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A Balancing Act: The Canonization of Tomson Highway
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Examines plays both published and unpublished.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.
Book Review
Crossroads: A Conversation with Sherman Alexie
A Curated Selection of Martha Tickie's Work
Decolonizing Curricular Resources: A Bibliography for Teaching and Learning Native American and Indigenous Studies in New England
Resources categorized by grade level and subject matter.
Eli Nasogaluak: "I Try to Produce Work That Shows a lot of Action and Strength"
An Essential Personal Journey Through Iroquois Myths, Legends, Icons and History
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.
Girl Who Loved Her Horses: A One-Act Play for Young Audiences
The Good Red Road: Journeys of Homecoming in Native Women's Writing
Imagination, Conversation, and Trickster Discourse: Negotiating an Approach to Native American Literary Culture
Indigenous Women and Street Gangs: Survivance Narratives
Interpreting Our Own: Native Peoples Redefining Museum Education
Interpretive Guide and Hands-on Activites: The Alberta Foundation for the Arts Travelling Exhibition Program: ᐊᐧᐃᐧᓯᐦᒋᑲᐣ = Wawisihcikan = Adornment
Lesson plans for elementary and secondary school students for exhibition featuring works by Elaine Alexie, Erik Lee, and Carmen Miller. Topics include First Nations groups of central Alberta and the Boreal forest, brief survey of Indigenous art in the twentieth century, abstract art, and First Nations traditional art forms and materials.
Interview with Doreen Jensen
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"
Life Histories: A Metis Woman and Breast Cancer Survivor
Like "Reeds Through the Ribs of a Basket": Native Women Weaving Stories
Lucy Meeko: "Only the mind can put something into motion"
Monkey Beach
Mourning Dove and Mixed Blood: Cultural and Historical Pressures on Aesthetic Choice and Authorial Identity
Native American Indian Art
Nick Sikkuark: "I Do Love the Carvings Themselves"
Out of the Sea: Sculpture and Graphics in the Inuit Art Collection
The Place of Falling Water
Ramona's Baskets: Romance and Reality
Rock and Roll, Redskins, and Blues in Sherman Alexie’s Work
Rough Knowledge and Radical Understanding: Sacred Silence in American Indian Literatures
Shirley Moorhouse: "Getting Paid for Something You Love is Pleasure on Pleasure"
Simon Tookoome: "Paper is Most Frustrating"
The Space between Us: Exploring Colonization and Injustice through Red: A Haida Manga
Stanley Felix: "What we Need Right Away is Assistance to get Better Stone"
Storytellers and Their Listener-Readers in Silko's "Storytelling" and Storyteller
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.