Search
Alternative Media for Public Pedagogy: "Chief" Concerns and Human Agency
American Indian Issues: An Introductory and Curricular Guide for Educators
Contains links to historical overview and nine lesson plans, including: Mascots, Symbols, and Name; Federal Indian Policy: Historical Roots and 19th Century Policies; Indian Boarding Schools; Red Power; and American Indian Tribal Gaming.
American Indians and Popular Culture: Volume 1: Media, Sports, and Politics
Black Ink and the New Red Power: Native American Newspapers and Tribal Sovereignty
Changemakers Lesson Plans: Remote Learning
Lesson plans focus on Native Americans who are fighting invisibility and creating change through their work, contributions from the past, and current actions which will impact the future.
The Chickasaw Press: A Source of Power and Pride
Choking Off That Angel Mother: Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins’s Strategic Humor
Christine Quintasket
Chronicles the life and works of the novelist and advocate of Aboriginal land rights.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Constructing Two Cultural Realities: Newspaper Coverage of Two American Indian Protest Events
[Cultural Politics and the Mass Media: Alaska Native Voices]
Decolonizing Native Histories: Collaboration, Knowledge, and Languages in the Americas
Dennis of Wounded Knee
Devolution and Indigenous Mass Media: The Role of Media in Inupiat and Sami Nation-State Building
Digital Indigeneity: Digital Media's Uses for Identity Formation Education, and Activism by Indigenous People in the Northeastern United States
Engaged Resistance: American Indian Art, Literature, and Film from Alcatraz to the NMAI by Dean Rader
Framing Red Power: The American Indian Movement, The Trail of Broken Treaties, and the Politics of Media
From Red Fears to Red Power: The Story of the Newspaper Coverage of Wounded Knee 1890 and Wounded Knee 1973
Gathering Around the Electric Fire: Persistence and Resistance in Electronic Formats
Gerald Vizenor and "Harold of Orange": from Word Cinemas to Real Cinema
"Guardians of the Indian Image": Controlling Representations of Indigenous Cultures in Television
Guatemala Tragedy Gets Little Attention
"I'm Not a Rapper, I'm an Activist Who Rhymes": Native American Hip Hop, Activism, and Twenty-first Century Identities
In the Light of Reverence and the Rhetoric of American Indian Religious Freedom: Negotiating Rights and Responsibilities in the Struggle to Protect Sacred Lands
Indian Record (Vol. XXXI, No. 6, June-July, 1968)
Indigenous Activism: The Paradox of Colonial Mass Media’s Propaganda and Censorship
Indigenous Memory and Imagination: Thinking Beyond the Nation
Indigenous Trauma Is Not a Frontier: Breaking Free from Colonial Economies of Trauma and Responding to Trafficking, Disappearances, and Deaths of Indigenous Women and Girls
Indigenous Women and Feminism: Politics, Activism, Culture
Ingenious Governance Amidst the Forced Federalism Era
"Keeping One Foot in the Community": Intergenerational Indigenous Women's Activism from the Local to the Global (and Back Again)
Last Real Indians
Like a Loaded Weapon: The Rehnquist Court, Indian Rights, and the History of Racism in America
Listening to Native American Voices from Wounded Knee, the Black Hills International Survival Gathering and the Tlingit Banishment
Mediating Indigeneity: Ho-Chunk 'Indian News' as a Critique of the Legacies of Settler Colonialism
Medicines at Standing Rock: Stories of Native Healing through Survivance
Militant AIM Activist Led Wounded Knee Uprising
Looks at the life of American Indian Movement activist and actor, Russell Mean.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.34.
A Mountain of Politics: The Struggle for dził ncaa si'an (Mount Graham), 1871-2002
Mourning the Land: Kanikau in Noho Hewa: The Wrongful Occupation of Hawai'i
Native Americans in Cold War Public Diplomacy: Indian Politics, American History, and the US Information Agency
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.