Gigawaabaa-bye-bye
"God of the Whiteman! God of the Indian! God Al-fucking-mighty!": The Residential School Legacy in Two Canadian Plays
Guest Editor's Preface : Studies in American Indian Literatures
"He Was Going Along": Motion in the Novels of James Welch
The Hero's Journey in Jame's Welch's Fools Crow and Traditional Pikuni Sacred Geography
Honoring LaVonne Ruoff
Hope at Sea: Possible Ecologies in Oceanic Literature
"'How Should I Eat These?' With Your Mouth, Asshole": First Nations Women's Literature Responds to Colonial Discourse
"I Became a Woman Through My Words": The Indigenous Feminist Writing of Lee Maracle and Beth Brant
“I Have Seen the Future and I Won’t Go”: The Comic Vision of Craig Strete’s Science Fiction Stories
“I Was Born Asking”: An Interview with Emma Larocque
Imagining Sovereignty: Self-Determination in American Indian Law and Literature
In Praise of Old Friendships
Indigeneity and Transnationality?
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.
Indigenous Cities: Urban Indian Fiction and the Histories of Relocation
Inhabiting Indianness: Sherman Alexie's Indian Killer and the Phenomenology of White Sincerity
Interview With James Welch (1940-2003): November 17, 2001
An Interview With Paul Goble
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.
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
Kim Scott's Benang and the Removal of Identity in Australian Aboriginal Literature
Law, Literature, and Leslie Marmon Silko: Competing Narratives of Water
Life after Death in Poverty: David Treuer's Little
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.
Literature Borealis: Circumpolar Themes in the Work of Nils-Aslak Valkeapää
The Literature of Indian Oklahoma: A Brief History
"The Literature of This Nation": LaVonne Ruoff and the Redefinition of American Literary Studies
Marvin Francis: An Inventory of His Papers at the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections
A MELUS Interview: Joy Harjo
Mountain Islands From Sitka Shores
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.
The Multi-Missionary Eleanor Roosevelt of American Indian Literatures
N. Scott Momaday: A Man of Words
Narrating History and Myth: Trickster Discourse in Thomas King's The One About Coyote Going West
Narrative Possession in Stephen Graham Jones's Ledfeather
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.