Inuit Art Quarterly, vol. 24, no. 1, Spring, 2009, pp. 34-41
Description
Chronicles the gallery owner's involvement in exhibiting, acquiring and selling works between 1953 and 1972.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article, scroll to p. 34.
Constitutional documents and Pre- and Post-Confederation statutes. Post-Confederation category is further divided into administrative, constitutional, federal grants, federal-provincial agreements, lands, Manitoba, Northern Canada, Saskatchewan and Alberta, and miscellaneous,
Presents the lives and journeys of Mikak and her son Tutauk, Attuiock, Ickongoque, Ickeuna, Tooklavinia and Caubvick, and looks at the roles they played in Britain’s expansion along the northeastern seaboard of Canada.
American Indian Quarterly, vol. 4, no. 1, 1978, pp. 33-56
Description
A discussion about an American anthropologist's European visit to identify how Europeans view American Indigenous populations. During his investigation he looks at European depictions of Indigenous people in museums and libraries, Indigenous influences in European culture, and compares smaller European societies also struggling for their own cultural autonomy to those of American Indigenous people.
Examines how the structure of native institutions and property rights provided a relatively high standard of living in the mid eighteenth century and for part of the nineteenth, then was unable to experience modern rates of economic growth and provide avenues for further development.