Indian Record (Vol. XXIV, No. 2, February, 1961)
Indian Record (Vol. XXIV, No. 3, March, 1961)
Indian Record (Vol. XXIV, No. V, May, 1961)
Indian School Tea WA Candy Selling
Indians in Eden: Wabanakis and Rusticators on Maine's Mount Desert Island, 1840s-1920s
Indigenous Cultural Festivals: Evaluating Impact on Community Health and Wellbeing
Indigenous Cultures
Indigenous Hip-Hop: Overcoming Marginality, Encountering Constraints
Indigenous (Re)Memory and Resistance: Video Works By Dana Claxton
Indigenous Women and Feminism: Politics, Activism, Culture
Indigenous Women in Film and Video: Three Generations of Storytellers and an Interview with Emerging Filmmaker Sally Kewayosh
Indigenous Women's Voices: 20 Years on from Linda Tuhiwai Smith’s Decolonizing Methodologiesk
Indigi-Genuis
Series of 13 videos (each approximately 5 minutes long), geared toward children, explore how Indigenous knowledge and traditions have contributed to the modern world.
Integrating Culturally Sensitive and Best Museum Practices at Two Northern California Museums: The Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology and the Karuk People's Center
Intellectual Property and the Safeguarding of Traditional Cultures: Legal Issues and Practical Options for Museums, Libraries and Archives
Introduction to Blackfoot Quillworking Techniques
Introduction to Determinants of First Nations, Inuit and Métis Peoples Health in Canada
Introduction to Native American/Indigenous Film
Inuit Art and HBC: Lesson Plan
Examines the company's role in fostering the development, promotion, collection and market for Inuit art. Suitable for Grades 4 to 12.
Inuit Art: Markers of Cultural Resilience
Isuma: Inuit Video Art
"It's a Double-Beat Dance": The "Indian Cowboy" in Indigenous Literature, Art, and Film
James Earl Fraser's The End of the Trail: Affect and the Persistence of an Iconic Indian Image
Jimmie Durham and the Carpentry of Ambivalence
John Diefenbaker speaking to reporters in Inuvik
John Diefenbaker with a group of aboriginal peoples
Jossette Morris
Kaahsinnooniksi Ao'toksisawooyawa: Reconnections with Historic Blackfoot Shirts
A Kachina by Any Other Name: Linguistically Contextualizing Native American Collections
Kent Monkman: Life and Work
Kinscapes, Counter Histories, and Nineteenth-Century Tintypes
Examines a photograph of a North-West Mounted Police officer to discuss how Kinscape can be used to discover more interpretive possibilities within the history of the prairies.
Kinsmen Christmas Party at Indian School
A Lakota Shirt
The Land Has Memory: Indigenous Knowledge, Native Landscapes, and the National Museum of the American Indian
Lauralee K. Harris
Learn about Western Canada in the Early 1900s through the Art of C.D. Hoy: Teacher Resource Guide for Grades 7-12
Hoy was a photographer who worked in Quesnel, British Columbia at the start of the twentieth century, when the Fraser River and Cariboo Gold Rushes were taking place, resulting in different cultural groups coming together in one location. Many of his portraits were of Indigenous people living in the area. Designed to complement the online exhibition Through the Lens of C.D. Hoy: How a Chinese Canadian Photographer Memorialized a Community.
A Legal Love Letter to My Children: If These Beads Could Talk
Discusses possible changes to the legal system through Indigenous pedagogies.