State of the World's Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2014: Events of 2013: Freedom from Hate
The Stories Hold Water: Learning and Burning in North Fork Mono Homelands
Stories in a New Skin: Approaches to Inuit Literature
Stories of Indian Days: O-ge-mas-es Relates Many Incidents Of Early Life in the West.
Compilation, edited and annotated, mainly consisting of newspaper articles published between 1920 and 1921. Text in bold, footnotes and words in square brackets are the editor's.
Stories of Success in Career Decision-Making: Listening to Indigenous Women
Storytelling and Strength: Voices from Indigenous Theatre in Canada
The Strongest Blood
Sudden Labour Displacement for Métis in Alberta
Susan Point: Works on Paper
Taku River Tlingit Place Names
Talking to Strangers: The Use of Stories as Guides to Intercultural Encounters by the Archaic Greeks and the Hudson’s Bay Cree
Talking Tribalography: LeAnne Howe Models Emerging Worldliness in “The Story of America” and Miko Kings
Teacher's Guide for Pīsim Finds Her Miskanow by William Dumas, Illustrated by Leonard Paul
[Teacher's Guide]: No Time to Say Goodbye by Sylvia Olsen
Stories in book are based on accounts from Indigenous people who attended Kuper Island Residential School. Lesson plan is intended for use with Grades 9 and 10.
Teacher's Guide: Pīsim Finds Her Miskanaw by William Dumas; illustrated by Leonard Paul
For use with picture-book which provides historical information about the pre-contact culture and language of the Rocky Cree people from around South Indian Lake in Northern Manitoba.
English text with some Cree vocabulary and phrases, and glossary and pronunciation guide.
Teaching and Learning about Justice Through Wahkohtowin
Tears 4 Justice and the Missing and Murdered Women and Children Across Canada: An Interview with Gladys Radek
Telling Our Stories: Aboriginal Young People in Victoria and Digital Storytelling
Tenas Wawa: The Chinook Jargon Voice
Website includes links to: brief history of Jargon, dictionaries, origins and evolution, all episodes of the Moola John Saga, a fictional saga.
[That Dream Shall Have a Name: Native Americans Rewriting America]
"That The People Might Live": Loss and Renewal in Native American Elegy
"This Is Our Land!" Indigenous Rhetoric and Resistance and the Northern Plains
Thunder Finder
Thunderbird Women: Indigenous Women Reclaiming Autonomy through Stories of Resistance
“To Fight against Shame through Love”: A Conversation on Life, Literature, and Indigenous Masculinities with Daniel Heath Justice
Towards a Further Understanding of What Indigenous People Have Always Known: Storytelling as the Basis of Good Pedagogy
"Toxic Masculinity", and Gender Entanglement
Traditional Knowledge, Co-existence and Co-resistance
[Trans-Indigenous: Methodologies for Global Native Literary Studies]
Transforming Our Nuuyum: Contemporary Indigenous Leadership and Governance: Stories told by Glasttowk askq and Bakk jus moojillth, Ray and Mary Green
A Translation of Selected Stories from Thomas King's One Good Story, That One: Idiolect, Irony, and the Trickster as Instruments of Anticolonial Resistance
Transnational Narratives of Conflict and Empire, the Literary Art of Survivance in the Fiction of Gerald Vizenor
Tribal 2.0: Digital Natives, Political Players, and the Power of Stories
Tribulations and Tears: Stories from the Youth of the Norway House Cree Nation
Truthful Engagement: Making the Witness Blanket, an Ongoing Process of Reconciliation
Tukitaaqtuq: Explain to one Another, Reach Understanding, Receive Explanation From the Past and the Eskimo Identification Canada System
Turning Pages: Harold R. Johnson on Peace and Good Order
Writer, activist and former lawyer discusses his book, Peace and Good Order, the effects of incarceration on Indigenous communities, and the way that jailhouse culture fills the cultural void left by residential schools. Duration: 28:08