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Alive and Well: Native Theatre in Canada
"And What Are You Dreaming About?": An Analysis of Tomson Highway's Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing
"Bending the Light" Toward Survivance: Anishinaabec-Led Youth Theatre Residential Schools
The Bingocentric Worlds of Michel Tremblay and Tomson Highway: Les Belles-Soeurs vs. The Rez Sisters
Looks at the parallels between two plays in terms of the subject matter and the dramatic techniques used. For example, bingo, is used as a symbol and illustration of women's consumerism and of the spiritual emptiness in their lives.
The Book of Jessica: The Healing Circle of a Woman's Autobiography
Discusses a play, The Book of Jessica, that illustrates the struggle women have in understanding what being "a woman" means, including across the barriers of race, culture, privilege and age.
Chocolate Woman Dreams the Milky Way
Circling the Question of Nationalism in Native Canadian Literature and its Study
Cole and Johnson's The Red Moon, 1908-1910: Reimaging African American and Native American Female Education at Hampton
Creative Arts, Culture, and Healing: Building an Evidence Base
Cultural Collision and Magical Transformation: The Plays of Tomson Highway
The Death of a Chief: Watching for Adaptation ; or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bard
Expanding Interpretations of Native American Women's History
First-Nations, Métis, and Inuit Drama from Playwrights Canada Press
First Tellers of Tales
Floyd Flavel: "They Thought Ahead Seven Generations"
Further (Farther)
Gerald Vizenor: Compassionate Trickster
"God of the Whiteman! God of the Indian! God Al-fucking-mighty!": The Residential School Legacy in Two Canadian Plays
Harold of Orange: A Screenplay
I Just See Myself as an Old-Fashioned Storyteller: A Conversation with Drew Hayden Taylor
Taylor talks about some of his characters in an interview, where he came from and how he got into theater.
The Indian Passion Play: Contesting the Real Indian in Song of Hiawatha Pageants, 1901-1965
Indians Playing Indians
Inside the Machine: Indigeneity, Subversion, and the Academy
An Interview With Drew Hayden Taylor
JudyLee Oliva's The Fire and the Rose and the Modeling of Platial Theories in Native American Dramaturgy
Lill in Review: A Working Bibliography
Lines and Circles: The "Rez" Plays of Tomson Highway
Discussion of two plays, The Rez Sisters and Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing, which expose the problems, challenges and injustices that Aboriginal people face.
Lost in Conflation: Visual Culture and Constructions of the Category of Religion
MELUS Interview: Hanay Geiogamah
MELUS Interview: William Yellow Robe
Murdered and Missing Women: Performing Indigenous Cultural Memory in British Columbia and Beyond
The Murmuring-In-Between: Eco-centric Politics in The Girl Who Swam Forever
The Mystery of the "North of the North" in Ibsen's Works
Native Playwright: Tomson Highway
New Stages: Questions for Canadian Dramatic Criticism
The Oklahoma Plays of R. Lynn Riggs
Opening on the Education Scene: a Native American Theatre Ensemble
Performing Aboriginalities: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
The Plains Cree Grotowski
The Politics of Representation: Some Native Canadian Women Writers
Discussion on reviving traditional storytelling techniques, in new forms, and challenging the Canadian literary tradition.