Sigwan
Silencing the Past: Social Memory and the Archaeology of the White Mountain Apache and Mormons in the Forestdale Valley, Arizona
Silko’s Originality in Yellow Woman
"Singing Of What They No Longer Are"?: The Role Of Traditional Inuit Myth and Legend in Contemporary Inuit Narrative and Visual Art
Skins: Contemporary Indigenous Writing
Smartberries: Interpreting Erdrich's Love Medicine
[...So They Understand: Cultural Issues in Oral History]
Some Words on Study as a Process of Discovery
Song to Tsuguntsalala
The Speaking Landscape and Multicultural Memory in Haida Gwaii Fiction: A Bioregional Analysis
Spiderwoman Theater and the Tapestry of Story
Spiral of Fire
Spokane Words: An Interview with Sherman Alexie
Storied Dialogues: Exchanges of Meaning Between Storyteller and Anthropologist
Stories about Cancer among the Woodland Cree of Northern Saskatchewan
Stories From the Margins: Toward a More Inclusive British Columbia Historiography
Stories of Healing From Native Indian Residential School Abuse
Stories That Make the World: Oral Literature of the Indian Peoples of the Inland Northwest as Told by Lawrence Aripa, Tom Yellowtail, and Other Elders
Storying Presence: Aboriginal Literature, Critical Strategies, and Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
Strategies of Subversion: An Examination of Tomson Highway's The Rez Sisters and its Appropriation of Sonata Form
Strong Women Stories: Native Vision and Community Survival
The Subversion of Identity in D'Arcy McNickle's The Surrounded, Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony, Louise Erdrich's Love Medicine, and Michael Doris' A Yellow Raft in Blue Water
English Thesis (M.A.)--The University of New Brunswick, 1996.
Subversive Humour: Canadian Native Playwrights' Winning Weapon of Resistance
Surviving the Storm
"Taken From her own Mouth": Women's Captivity Narratives and the Uses of Female Authorship
Taku
Talk About the Horse of a Different Color
Humorous article on the issue of appropriate terms for Canada's original inhabitants.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.31.
Taloyoak: Stories of Thunder and Stone: Archaeological and Oral Narrative Project
Project undertaken to preserve Taloyoak history and connect oral stories to the archaeological survey of Netsilik area. Includes links to oral narratives, the survey, stories and legends as well as Grade Nine teaching module, Thunder and Stone.
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Tangled, Lost and Bitter? Current Directions in Writing of Native History in Canada
Teaching Beliefs in Mohawk Classrooms: Issues of Language and Culture
Telling Our Stories: Omushkego Legends and Histories From Hudson Bay
Telling the Story of the Past: History, Identity, and Community in Fiction By Walter Scott, William Faulker, Toni Morrison, and Leslie Silko
Testimonio: Ne'aahtove---Listen to Me! Voices From the Edge - Educational Stories of Northern Cheyenne Women
Thank You, Lavonne
Theatres of Power: Tent Boxing circa 1910-1970
There is No Bentham Street in Calgary: Panoptic Discourses and Thomas King's Medicine River.
"There's Still More Digging To Do": A Story in Honor of A. Lavonne Brown Ruoff
"This Blood Is a Map": Voice and Cartography in Contemporary Native American Poetry
This is Who I Am: Experiences of Native American Students
Those Treasured Purple-Inked Pages
Three-Day Road
Thrity Years Later: The Long-Term Effect of Baording Schools on Alaska Natives and Their Communities
Reports results of interviews conducted with 61 individuals who attended boarding schools or were in the urban boarding home program from the late 1940s through the early 1980s, as well as one individual whose parents were boarding school graduates.
Throwing the Baby Eagle Out of the Nest
The Time of the Butterfly: Native American Women's Autobiography in the Twentieth Century
Time Travellers
A Timely Fable
"To Feel the Drumming Earth Come Upward": Indigenizing the American Studies Discipline, Field, Movement
Looks at Indigenous academics and scholars and their responsibilities.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.