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The Best of the Best in Native Arts: Part 2
Examines plays both published and unpublished.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
The Best of the Best in Native Arts [Part I]
Choices in the categories of art, literature, poetry, political works, and music.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Blackfish
Chasing Sitting Bull & Crazy Horse: Two Fourteenth U.S. Infantry Diaries of the Great Sioux War
A Curated Selection of Martha Tickie's Work
The David Unapian Award
Decolonization and Life History Research: The Life of a Native Woman
Eli Nasogaluak: "I Try to Produce Work That Shows a lot of Action and Strength"
“An Evening’s Curiosity”: Image and Indianness in James Welch’s The Heartsong of Charging Elk
Exploring Pathways to Reconciliation
Discusses reconciliation from the point of view and experiences of an Indigenous social worker, a mother and a daughter and the living legacy of residential school.
First Nation's Historical Centre for Tourism and Education
Discusses the First Nation owned and operated Chief Poundmaker Historical Centre and Tee-Pee Village which is open to welcome history buffs, campers, and community groups.
Entire issue on one pdf. To view article scroll to p. 18 of the special insert Windspeaker's Guide to Indian Country.
A Foot In Two Worlds
A Framework for Indigenous Adoptee Reconnection: Reclaiming Language and Identity
Girl Who Loved Her Horses: A One-Act Play for Young Audiences
"Human Debris": Border Politics, Body Parts, and the Reclamation of the Americas in Leslie Marmon Silko's Almanac of the Dead
In Conversation: [Romeo Saganash]
In the Master's Maison: Mobile Indigeneity in The Heartsong of Charging Elk and Blue Ravens
Interview: Jenni Laiti
Jimmy Arnamissak: "Leaving Something That People Remember You By."
Johnny Aculiak: "It Seems to me That Our Culture Will Die off One Day if we do not Keep Carving"
Kenojuak Ashevak: "I Use Felt Pens, Crayons, Pencils and Erasers"
Letter to a Just-Starting-Out Indian Writer—and Maybe to Myself
Lucy Meeko: "Only the mind can put something into motion"
Métis Director Terril Calder Discusses Her TIFF16 Short SNIP
Nick Sikkuark: "I Do Love the Carvings Themselves"
Out of the Sea: Sculpture and Graphics in the Inuit Art Collection
Paul Simon Money
Prayers Shrieked to Heaven: Humor and Folklore in Contemporary American Indian Literature
Preserving Cultural Heritage and Creating Economic
Stability after the Nepal Earthquake
Reimagining Resistance: Achieving Sovereignty in Indigenous Science Fiction
Shirley Moorhouse: "Getting Paid for Something You Love is Pleasure on Pleasure"
Simon Tookoome: "Paper is Most Frustrating"
Small Harbour
Song Buried in the Muscle of Urgency
Spork
Stanley Felix: "What we Need Right Away is Assistance to get Better Stone"
Storytelling on Capitol Hill: Recollections and Recommendations on Tribal College Week
Storytelling to Stage: The Growth of Native Theatre in Canada
Discussion on how theatre is an ever-growing extension of storytelling with metaphorical, philosophical, and psychological implications.