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
Producing the "Others": The Development of Kraevedenie in Chukotka
Examines kraevedcheskii (local history) museums and how they reflect the Indigenous population.
Protect and Promote Your Culture: A Practical Guide to Intellectual Property for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities
Pushing the Needle: Collections Based Museum and Source Community Collaborations
Raise a Flag: Works from the Indigenous Art Collection (2000-2015): Education Guide
(Re)Inscription: Reclaiming O'odham Identities through Tattoos
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
Reclaiming Territories through Indigenous Performance
Recognition on Settler Terms: The Canadian Handicrafts Guild
and First Nations Craft from 1900 to 1967
Reconciliation Pole
Red: The Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship
Reflections on Rethink150: Indigenous Truth
Remote Avant-Garde: Aboriginal Art under Occupation
Residential Schools and "Reconciliation" in the Media Art of Skeena Reece and Lisa Jackson
A Resource for the Edward S. Curtis Collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario
A Response to the Japanese Printmakers
Ribbonwork of the Great Lakes Indians: The Material of Acculturation
Ritual and Myth: Native American Culture and Abstract Expressionism
The Road Forward
Musical documentary traces Indigenous rights activism from the founding of the Indian of Brotherhood of B.C. in the 1930s to the present day. Duration: 1:41:00.
Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World
Documentary looks at the little-known story of Indigenous influences on and contributions to the evolution of contemporary rock and blues music. Artists profiled include Charley Patton, Mildred Bailey, Link Wray, Jesse Ed Davis, Stevie Salas, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Robbie Robertson, Randy Castillo, Jimi Hendrix, and Taboo.
Salish Indian Art from the J.R. Simplot Collection - Poster. - 13 June - 17 September 1986.
Saskatchewan History - The First Peoples: Plains First Nations
Scenes from the Fringe: Gendered Violence and the Geographies of Indigenous Feminism
Screen Text and Institutional Context: Indigenous Film Production and Academic Research Institutions
Seneca Art and Culture Center at Ganondagan State Historic Site
The Sense of a Better Ending: Legal Pluralism and Performative Jurisprudence in Atanarjuat the Fast Runner
Settler Colonial Ways of Seeing: Documentary Governance of Indigenous Life in Canada and Its Disruption
Sewing in Arviat: Inuit Women’s Work through Stories and Parkas
Shaping Indigenous Identity: The Power of Music
Indigenous Studies Thesis (MPhil) -- UiT Arctic University of Norway, 2017.
Showing and Telling the Story of Nikis (My Little House): An Arts-Based Autoethnographic Journey of a Cree Adult Educator
Shuvinai Ashoona: Life & Work
The Social Life of Sound: Urban Indigenous Youth, Hip Hop and Hardcore
Southern Cheyenne Style Moccasins: Bob Gurney's Moccasins Revisited
The Space between Us: Exploring Colonization and Injustice through Red: A Haida Manga
Standing Strong Task Force Report & Recommendations: Acknowledging the Past, Learning form the Present, Looking to the Future
Staying in Place: Plains Metis Borderland Communities, 1885-1930
Stepping Out of the Shadows of Colonialism to the Beat of the Drum: The Meaning of Music for Five First Nations Children with Autism in British Columbia
Stranger than Fiction: The Creation of Two Short Theatre of the Real Plays about Closed Stranger Adoption in Aotearoa
Stress, Emotions, and Motivational States Among Traditional Dancers in New Zealand and Japan
Strong Hearts, Wounded Souls Revisited: The Research, the Findings, and Some Observations of Recent Native Veteran Readjustment
Survivance, Signs, and Media Art Histories: New Temporalities and Productive Tensions in Dana Claxton’s Made To Be Ready: A Review Essay
Surviving the War by Singing the Blues: The Contemporary Ethos of American Indian Political Poetry
Susan Point: Spindle Whorl: Teacher's Study Guide
Although designed to accompany class visit to an exhibition of the Musqueam artist's work, can be used alone.
Teacher Resource Guide for Grades 9-12: Learn About Community & Land Stewardship through the Art of Pitseolak Ashoona
Pitseolak Ashoona is a renowned Inuk artist from Nunavut.
Designed to complement the book Pitseolak Ashoona: Life and Work.
Teacher Resource Guide for Grades 9-12: Learn about Land & Indigenous Worldviews through the Art of Norval Morrisseau
Includes biography, discussion of artist's style and techniques learning activities, and image file. Designed to complement Norval Morrisseau: Life and Work by Carmen Robertson.
Teaching with and about the Ivory Art from Chukotka and the Bering Strait
Examines the contemporary practices of craving and engraving walrus ivory.