Goodbye, Columbus: Take Two
Compares the treatment of the "discovery" of North America in two children's books: Encounter by Jane Yolen and A Coyote Columbus Story by Thomas King.
Excerpt from A Broken Flute: The Native Experience in Books for Children edited by Doris Seale and Beverly Slapin.
The Gospel According to Peter John
Grade 5 Social Studies: People and Stories of Canada to 1867: A Foundation for Implementation
Modules: First Peoples, Early European Colonization (1600 to 1763), Fur Trade, and From British Colony to Confederation (1763 to 1867).
Grand Rapids Stories: Volume I
Related: Volume 2.
Grandmother to Granddaughter: Generations of Oral History in a Dakota Family
Grateful For the Push: A Tribute to Lavonne Ruoff
Guest Editor's Preface : Studies in American Indian Literatures
Gwich'in Native Elders: Not Just Knowledge, But a Way of Looking at the World
Haida Perspectives on Living with Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes
'Hang on to these words': Johnny David's Delgamuukw Evidence
[Hank Williams First Nation: Screenplay]
Haunted by Pehin Hanska
Havasu Ba Qwawa (The Language of the People)
Have Some Old Fashioned Christmas Fun at Rez
The Hero's Journey in Jame's Welch's Fools Crow and Traditional Pikuni Sacred Geography
Hidden in Plain Sight: Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture, vol. 1
High Slack: Waddington's Gold Road and the Bute Inlet Massacre of 1864
Himwic`a: Our Legends: As Told by Our Hupačasath Elders
Retelling of seven traditional stories including: When the Eagle Went to Borrow Eyes from the Snail; The Shadow; Daughter of Sea Cucumber; The Thunderbird Has a Nest on Thunder Mountain; and When the Codfish Was Sad.
Written in English and Hupačasath.
History and Indigeneity in the Works of John Major Richardson
HIV Infection in Aboriginal Women
Honoring LaVonne Ruoff
"'How Should I Eat These?' With Your Mouth, Asshole": First Nations Women's Literature Responds to Colonial Discourse
How to Write the Great American Indian Novel
"I Have Spoken": Fictional "Orality" in Indigenous Fiction
I'll Eat Them All Up
Story about a group of children who are pursued by a weetigo but escape with the help of Wesakaychak.
I'm Going Home
I'm Not Scared of Ghosts and Other Chipewyan Stories
Stories collected from storytellers and writers from Fort Resolution, Hay River, Fort Smith, and Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
Text in Chipewyan and English.
"I Was the One to Make the Peace": Roberto Thomson and the Seri Indians
I Will Sing (For My People)
Ilagiit and TuqΠuraqtuq Inuit Understandings of Kinship and Social Relatedness
Illusions
Image, Music, Text: An Interview with Jeannette Armstrong
Imagining Difference: Legend, Curse and Spectacle in a Canadian Mining Town
In Praise of Old Friendships
Indian Aesthetics: Literature
"Indian Blood": Reflections on the Reckoning and Refiguring of Native North American Identity
The Indian Who Made America
Indians and Immigrants: Survivance Stories of Literacies
Indigeneity and Transnationality?
Indigenizing the Future: Why We Must Think Spatially in the Twenty-First Century
Looks a the life of Vine Deloria, Jr. and his contributions as an Indigenous thinker and intellectual.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.