Smoke and Mirrors: The Changing Image of Native Americans in Films and Television Since 1950
So We Beat On: How Native Interpreters at Living History Museums Experience Racial Microaggressions
The Social Construction of Aboriginal Peoples in the Saskatchewan Print Media
Society Needs to Recognize Worth of Aboriginal Women
Discusses how advocates for Aboriginal women stress that society and the justice system need to treat Aboriginal women with the same respect as non-Aboriginal women.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Some Notes on Political Theory and American Indian Values: The Case of the Muscogee Creeks
Someone's Mother, Sister or Daughter: Street Sex Workers, Their Families and Transitioning Out of Street Sex Work
Something New in the Air: The Story of First Peoples Television Broadcasting in Canada
Spectacular Native Performances: From the Wild West to the Tourist Site, Nineteenth Century to the Present
Speculative Fiction in Native American Indian Literature: Active Resistance to Female American Indian Stereotypes
“Squaw Men,” “Half-Breeds,” and Amalgamators: Late Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Attitudes Toward Indian-White Race-Mixing
"A Squaw or a Woman:" Gender and Indian Agency in the Carlisle Indian Industrial School Newspapers, 1879-1900
Staged Encounters: Native American Performance Between 1880 and 1920
State of the Inner City: Forest For the Trees: Reducing Drug and Mental Health Harms in the Inner City of Winnipeg
Stealing the Horses: The Representation of Non-Natives in Native Canadian Literature
Stereotypes of Contemporary Native American Indian Characters in Recent Popular Media
Stereotypes of Maoris Held by Europeans: A Study Based on Four Newspapers of the Liberal Period
Stereotyping American Indians
[Steven Loft, Curator in Residence, Indigenous Art]
Stolen Identities: The Impact of Racist Stereotypes on Indigenous People: Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs United States Senate One Hundred Twelfth Congress
Witnesses and submissions discuss the damaging effects of stereotypical representations of Native Americans in sports and the media.
Stolen Lives: The Indigenous Peoples of Canada and the Indian Residential Schools
Stolen Sisters: Colonial Roots of Sexual Violence against Aboriginal Women and Unsympathetic Media Representations toward Their Stories in Contemporary Canada
Discusses how colonialism has created behavioral patterns and attitudes which serve to legitimize violence against Indigenous women and perpetuate racism and discrimination
Stories From Outside the Textbook: "Counter Points" To Colonial Narratives in the British Columbia Public Education System
Story and Stereotype: Aboriginal Literature as Anti-Racist Education
Strategies of Discourse: Native American Women Characters in Jackson's Ramona, Callahan's Wynema, and Mourning Dove's Cogewea
[Studio Portrait of Aboriginal Woman]
Subject Consolidation, The Hierarchic Motive, and Two Months in the Camp of Big Bear
Sugar Cane and Sugar Beets: Two Tales of Burning Love
Survivance in Indigenous Science Fictions: Vizenor, Silko, Glancy, and the Rejection of Imperial Victimry
[Surviving Disappearance, Re-Imaging & Humanizing Native Peoples: Matika Wilbur at TEDxSeattle]
Symbolic and Discursive Violence in Media Representations of Aboriginal Missing and Murdered Women
"Take a Picture With a Real Indian": (Self-) Representation, Ecotourism, and Indigeneity in Amazonia
Talkin' up Sport and Gender: Three Australian Aboriginal Women Speak
"A Taste of Paradise": Sacajawea and the Romanticizing of Americanization"
Teacher Guide for K.C. Adam's Perception: A Photo Series
Teaching American Indian History with Primary Sources
Technologies of Remembrance: Literary Criticism and Duncan Campbell Scott's "Indian Poems"
Tee Peez, Totem Polz, and the Spectre of Indianness as Other
Teepees and Trade-marks: Aboriginal Peoples, Stereotypes and Intellectual Property
"Telling Our Own Story": The Aesthetic Expression of Collective Identity in Native American Documentary
Telling Our Twisted Histories
Website contains links to a series of 12 podcasts which explore the impact of words such as reconciliation, indian time, school, reserve, and savage. Host Kaniehti:io Horn engages in conversations with more than 70 people from 15 First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.
Telling Their Own Story: The Presentation of American Indian History Reconsidered
Terrance Houle & Adrian Stimson: Buckskin Re-Mounting
Territorial Stigma on the Canadian Prairies: Representations of North Central, Regina
Thanksgiving ... A Resource Guide: An Indian Education Curriculum Unit
Discusses some of the myths and stereotypes associated with Thanksgiving and contrasts them to the factual version of what took place when the pilgrims landed in the United States.