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Canada's Due Diligence Obligation to Prevent, Protect, Punish and Remedy Violence Against Aboriginal Women
Canadian-American Value Differences: Media Portrayal of Native Issues
The Canadian Armed Forces’ Eyes, Ears, and Voice in Remote Regions: Selected Writings on the Canadian Rangers
Canadian Illustrated News: Images in the News: 1869-1883
"The Canadian Indian"
Canadian Indian Boys Shooting at Pennies, at Lorette - Sketch. - [1875?].
Historical note:
Canadian Indians at the Front
Brief article argues that even though men were not citizens and therefore knew "no politics as yet", they enlisted because they were monarchists. Comments on the high number "Indians" who volunteered for service. Tone reflects attitudes of the time. Several issues on one pdf. To access this article use page counter at the top of the screen and go to page 972 of 1276.
The Canadian Newspaper Industry's Portrayal of the Oka Crisis
Canadian "Range Wars": Struggles over Indian Cowboys
“Captive Woman?”: The Rewriting of Pocahontas
in Three Contemporary Native American Novels
The Captivity and Deliverance of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, of Lancaster, Who Was Taken by the French and Indians
Capture of Louis Riel by the Scouts Armstrong and Hourie, May 15, 1885
Captured in the Middle: Tradition and Experience in Contemporary Native American Writing. Sidner Larson
Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West
[Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West]
Cartographies of Desire: Captivity, Race, and Sex in the Shaping of an American Nation by Rebecca Blevins Faery
Case Comment: R. v. Gladue
A Case Study of Two Cherokee Newspapers and Their Fight Against Censorship
Case Study: Reporting in Indigenous Communities
Catlin/Curtis/Disney: Native American Culture as Spectacle
Art History Thesis (MA) -- California State University, 2008.
Caught Up: Indigenous Re/presentations of Colonial Captivity
Celebrate Diversity, Strengthen Community
Introduction to biases and stereotypes about Indigenous and other groups.
Celluloid Indians: Native Americans and Film
Central Canada's Patrick Riel: Metis Soldiers, English Canadian Settler Mythmaking, and the First World War
History Thesis (MA) -- University of Regina, 2021.
Challenging Frontiers: The Canadian West
Challenging Racism in Higher Education: Promoting Justice
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.
Changes in Film Representations of Sami Culture and Identity
The Changing Face of the Métis Nation
Changing Images: Photographic Collections of First People of the Pacific Northwest Coast Held in the Royal British Columbia Museum, 1860-1920
Changing Perspectives: Photography and First Nations Identity
Changing the Narrative about Native Americans: A Guide for Allies
Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity
Charles Alexander Eastman's From the Deep Woods to Civilization and the Shaping of Native Manhood
Chasms and Collisions: Native American Women's Decolonial Labor
The Cherokee Kid: Will Rogers and the Tribal Genealogies of American Indian Celebrity
The Cheyenne Nation: People of the Great Plains
'Chief Illiniwek' Does His Last Dance
Children at Muskoday (John Smith) Reserve.
Children of Change, Not Doom: Indigenous Futurist Heroines in YA
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.