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8th Fire Guide for Educators
8th Fire: Indigenous in the City
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Economies Project: Literature Review
Aboriginal Arts Development Awards: A Program Assessment
An Aboriginal Camp near Yorkton, SK
Aboriginal Family by Teepee
A photograph of a Metis? man with a Cree? woman and her child standing outside a teepee. Picture possibly taken by George Mann family who worked with Cree people in Onion Lake, Saddle Lake and Hobbema reserves between 1883 and 1916. Members of the family were known to continue to visit these areas well into the 1920s.
Aboriginal Family Outside Teepee
Aboriginal Peoples in Canadian Cities: Transformations and Continuities
Aboriginal stone pickers, Davidson
Aboriginal stone pickers, Davidson
Aboriginal Theatre
Aboriginal Women’s Access to Justice Video Project Report
Background and information to accompany the videos: Don't Need Saving: Aboriginal Women and Access to Justice and A Message to You from the Hearts of Aboriginal Women.
Aboriginal Women's Visions of Breast Cancer Survivorship: Intersections of Race(ism)/Class/Gender and "...Diversity as We Define It"
Act Locally, Sell Globally: Inuit Media and the Global
Cultural Economy
Acts of Empathic Imagination: Contemporary Native American Artists and Writers as Healers
Adolphus Ross and William Bird
After the Apology: Reframing Violence and Suffering in First Australians, Australia, and Samson and Delilah
Agecoutay Captures and Shares The World's Stories
Ahenakew, David
Historical note:
David Ahenakew (born July 28, 1933) is a Canadian First Nations politician, and former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. Ahenakew is a controversial public figure in Canada due to anti-semetic comments regarding World War 2 and the Holocaust.Alanis Obomsawin
Alfred Durocher #1
All Indians Do Not Live in Teepees (Or Casinos)
Ancient Households of the Americas: Conceptualizing What Households Do
Argentina: The Mapunky and the Mapuheavy: Voices from the Margins
Art and Wellness: The Importance of Art for Aboriginal Peoples' Health and Healing
The Art of Giving: Cooperation, Reciprocity and Household Economic Strategies Among Soapstone Carvers in Qimmiurt (Lake Harbour), NWT
Art, Social Power, and Native Peoples: An Analysis of Representations
Artist Patrick Ross
Artistic Displacements: An Interview with Edgar Heap of Birds
Arts of Engagement: Taking Aesthetic Action in and beyond the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Arts Project Tackles Regina's Notorious North End Social Problems
As the Rez Turns: Anomalies Within and Beyond the Boundaries of a Pueblo Community
Augusta
B.C. First Nations Studies [Textbook]
B.W. Currie and Unidentified Inuk Man Outside Igloo
Baby in Hammock, Split Lake, MB.
Ballads Not Bullets: Tom Jackson
Bazaar Artists: Project Have Hope — Investing in Women and the Future of Uganda
Beading Offers Women Chance to Change Lives
Beadwork: First People's Beading History and Techniques: Teacher's Guide
Developed for use with book by artist Christi Belcourt in accordance with of the Ontario Adult Literacy Curriculum Framework.
[BeauDril Worker at Work]
BeauDril Worker At Work
[Bennie Klain]
"Best Wishes From Canada, Indian Types"
Beyond Invisibility: A REDress Collaboration to Raise Awareness of the Crisis of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women
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.