Prickly Pears
Primitivism in Missinippi Cree Historical Consciousness
Promises of the "Vanishing" Worlds: Re-Storying "Civilization" in the Philippine National Imaginary
Using the literary work of Filipino author Nick Joaquin to examine the Philippine discursive between the "normal" civilized and the defined "primitive" Indigenous populations.
The Prophecy
Looks at a fictional visionary's dream about the horrors that await the First Nations of the Americas.
The Quinzhee
Racism Experiences of Urban Indigenous Women in Ontario, Canada: “We All Have That Story That Will Break Your Heart”
Raven Tales: Traditional Quileute Stories of Bayak, the Trickster
Includes five stories: Raven and Bear; Raven and Fishduck; Raven and Mole; Raven and Skatefish; and Raven and Eagle.
(Re)claiming History and Visibility Through Rhetorical Sovereignty: The Power of Diné Rhetorics in the Works of Laura Tohe
Reading Between Worlds: Narrativity in the Fiction of Louise Erdrich
Reading Bodies, Writing Blackness: Anti-/Blackness and Nineteenth-Century Kanaka Maoli Literary Nationalism
Reading for Land Susan Hill's The Clay We Are Made Of: Haudenosaunee Land Tenure on the Grand River
Reading for Reconciliation? Indigenous Literatures in a Post-TRC Canada
"The Real Geronimo Got Away": Eluding Expectations in Geronimo: His Own Story; The Autobiography of a Great Patriot Warrior
Reassessing Traditional Inuit Poetry
Discussion on Inuit poetry; and the difference between the contemporary Canadian poetic tradition and that of the traditional Inuit.
Les récits de notre terre: Les Algonquins
Reclaiming Territories through Indigenous Performance
Recovering Native American Writings in the Boarding School Press
Red Bird, Red Power: The Life and Legacy of Zitkala-Ša
Red Pens, White Paper: Wider Implications of Coulthard’s Call to Sovereignty
Red & White Men; Black, White & Grey Hats: Literary Attitudes to the Interaction between European and Native Canadians in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century
Investigates how attitudes changed between European and Indigenous Canadians in early literature.
Red Women Rising: Indigenous Women Survivors in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside
Reflections on Anthropology at the University of British Columbia
Rekindling the Sacred Fire: Métis Ancestry and Anishinaabe Spirituality
Reservation Life as Depicted In Contemporary Native American Literature
Reset and Redefine: Never Alone (Kisima Ingitchuna) and the Rise of Indigenous Games
Resilience and Rebellious Memory Loops: Further Musings of an American Indian Ethnoecologist
Resisting Consumption: Exploring Pathways of Resistance to the Assimilative Nature of the Canadian Education System Through Tomson Highway's Kiss of the Fur Queen
Review Articles: No Writing at All Here: Review Notes on Writing Native
A Review of The Navajo and the Animal People: Native American Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Ethnozoology
Review: One Eye on the Sky
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The Russians are Coming, The Russians Are Dead: Myth and Historical Consciousness in Two Contact Narratives
Saltwater People as Told by Dave Elliott Sr.: A Resource Book for the Saanich Native Studies Program
Revised edition.
The Saugeen Ojibway Nation and Canada: Historical Relationships, Settler Colonialism, and Stories of a Shared Space
Savage, Degenerate, and Dispossessed: Some Sociological, Anthropological, and Legal Backgrounds to the Depiction of Native Peoples in Early Long Poems on Canada
Screen Text and Institutional Context: Indigenous Film Production and Academic Research Institutions
The Secret of the Twig: Salish Adaptation, Jesuit Inculturation, and Spirit-Matter Relation in D’Arcy McNickle’s The Surrounded
Seeing the Skies through Navajo Eyes: An Introduction to Cross-Cultural Astronomy
Designed as a resource for planetariums, for middle school teachers, and a book that families can read together.
Selected Children’s Fiction by Canadian Indigenous Authors Related to Truth and Reconciliation Themes
Lists approximately 150 works.