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Aboriginal Women Claiming Rights Through Writing: A Comparative Analysis of Selected Texts
Agnes Mayo Moore Oral History Project River Trip 2000
Allegations, Secrets, and Silence: Perspectives on the Controversy of Roberta Sykes and the Snake Dreaming Series
An Appreciation
The Archives
Athapaskan Women: Lives and Legends
The “Authentic Indian”: Sarah Winnemucca's Resistance to Colonial Constructions of Indianness
The Autobiographings of Mourning Dove
Discusses importance of three books: Cogewea the Half-Blood, Coyotes Stories, and Morning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography.
Becoming Rosalind's Daughter: Reflections on Intercultural Kinship and Embodied Histories
Between Storytelling and Life Writing: Reading Delphine Red Shirt and Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve
Blankets of Shame: Emotional Representation in Maria Campbell’s Half-breed
The Blue Jay’s Dance: A Birth Year.
The Book of Jessica: The Healing Circle of a Woman's Autobiography
Discusses a play, The Book of Jessica, that illustrates the struggle women have in understanding what being "a woman" means, including across the barriers of race, culture, privilege and age.
Book Reviews
[Book Reviews]
Book Reviews
Book Reviews:
The Braiding Histories Stories
Camping with the Sioux: Fieldwork Diary of Alice Cunningham Fletcher
The Captivity and Deliverance of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, of Lancaster, Who Was Taken by the French and Indians
Carol Couchie
Interview with the chair of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada's Aboriginal Health Issues Committee who helped create the Association of Aboriginal Midwifes and Aboriginal Midwifery Education Program.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.20.
Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity
Excerpt from an essay that examines the themes in Maria Campbell's Halfbreed.
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.
Citizen of the Year: An Inspiration To All
Claiming Voice, Writing Difference: A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous Women's Life Writing in Australia and North America
Coming to Voice: Native American Literature and Feminist Theory
Connecticut River Valley Awakening
Contemporary Native Women's Voices in Literature
Looks at one way to cross the cultural boundary in Aboriginal literature by examining the purpose of author Maria Campbell, in Halfbreed, Beatrice Culleton, in In Search of April Raintree, and Lee Maracle, in I Am Woman.
Contributing to Health Reform: Urban Aboriginal Women Speak Out
Conversations with Our Elders
Coping With Trauma: Self-Portrayal in Linda Hogan's Memoir
Creating Space: My Life and Work in Indigenous Education
Critical Compassion: The Reader as Witness in Maria Campbell's Halfbreed
Critical Events: Métis Servicewomen’s WWII Stories with Dorothy Chartrand
Cross-Cultural Relationships: The Work of Canadian Artist Mildred Valley Thornton
Culture and Intercultural Dynamics: The Life Stories of Three Women from Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (Volume II)
A Culture of Loss: The Mourning Period of Paper Indians
"[D]ifferent Sides of the Picture": Four Women's Views of Canada (1816-1838)
Daisy Bates, Grand Dame of the Desert
Decolonizing Gender: Indigenous Feminism and Native American Literature
Dispersed, But Not Destroyed: Leadership, Women, and Power Within the Wendat Diaspora, 1600-1701
E. Pauline Johnson: Mohawk Indian
Early Days in the Hudson's Bay Coy
Historical note:
Early Native American Women Writers: Pauline Johnson, Zitkala-Sa, Mourning Dove
[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.