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Aboriginal Policy through Literary Eyes
Aboriginal Writers Collaborating To Produce Aboriginal Day Radio Special
Adams, Howard, Prison of Grass (Ch. 7-9)
Ahkii: a Woman is a Sovereign Land
Áillohaš and His Image Drum: The Native Poet as Shaman
Anskohk Festival Celebrates Success of Aboriginal Writers
Aurora Online With Drew Hayden Taylor: An Afternoon with Drew Hayden Taylor, Playwright
Avataq Cultural Institute: Keeping Inuit Culture Afloat
"Basket Becomes Codex: A Poem by Trevino Brings Plenty in the Portland Art Museum"
Best of Aboriginal Literature Celebrated
Description of the Anskohk Aboriginal Literature Festival which was created to bring together and celebrate Indigenous authors and their works.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.23.
The Best of the Best in Native Arts: Part 2
Examines plays both published and unpublished.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
Black Elk Speaks
Blood/Memory in N. Scott Momaday's The Names: A Memoir and Linda Hogan's The Woman Who Watches Over the World: A Native Memoir
"By My Heart": Gerald Vizenor's Almost Ashore and Bear Island: The War at Sugar Point
Cancer Takes Life of Mervin Dieter
“Carried in the Arms of Standing Waves:” The Transmotional Aesthetics of Nora Marks Dauenhauer
Changing Debates in Museum Studies since NAGPRA
Checking Under the Bed for My Guests
Questions about the legendary little people are raised by the author after someone tugged on a house guest's hair.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Chief Dan George: Acclaimed Actor, Gentle Soul
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.
The Columbian Moment: Overcoming Globalization in Vizenor’s The Heirs of Columbus
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2, no.4]
Communities of Grief: Surviving War in the Fiction of Ralph Salisbury
Consuming, Incarcerating, and “Transmoting” Misery: Border Practice in Vizenor’s Bearheart and Jones’s The Fast Red Road
The Death of Jim Loney as a Bicultural Novel
Doctoring Divinity: Trickster, Jim Logan and the Classical Canon
[Eden Robinson]
Eden Robinson
Interview with the award winning author of Traplines and Monkey Beach.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Electronic Computer and Stub Pencil: Poetry and the Writing-in of Ralph Salisbury
Ephemeral Identity in Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
Ethnicity and Accountability: Recent American Fiction
“An Evening’s Curiosity”: Image and Indianness in James Welch’s The Heartsong of Charging Elk
Evidently, I've Been a Good Boy
Comments by the author on liiving with a cheerleader, the only Mohawk cheerleader in the Canadian Football League.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.6.
Festival Recognizes Storytellers
First Annual Authors' Conference
{footprints} Dr. Dale Auger
Depicts the life of Dr. Dale Auger, winner of the Aboriginal Children's Book of the Year award in 2006 and the 2007 R. Ross Annett Award for Children's Literature.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.
From Discomfort to Enlightenment: An Interview with Lee Maracle
from Swift Cinder
GDI Launches New Books at This Year's Back to Batoche
GDI Wins Big at Saskatchewan Book Awards
Gerald Vizenor's Transnational Aesthetics in Blue Ravens
Gigawaabaa-bye-bye
Gray Wolf's Daughter
Honoring the WORD: Classroom Instructors Find That Students Respond Best to Oral Tradition
Imag(in)ing the Nation Through Maori Eyes/I's
"In Navajo we call him little father" / "In Navajo, we call him 'shidá'í:'" The Emergence and Calibration of Style by Two Navajo Poets
Paper from Texas Linguistics Forum: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Symposium About Language and Society, Austin, 2007. Looks at the natural history of Navajo poetry "style".
In the Master's Maison: Mobile Indigeneity in The Heartsong of Charging Elk and Blue Ravens
Indian? Fiction? Indian Fiction? Communicating Culture Between Reservation and Non-Reservation Realities in Contemporary Indian Literature
"Indian Time" Is Often Just Bad Manners
Concept of "Indian time" is that things happen when they need to; this paper discusses how people use this concept to shift blame for their own actions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.