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Afterword: Antiracist Activism in the Arts Community
Alex Janvier's Morning Star: A Metaphor for Canada’s Competing Cultures
Animal Arrays and Geometric Pictorials: Commercial Aspects of Plains Painting
Art and Identity: Secondary Students Discovering a “Sense of Self” Through Creating Artworks and Webpages
Asingit: Inuit Art from the Macdonald Stewart Centre
Bazaar Artist: Hawk Henries
Bernice Sayese
Chronicles the life and works of the first Aboriginal woman to receive the Prince Albert Citizen of the Year Award.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.
Boye Ladd: A Visit from a Friend
Powwow dancer, Boye Ladd, relates traditional teachings on various topics relating to First Nations culture, including information about the sacred drum, respect for other people and groups, and the right to wear an eagle feather.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.29.
Bridging Cultural Divides
Bridging the Bitter Divide in Saskatoon
Bringing Throat-Singing to Pop Culture's Attention
Bundjalung Dreaming Meets European History
Civilizations Lost and Found: Fabricating History - Part One: An Alternate Reality
Civilizations Lost and Found: Fabricating History - Part Two: False Messages in Stone
"A Cuchi Moya!" - Star Trek's Native Americans
Cultural Awareness Through the Arts: The Success of an Aboriginal Antibias Program for Intermediate Students
Culture and Native American Theater: A Structural Analysis of Diane Glancy's "The Truth Teller"
Dancing to Say "Mahalo": Bazaar Artist Kumu Kawika Alfiche
The Dawn of Translation
Decolonizing the Runway: Jessica R. Metcalfe Brings Native American Fashion Into the Spotlight
Do You Recognize Who I Am? Decolonizing Rhetorics in Indigenous Rock Opera Something Inside is Broken
Doctoring Divinity: Trickster, Jim Logan and the Classical Canon
Drawing on Inuit
Elder's Perspective: Mariano Aupliaarjuk
Electronic Powwow is Music Made for Dancing
Brief profile of a band, A Tribe Called Red, whose blend of powwow songs with a dance beat has been nominated for a Canadian Polaris Prize.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.23.
Equality Rights Proponent Was an Accomplished Artisan
Chronicles the life and works of Horton First Nation Chief Rita Smith.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
“An Evening’s Curiosity”: Image and Indianness in James Welch’s The Heartsong of Charging Elk
An Examination of Native Americans in Film and Rise of Native Filmmakers
Focus On: Curatorial Collaboration
Framing the Past
Frederick Alexcee's Entangled Gazes
From a Whisper to a Scream
From Health Worker to Health Worker across Australia
From the Caribbean to the South Pacific: Cultural Hybridity, Resistance, and Historical Difference
Gerald Vizenor's Transnational Aesthetics in Blue Ravens
The Golden Potlatch : Study in Mimesis and Capitalist Desire
"The Greatest Drama in Indian Life": Experiments in Native American Identity and Resistance at the Haskell Institute Homecoming of 1926
Gud Gii AanaaGung: Look at One Another
History Lessons
Hydro-Quebec Buys Inuit Art
In the Heard Museum Art Imitates Life
[In the Reign of Twilight]
Indian Art was Ignored, at Best, Until Coming of Heard Museum
Indian Culture Makes Mark at Mosaic '79
Indian Prehistory as Revealed by Archaeology
“The Indian Who Bombed Berlin”: German Encounters in Ralph Salisbury’s Work – Modulating Modern Precariousness
Indigena: Perspectives of Indigenous Peoples on Five Hundred Years ...
Indigenous New Media Arts: Narrative Threads and Future Imaginaries
The Inmates Are Running the Asylum [Professor Stymied by Students' Refusal to Audition for a Production of the Rez Sisters]
Examines the reasons why a western Canadian Fine Arts university professor was unable to convince members of his class to audition or act in a First Nations play.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.3.