Sand Talk

How Indigenous Thinking Can Save the World

256 pages

English language

Published Jan. 6, 2020 by HarperCollins Publishers.

View on OpenLibrary

reviewed Sand Talk by Tyson Yunkaporta

We need Indigenous wisdom

Yarning about the ways of Indigenous knowledge. Insightful, sometimes impenetrable, with a bit of bullshit. The barest exposure, but what next? How to incorporate this into our worldview?

Reading time 10 days, 25.6 pages/day

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Review of 'Sand Talk' on 'Goodreads'

Revised, complete review: practicallyuntitled.blogspot.com/2021/07/sand-talk-can-indigenous-thinking.html

The
Bad
Does this book live up to its title? Not in the slightest.
As others have stated, this book has little to do with indigenous thinking changing the world. Sure, there are moments in which an approach or idea could be useful when applied at scale, but the title overpromises on what are incredibly broad ways of understanding the world. Further, indigenous thinking and culture is by its nature relegated to only small groups of people, and so I see no real place for the non-indigenous majority to adopt any of what is described in the book - you can’t just become indigenous. I doubt that this is the fault of Yunkaporta, however, and was likely some sort of marketing push to sell more copies of an otherwise challenging and pertinent assortment of essays.

The Claims That Don’t Add Up; Or, Overgeneralising the West
Yunkaporta …