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Agnes Mayo Moore Oral History Project River Trip 2000
"All My Relatives Are Noble": Recovering the Feminine in Ella Cara Deloria's Waterlily
Allegations, Secrets, and Silence: Perspectives on the Controversy of Roberta Sykes and the Snake Dreaming Series
As It Was In The Beginning
Assuming Indian Voices: Western Women Writers, Alice Marriott, Muriel Wright, and Angie Debo
The “Authentic Indian”: Sarah Winnemucca's Resistance to Colonial Constructions of Indianness
The Autobiographings of Mourning Dove
Discusses importance of three books: Cogewea the Half-Blood, Coyotes Stories, and Morning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography.
Between Storytelling and Life Writing: Reading Delphine Red Shirt and Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve
Blankets of Shame: Emotional Representation in Maria Campbell’s Half-breed
The Blue Jay’s Dance: A Birth Year.
[Book Reviews]
Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity
American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1, 1988, pp. 1-37
Cherokee Sister: The Collected Writings of Catharine Brown, 1818-1823
Christine Quintasket
Chronicles the life and works of the novelist and advocate of Aboriginal land rights.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Coming to Voice: Native American Literature and Feminist Theory
Consuming Passions: Reconciliation in Women's Intellectual Memoir
Contemporary Native Women's Voices in Literature
Looks at one way to cross the cultural boundary in Aboriginal literature by examining the purpose of author Maria Campbell, in Halfbreed, Beatrice Culleton, in In Search of April Raintree, and Lee Maracle, in I Am Woman.
Coping With Trauma: Self-Portrayal in Linda Hogan's Memoir
Critical Compassion: The Reader as Witness in Maria Campbell's Halfbreed
"[D]ifferent Sides of the Picture": Four Women's Views of Canada (1816-1838)
Decolonizing Gender: Indigenous Feminism and Native American Literature
Dis/engagement: Zitkala-Ŝa's Letters to Carlos Montezuma, 1901-1902
Domesticating the Frontier: Representations of Native Americans in U.S. Women's Prose, 1820-1885
E. Pauline Johnson: Mohawk Indian
E. Pauline Johnson, Tekahionwake: Collected Poems and Selected Prose
"The Ears of the Palefaces Could Not Hear Me": Languages of Self-Representation in Zitkala-Sa's Autobiographical Essays>
[Eden Robinson (August 20, 2012)]
Female Archetypes in Select Canadian Writing
Finding a Place in Nation: Autobiography and Embodiment
Finding My Talk: How 14 Canadian Native Women Reclaimed Their Lives After Residential School
The Good Red Road: Journeys of Homecoming in Native Women's Writing
Gray Wolf's Daughter
Hybrid Imaginings
"I Became a Woman Through My Words": The Indigenous Feminist Writing of Lee Maracle and Beth Brant
In the Belly of a Laughing God: Humour and Irony in Native Women's Poetry
In the Belly of This Story: The Role of Fantasy in Four American Women's Novels of the 1980s
Indigenous Memory and Imagination: Thinking Beyond the Nation
Intervening in the Archive: Women-Water Alliances, Narrative Agency, and Reconstructing Indigenous Space in Deborah Miranda’s Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
Iskwekwak--Kah' Ki Yaw Ni Wahkomakanak: Neither Indian Princesses Nor Squaw Drudges
Justice for Indians and Women: The Protest Fiction of Alice Callahan and Pauline Johnson
Klee Wyck: The Eye of the Other
Focuses on several facets of Emily Carr's book Klee Wyck: the feminist tone; the effect of modernism on native life; examination of the sketches; the message of disintegration, loss and of hope.
The Late Pauline Johnson - Photograph. - 15 March 1913.
Historical note: