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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Visiting with Aunties

Stories about Indigenous Women’s Kinship

This collection foregrounds the women-centered networks of kinship, knowledge, and community care nurtured by Métis and Cree Aunties.  

The stories told by Métis and Cree Aunties are as complex, engaging, and powerful as the women themselves, imbued with generations of wisdom. Visiting with Aunties uses storytelling by and about Aunties to deepen our understanding of Indigenous women’s kinship systems and the important cultural role Aunties play in families and communities.

Ranging from personal reminiscences to historical surveys, this collection is grounded in a uniquely Prairie Métis and Cree perspective. Contributors recount experiences of their own Aunties and as Aunties themselves. Through visiting—working, talking, and sharing knowledge together—they reveal the influence of women-centered governance on such areas as cultural teachings, health and well-being, education, and the arts.

The women whose voices emerge in this collection challenge colonial representations of Indigenous women. Collectively, they create a living expression and rich tapestry of kinship relationships.


180 pages | 9 b&w photos | 6 x 9 | © 2026

Women and Indigenous Studies

Native American and Indigenous Studies

Sociology: Sociology--Marriage and Family

Women's Studies:


Reviews

Visiting with Aunties is an invitation to come home – to our lands, our families, and our selves. Weaving together Cree and Métis writings, Gaudet creates a gathering place where time stretches and softens, cheeks ache from laughing so hard, and we sit taller surrounded by kin. Featuring stories that, like the Aunties themselves, are complex, beautiful, and powerful, readers are gifted with the kind of joy and care that fills both belly and spirit. This book is a celebration of family, memory, resistance, and love – a reminder that the most profound teachings often reside in the everyday moments of visiting, listening, and being held.”

Gina Starblanket, School of Indigenous Governance, University of Victoria

“As this liberatory, revolutionary, women-centered analysis enters mainstream Métis history, the aunties will be a force to reckon with.”

Catherine Kineweskwêw Richardson, Research Chair in Indigenous Healing Knowledge, Concordia University

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