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Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity
American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1, 1988, pp. 1-37
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2, no.4]
Contemporary Native American Autobiography: N. Scott Momaday's The Way to Rainy Mountain
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.
D'Arcy McNickle: An Annotated Bibliography of His Published Articles and Book Reviews in a Biographical Context
Detecting Colonialism: Detective Fiction in Native American and Sardinian Literatures
Earthboy's Return--James Welch's Act of Recovery in Winter in the Blood
Elaine Goodale Eastman and the Failure of the Feminist Protestant Ethic
"He Was Going Along": Motion in the Novels of James Welch
Healing via the Sunwise Cycle in Silko's "Ceremony"
Jeannette Armstrong & The Colonial Legacy
Discussion on the effects of colonization, the solutions to a path of healing and the changes required to alter the future.
Laguna Symbolic Geography and Silko's "Ceremony"
Lines and Circles: The "Rez" Plays of Tomson Highway
Discussion of two plays, The Rez Sisters and Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing, which expose the problems, challenges and injustices that Aboriginal people face.
The Literature of Indian Oklahoma: A Brief History
A MELUS Interview: Joy Harjo
Momaday, Welch, and Silko: Expressing the Feminine Principle through Male Alienation
Mourning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography
Mourning Dove's Canadian Recovery Years, 1917-1919
Discusses the period in Christine Quintasket's life when her health improved and she regained the strength to pursue her ambitions as a writer.
Mourning Dove's Voice in Cogewea
N. Scott Momaday: A Man of Words
Pauline Johnson
A Poet in the Wild
The Politics of Representation: Some Native Canadian Women Writers
Discussion on reviving traditional storytelling techniques, in new forms, and challenging the Canadian literary tradition.