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"Active Readers...Observe Tricksters": Trickster Texts and Cross-Cultural Reading
Adams, Howard, Prison of Grass (Ch. 7-9)
Afterword: Antiracist Activism in the Arts Community
Among the Thlinkits in Alaska
The Angels Walked In Front Of Me
The Artists Speak
Bazaar Artist: Hawk Henries
Being an Indigenous Carer
The Braiding Histories Stories
Bridge Building: Providing Information Services to Canadian Aboriginal Peoples
Bridging the Gap: The Need for First Nations Libraries
The Challenge of First Nations History in a Colonial World
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.
Colonialism and Race Relations in Remote Inland Australia: Observations from the Field of Australian Indigenous Studies
Coming Home
Consuming, Incarcerating, and “Transmoting” Misery: Border Practice in Vizenor’s Bearheart and Jones’s The Fast Red Road
Cultural Awareness Through the Arts: The Success of an Aboriginal Antibias Program for Intermediate Students
Deloria was the Voice for a Generation of Indians
Determination and Perseverance
Difference is No Reason For Discrimination
Discourses of Denial: Mediations of Race, Gender, and Violence
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
Edmonton Pentimento: Re-Reading History in the Case of the Papaschase Cree
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part I
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 104
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part II
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 30
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part III
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 67.
Elder's Perspective: Mariano Aupliaarjuk
Ephemeral Identity in Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
“An Evening’s Curiosity”: Image and Indianness in James Welch’s The Heartsong of Charging Elk
Experimental Eskimos
Extracts From the Diary of an Aboriginal Overseas Study Award Holder [1]
Extracts From the Diary of an Aboriginal Overseas Study Award Holder [4]
“The First Real Indians That I Have Seen”: Franz Boas and the Disentanglement of the Entangled
Focus On: Curatorial Collaboration
Forever Changed: Boarding School Narratives of American Indian Identity in the U.S. and Canada
The Fragment, the Spiral and the Network: The Progress of Interpretation in Louise Erdrich's American Horse
A Framework for Indigenous Adoptee Reconnection: Reclaiming Language and Identity
The Future of the Red Man
Gathering, Telling, Preparing the Stories: A Vehicle for Healing
Gerald Vizenor's Transnational Aesthetics in Blue Ravens
Glen Coulthard & the Three Rs
Grandma’s Stocks: An Indigenous Perspective on the Economic Crisis
Health Promotion and Lifestyle Shoalhaven, South Coast NSW
Homestead Venture, 1883-1892 An Ayrshire Man’s Letters Home, Part I
An edited collection of correspondence published in the Ayrshire Post, and written by William Gibson, a Scottish farmer settled in the Wolseley, SK area. Letters discuss the day-to-day life of farming in the area and describe Gibson’s interactions with the nearby Nêhiyawak (Cree) people. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 98.
Homestead Venture, 1883-1892 An Ayrshire Man’s Letters Home, Part II
An edited collection of correspondence published in the Ayrshire Post, and written by William Gibson, a Scottish farmer settled in the Wolseley, SK area. Letters discuss the day-to-day life of farming in the area and describe Gibson’s interactions with the nearby Nêhiyawak (Cree) people. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 30