Indigenizing the Future: Why We Must Think Spatially in the Twenty-First Century
Looks a the life of Vine Deloria, Jr. and his contributions as an Indigenous thinker and intellectual.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.
Interview With James Welch (1940-2003): November 17, 2001
An Interview With Paul Goble
JudyLee Oliva's The Fire and the Rose and the Modeling of Platial Theories in Native American Dramaturgy
Killing a Culture to Save a Race: Writing and Resisting the Discourse of the Carlisle Indian School
Life after Death in Poverty: David Treuer's Little
Literature Borealis: Circumpolar Themes in the Work of Nils-Aslak Valkeapää
"The Literature of This Nation": LaVonne Ruoff and the Redefinition of American Literary Studies
Literatures, Communities, and Learning: Conversations with Indigenous Writers
Making the Leap: The Poetry of César Vallejo and Ralph Salisbury
Marvin Francis: An Inventory of His Papers at the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections
Mountain Islands From Sitka Shores
The Multi-Missionary Eleanor Roosevelt of American Indian Literatures
N. Scott Momaday: Towards an Indian Identity
Narrating History and Myth: Trickster Discourse in Thomas King's The One About Coyote Going West
The Nation Says Goodbye to a Great Man
Article commemorating the life and accomplishments of Harold Cardinal, author, teacher, lawyer and leader who died June 3, 2005 at the age of 60.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
Native American Spatial Imaginaries and Notions of Erasure in Sherman Alexie’s The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fist Fight in Heaven
Offering, In Return
The Old Lady Trill, The Victory Yell: The Power of Women in Native American Literature
The Other Side of the Story: The Importance of James Welch’s Fools Crow Novel
The People and the Word: Reading Native Nonfiction
"Planting the Seeds of Revolution": An Interview with Poet Esther Belin (Diné)
Poems by Ralph Salisbury
The Poetry of Ralph Salisbury: Syntax as Vehicle for Conveying an Ethical Vision
Postcolonial Imagination and Postcolonial Theory: Indigenous Canadian and Australian Literature Fighting for (Postcolonial) Space
Postindian Survivance and the Trickster Condition of In-Betweenness: Reading Sherman Alexie and Gerald Vizenor in the World of Postmodernism
Poverty, Racism Obstacles Overcome
Focuses on the achievements of Emma LaRocque, a winner of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award in the education category, and describes how she overcame many obstacles to achieve her goals.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.33.
Preface: A Symposium Issue
A Question of Belonging: How Borders Impact Native American Identity
Philosophy Thesis (MA) -- University of Graz, 2020.
Re-Imagining the Contact Zone: Ethnic Theory and the Friction of Clarence Major, Maxine Hong Kingston, Ana Castillo, and Gerald Vizenor
Re-membering Cherokee Justice in Ruth Muskrat Bronson's "The Serpent"
The Real Thing: Identity and Cultural Authenticity are Drama Fodder for William S. Yellow Robe Jr.
Reconstructing Australia’s Shameful Past: The Stolen Generations in Life-Writing, Fiction and Film
Repossession of a Cultural Space in Francophone Native Literature From Quebec
Representing Cherokee Dispossession
A Response: Going along with the Story
"Resting in Peace, Not in Pieces": The Concerns of the Living Dead in Anna Lee Walter's Ghost Singer
Restorative Narrative: Nonfiction and the Resetting of the Grasslands' Future
Review Essay: Bury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese’s
Rhetorical Removals
Rough Ruoff, Pirate Fighter
Securing Our Nation's Roads and Borders or Re-circling the Wagons? Leslie Marmon Silko's Destabilization of "Borders"
Skins: Contemporary Indigenous Writing
Smartberries: Interpreting Erdrich's Love Medicine
Some Words on Study as a Process of Discovery
Speaking of Ralph: An Interview with Ingrid Wendt
Storying Presence: Aboriginal Literature, Critical Strategies, and Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
Survey of Native American Literature
"This survey textbook overviews Native American literature from its origins in poems and creation myths of the continent's hundreds of Native cultures. Texts are organized with major sections on creation myths, fiction, poetry, and nonfiction/memoir."