{"id":253,"date":"2020-01-30T10:42:15","date_gmt":"2020-01-30T15:42:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/ravenmag\/?post_type=cu-stories&p=253"},"modified":"2020-02-12T10:36:57","modified_gmt":"2020-02-12T15:36:57","slug":"raven-forevermore","status":"publish","type":"cu-stories","link":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/ravenmag\/story\/raven-forevermore\/","title":{"rendered":"Forevermore"},"content":{"rendered":"
Four members of the 杏吧原创 community share their perspectives on the namesake bird of both this magazine and the university\u2019s varsity sports teams.<\/p>\n
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By Barbara Dumont-Hill<\/p>\n
In 1997, my husband and I were sitting on a bench in Banff and this huge raven \u2014 the biggest I\u2019ve ever seen \u2014 walked towards us. He had a limp and I could imagine that he was using a cane. He stood right in front of me, looked me in the eye and started to speak. He moved around and circled sometimes, but he went on and on for about 10 minutes. When birds give me a message, I tell them, \u201cThere was a time when our people understood the language of the birds, but I don\u2019t understand you.\u201d But he kept talking and finally he came up very close to my feet and then turned and hobbled away.<\/p>\n
Around 10 years ago, going to a grocery store in Ottawa, my husband and I had just gotten out of our car and a raven landed in front of me. It was like he didn\u2019t want me to walk past. He was a young raven, but it brought me back to the time in Banff when that old raven had a message for me. Back in 1997, I had a hard time having a conversation with anybody. I knew so little about who I was. But then my life started to change, and I believe that old raven began the shapeshifting. I inherited some of its spirit. When the young raven came to me, his message was that it was the beginning of me having a voice.<\/p>\n
That\u2019s what raven does. That\u2019s the magic that it can instill. I had always been ashamed of who I was. Now I\u2019m proud. And I think part of the transformation was raven taking me out of the darkness and bringing me into the light.<\/p>\n
I speak to students all the time and tell them I never went to university, but they have the opportunity at 杏吧原创 to learn and create change. I don\u2019t have special powers. I just listen to people and give them a hug if they want me to. Often, when I hug people, I can tell that they\u2019re hurting, and I ask them to let me take their hurt, and we hug as long as they need to. Often, students need a raven to help begin the shapeshifting in their lives.<\/p>\n
Our people used to listen to animals. Everything had a message and everything was important. Today, there are a lot of messages that we ignore. The animals are telling us, \u201cWhen we have all disappeared, you too will disappear.\u201d But we are not listening. And we don\u2019t listen to one another or to the Earth, either. We need to be aware that everything has messages, and that we all have the ability to create change.<\/p>\n
Barbara Dumont-Hill<\/em><\/a> is a knowledge keeper at 杏吧原创\u2019s <\/em>Ojigkwanong Centre<\/em><\/a>, a member of the university\u2019s Indigenous Strategic Initiatives Committee and a grandmother from the <\/em>Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg First Nation<\/em><\/a>.<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> By Michael Runtz<\/p>\n When I was a young birder in the Ottawa Valley, common ravens were anything but common, and in fact were so rare that a winter sighting would create great excitement. A widespread poisoning program to eliminate wolves was reportedly one of the reasons for their rarity because they regularly scavenge large wolf-killed animals. Today, ravens have become what their name suggests and are regularly seen (and heard) on the 杏吧原创 campus. The sight of two of these huge crows-on-steroids landing on top of the Nesbitt Biology Building<\/a> during a snowstorm on one of my weekly bird walks is a memory not soon forgotten.<\/p>\n Ravens are extremely intelligent birds that, because of their loud screams and squawks, allow me to find wolves. When I hear a cacophony of ravens, I know that wolves aren\u2019t far away. Ravens follow wolf packs in anticipation of a kill, then feast on the leftovers, sometimes stealing beakfuls of meat from under a wolf \u2019s nose. When a bald eagle appears at a carcass, the ravens fly up only to settle down again at the kill, remaining just out of reach of that bird\u2019s massive bill. I once watched a raven tug on an eagle\u2019s tail and when the eagle looked back at its antagonist, one of the raven\u2019s companions stole a beakful of meat.<\/p>\n Raven groups are fascinating to watch at a carcass, as biologist Berndt Heinrich<\/a> details in his terrific book, Ravens in Winter<\/em><\/a>. If a territorial pair finds a dead deer or moose, they remain silent while they feast. If juveniles locate one, however, they scream vociferously, attracting more young ravens to the carcass. The resulting \u201cconspiracy\u201d sets up dominance hierarchies and pair bonds, with much posturing and courtship behaviour \u2014 a dead animal turned singles bar.<\/p>\n Ravens are also beautiful to watch in the air. They perform mesmerizing acrobatics, flipping upside down and diving at breakneck speeds. They soar and play with and seem to taunt hawks. And their vocalizations are diverse, ranging from bell-like dongs to raucous screams. \u201cThe raven is the paragon of the air,\u201d writes Heinrich, and \u201cits deep, sonorous penetrating voice demands immediate attention and respect, even though we have little or no idea what it says.\u201d<\/p>\n Michael Runtz<\/em><\/a> is a biology professor at 杏吧原创 and a world-renowned naturalist who has published 12 books featuring his writing and photography, most recently <\/em>Algonquin Wild: A Naturalist\u2019s Journey Through the Seasons<\/a>, in 2018.<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> By Brian Johnson<\/p>\n Arguably no literary bird has enjoyed greater fame or longevity than the \u201cominous bird of yore\u201d that graces Edgar Allan Poe\u2019s<\/a> popular 19th century poem \u201cThe Raven<\/a>.\u201d To the poem\u2019s bereaved speaker, the feathered midnight visitor who croaks \u201cNevermore!\u201d in response to his every question is a frustratingly enigmatic messenger from \u201cNight\u2019s Plutonian shore.\u201d Is the bird a gift from God sent to help the speaker momentarily forget his grief? Or is it a \u201cdevil,\u201d \u201ca tempter,\u201d \u201ca thing of evil\u201d? Or perhaps it is a \u201cprophet,\u201d able to reassure the morose speaker that he will be reunited with his beloved in the afterlife? \u201cNevermore!\u201d \u201cNevermore!\u201d \u201cNevermore!\u201d comes the teasing, maddening, unvarying reply.<\/p>\n Poe\u2019s campy Gothic depiction of the raven as ominous messenger draws on a long history of the bird\u2019s representation in Europe, the Middle East and South Asia. Dating back to antiquity, and finding continuous renewal across a broad range of contexts \u2014 the Bible, Norse mythology, the Qu\u2019ran and Shakespeare, to name only a few \u2014 the convention of depicting the raven as a sinister creature has roots in the bird\u2019s objective features: its black colouration, its carrion diet, its battlefield ubiquity and its uncanny ability to mimic human speech. All of these qualities have contributed to its status as a figure of evil, death or ill-omen, as a prophetic mediator between the living and the dead, or some combination thereof. In Poe\u2019s poem, the ultimately unknowable raven (its animal speech might, after all, not mean anything) becomes a site for the speaker\u2019s projections and \u201cfancies,\u201d all drawn from the storehouses of diverse cultural traditions.<\/p>\n In other ways, however, the playfulness of Poe\u2019s raven points towards another set of cultural traditions wherein the raven\u2019s role as mediator between human and supernatural realms makes it not a pretext for Gothic chills but a mischievous, shapeshifting bearer of sacred knowledge and communal memory. Raven\u2019s celebrated role as both trickster and Creator in the stories and spiritual practices of the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest, for instance, inspires Haisla and Heiltsuk author Eden Robinson<\/a>\u2019s generically hybrid trickster novels, Son of a Trickster<\/em><\/a> and Trickster Drift<\/em><\/a>, which feature the spiritual and supernatural coming-of-age of Indigenous teen Jared whose parentage is part wee\u2019git<\/em> (Raven), part witch. Meanwhile, many works of contemporary urban fantasy, like Neil Gaiman\u2019s American Gods<\/em><\/a> and Susanna Clarke\u2019s Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell<\/em><\/a>, notably feature ravens that nostalgically conjure the pagan ambiance and \u201cmagic\u201d of pre-Christian Europe.<\/p>\n As the foregrounding of the raven\u2019s deep roots in multiple traditions by its most recent literary appearances suggests, Poe\u2019s \u201cbird of yore\u201d was neither strictly \u201cominous\u201d nor strictly \u201cPoe\u2019s\u201d to begin with. In literature today, it is now, more than ever, a figure in which the threads of numerous cultural traditions converge, clash and sometimes mingle.<\/p>\n Brian Johnson<\/em><\/a> is a professor in 杏吧原创\u2019s <\/em>Department of English Language and Literature<\/em><\/a> with an interest in comics studies, Canadian literature, psychoanalysis and genre.<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> By Sarah Zutrauen<\/p>\n Everyone always says your last game of your final season is the shortest game you\u2019ll ever play. You can see your varsity career ticking away on the scoreboard. It\u2019s bittersweet that my Ravens soccer<\/a> years are over. After five years of hard work, I will proudly move on as an alumna. Being a varsity athlete enhanced my university experience. It was challenging to balance school and sport because we spent so many hours on the field and in the gym, but this forced me to develop time-management skills. Playing sports has taught me many other things, including perseverance, resilience and collaboration, which can be used in many environments.<\/p>\n
<\/div>Paragon of the Air<\/h2>\n
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<\/div>Cultural Convergence<\/h2>\n
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<\/div>Something Larger Than Yourself<\/h2>\n
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