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Chimo (Chee’mo) greetings [inuit] Editor: Neil ten Kortenaar Book Reviews Editor: Julia Emberley Chimo is published twice yearly by the Canadian Association for Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies. Please address editorial and business correspondence to: Neil ten Kortenaar, Editor, Chimo, CACLALS, Centre for Comparative Literature, University of Toronto, 93 Charles St W, 3rd floor, Toronto ON, M5S 1K9, Canada or by email to: kortenaar@utsc.utoronto.ca. The Editors appreciate receiving all extended submissions in electronic form (Microsoft Word, if possible). The Editors reserve the right to amend phrasing and punctuation in items accepted for publication in Chimo. CACLALS Annual Membership Fee: Regular $50.00, Part-time Sessional and Post Docs $20.00, Student or Unwaged $20.00. Please address membership correspondence to Susan Spearey, Department of English Language and Literature, Brock University, 500 Glenridge Avenue, St Catharines ON L2S 3A1 or by e-mail at sspearey@brocku.ca.
On the cover: Three Birds, 2003, ink on paper. Damon Badger-Heit graduated from the Saskatchewan Indian Federated College at the University of Regina in 2003 with a B.A. in English and Indian Art. Since then he has developed as a practising artist with works displayed at Saskatchewan galleries, including the 5th Parallel, Otherside, Exchange, and Wanuskęwin. Damon is also a freelance writer with contracts from a number of organizations, including the First Nations University of Canada, the Regina Leader Post, and the OSAC. In 2003, the Saskatchewan Arts Board awarded Damon an Individual Assistance Grant to develop his play Broken Bones. Having recently completed an eighteen-month contract as an art instructor at the MacKenzie Art Gallery of Regina, Damon has accepted a position as Project Manager for Common Weal Community Arts Inc., an arts organization dedicated to achieving social justice by connecting artists and their art with the community. Damon Badger-Heit is a member of the Mistawasis First Nation of Saskatchewan. Copyright© 2010 CACLALS The Canadian Association for Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies |