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The Addressed and the Redressed: Helen Hunt Jackson's Protest Essay and the U.S. Protest Novel Tradition
Agencies and Associations: Women Writing Indian Reform in Nineteenth-Century America
Agent of Change: Trickster in Ojibwa Oral Narratives and in the Works of Louise Erdrich
Alternative (Hi)stories in Stolen Generation and Residential School Narratives: Reading Indigenous Life Writings by Doris Pilkington and Shirley Sterling
Assisting American Indian Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan Cope with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Lessons from Vietnam Veterans and the Writings of Jim Northrup
Before the Country: Native Renaissance, Canadian Mythology
Books in Review
Breaking the Silence: Refiguring Self-Identity in Eden Robinson's Traplines
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.
Claiming Voice, Writing Difference: A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous Women's Life Writing in Australia and North America
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2, no.4]
Competing Land Claims and Racial Hierarchies in the Works of Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Alexander Posey, Helen Hunt Jackson, and Charles Lummis
Conjuring the Colonizer: Alternative Readings of Magic Realism in Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
Contact Zones: Aboriginal and Settler Women in Canada's Colonial Past
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
Decolonizing Pedagogy: Teaching Louise Erdrich's The Bingo Palace
Dimensions of Homing and Displacement in Louise Erdrich's Tracks
Earthboy's Return--James Welch's Act of Recovery in Winter in the Blood
Elucidating Abstract Concepts and Complexity in Louise Erdrich's Love Medicine Through Metaphors of Quilts and Quilt Making
The Emergence and Importance of Queer American Indian Literatures; Or, "Help and Stories" in Thirty Years of SAIL
Festival Recognizes Storytellers
"He Was Going Along": Motion in the Novels of James Welch
Home/ward Bound: The Making of Domestic Relations in Native American Literature and Law, 1886-1936
Honoring the WORD: Classroom Instructors Find That Students Respond Best to Oral Tradition
Honouring Mystery: The Evolutionary Fiction of Wayland Drew
In Defense of Black Robe: A Reply to Ward Churchill
"In Navajo we call him little father" / "In Navajo, we call him 'shidá'í:'" The Emergence and Calibration of Style by Two Navajo Poets
Paper from Texas Linguistics Forum: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Symposium About Language and Society, Austin, 2007. Looks at the natural history of Navajo poetry "style".
In the Days of Our Grandmothers: A Reader in Aboriginal Women's History in Canada
In the Eye of the Beholder: Representations of Australian Aborigines in the Published Works of Colonial Women Writers
Indians, Incorporated
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.
Joe Highway: King of the North
"Let It Be Really New": The Early New Masses and Nativist Discourse
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.
Literacy Festival Stresses Importance of Reading Skills
The Literature of Indian Oklahoma: A Brief History
Living History: A Conversation with Kimberly Blaeser
Loss of Mother/hood: Maternalising Postcolonial Cultural Memory
Louise Bernice Halfe
Magic Weapons: Aboriginal Writers Remaking Community After Residential School
A MELUS Interview: Joy Harjo
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.