Indigenous New Media Arts: Narrative Threads and Future Imaginaries
Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada: First Nations
Inspiration from Museum Collections: An Exhibit as a Case Study in Building Relationships between Museums and Indigenous Artists
International Indigenous Design Charter: Protocols for Sharing Indigenous Knowledge in Professional Design Practice
Introduction
Lakota Performers in Europe: Their Culture and the Artifacts They Left Behind
Living in a (Schrödinger’s) Box: Jimmie Durham’s Strategic Use of Ambiguity
Make Yourself (Un)Comfortable: Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun at the Museum
The Mechanics of Survivance in Indigenously-Directed Video-Games: Invaders and Never Alone
Minogondaagan: The Good Voice
Museums Decolonizing with Holistic Intentionality: Curatorial and Descendant Community Processes
Native Narratives, Mystery Writing, and the Osage Oil Murders: Examining Mean Spirit and The Osage Rose
Never Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
Niitsitapiisini: Our Way of Life: The Story of the Blackfoot People
Notes on Becoming a Comrade: Indigenous Women, Leadership, and Movement(s) for Decolonization
Author uses her own experiences as non-Indigenous woman of color to explore the challenges in becoming an ally with Indigenous communities fight in their fight for decolonization.
Nuuk, Greenland: Site, Situation, and “The Law of the Primate City”
Objets ethnographiques associés aux Inuit du Labrador exhibés en Europe en 1880
On-Screen Protocols & Pathways: A Media Production Guide to Working with First Nations, Métis and Inuit Communities, Cultures, Concepts and Stories
Other Picture Boards in Van Diemen’s Land: The Recovery of Lost Illustrations Of Frontier Violence and Relationships
Our War Paint Is Writers' Ink: Anishinaabe Literary Transnationalism
Outsourcing Reconciliation: The Government of Canada's #IndigenousReads Campaign and the Appropriation of Indigenous Intellectual Labor
Pig Girl: An Indigenous Woman’s Perspective Through “Scriptive Things”
Playing Indian, between Idealization and Vilification: Seems You Have to Play Indian to be Indian
Plundered Skulls and Stolen Spirits: Inside the Fight to Reclaim Native America's Culture
Pocahontas Looks Back and Then Looks Elsewhere: The Entangled Gaze in Contemporary Indigenous Art
Policing Resource Extraction and Human Rights in The Land of the Dead
Pop Culture Confronts British Columbia's Colonial History
Presentation of Self, Culture, and Other in Public Podium Talk: Constructing Indigenous/non-Indigenous Relations in Grassroots Popular Education
Protocols for Using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts
Pushing the Needle: Collections Based Museum and Source Community Collaborations
Qaujimanira: Inuit Art as Autoethnography
In this conference extract the author examines the history of Inuit art noting the ongoing self-representation in the work and argues that this allows for a high level of agency in Inuit art.
Racism, Popular Culture, and the Everyday Rosebud Reservation
“Rather Unusual Stuff”: Nathan Jackson's Early Advent of a Tlingit Modern
"Re-Creation Stories": Re-Presencing, Re-Embodiment, and Repatriation Practices in Leanne Betasamosake Simpson's "How to Steal a Canoe"
Re/making the 'Meeting Place' - Transforming Toronto's Public Spaces Through Creative Placemaking, Indigenous Story And Planning
Reading for Reconciliation? Indigenous Literatures in a Post-TRC Canada
Recognition on Settler Terms: The Canadian Handicrafts Guild
and First Nations Craft from 1900 to 1967
Reconciliation: Facilitating Ethical Space between Indigenous Women and Girls of a Drum Circle and White, Settler Men of a Police Chorus
Rethinking Image and Narrative at the Heart of Empire: Notes from Indigenous London
Presenter discusses how there has been a record of an Indigenous travelers to London dating as far back as 1502, which debunks the common attitude that Indigenous peoples and urbanity and modernity are mutually exclusive.
Duration: 48:36
Settler City Limits: Indigenous Resrugence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie West
Speaking Our Truth: A Journey of Reconciliation: Teachers' Resource Guide
For use with the book by Monique Gray Smith. Includes summary, essential questions, key concepts, vocabulary and learning activities for each chapter of book. Recommended for ages 9-13.