered the problem.
  • Describe what happened.
  • Describe what you expected to happen.