Search
Always an Adventure: An Autobiography
Amerindian Elements in the Poetry of Ernesto Cardenal
Arriving at a Common Ground: John Reed Swanton and American Anthropology
Artists as Shamans: Historical Review and Recent Theoretical Model
Artists with Their Work - Ruth Cuthand. - Program. - 1990.
Historical note:
Ruth Cuthand was born in Prince Albert, SK in 1954 and grew up near the Blood Reserve in Alberta. Her heritage is Plains Cree and Scots/Irish. Her Aboriginal culture and memories of her childhood experiences are often the inspiration for her art-making practice.Autobiographic Narrative in the Drawings of Napachie and Annie Pootoogook
The Autoethnography of William Whipple Warren
Between Two Worlds
Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Life of Henry Bird Steinhauer
[Big Think Interview With Sherman Alexie]
Blackbird's Song: Andrew J. Blackbird and the Odawa People
Book Reviews
[Book Reviews]
Book Reviews
Books in Review
Books in Review
Braiding Histories: Learning From Aboriginal Peoples' Experiences and Perspectives
Brian Honyouti: Send in the Clowns
Bridging Two Peoples: Chief Peter E. Jones, 1843-1909
Broken Alliance: Debating Six Nations' Land Claims in 1822
A Choctaw Odyssey: The Life of Lesa Phillip Roberts
Clyde Warrior's "Red Power": A Fresh Air of New Indian Idealism
Collectors of Navajo Rugs: An Analysis and Comparison of the Marjorie Merriweather Post and Washington Matthews Smithsonian Collection
Coming Home Through Grandmother Rosa's Story: Basil Johnston's Crazy Dave
Community Leader Died Trying to Protect His Wife
Comments on the violent death of Andrew Mixemong, a well-loved friendship centre president.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.38.
Connecticut River Valley Awakening
Contemporary Canadian Aboriginal Art: Storyworking in the Public Sphere
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.
Conversations with Remarkable Native Americans
Countering Imperial Justice: The Implications of a Cree Response to Crime
D'Arcy McNickle: An Annotated Bibliography of His Published Articles and Book Reviews in a Biographical Context
Death of a Liberator
Did I Hear That Right? One Anthropologist's Reaction to Colleague's Testimony in a Court Case Involving Alaska Native Aboriginal Hunting and Fishing Rights on the Outer Continental Shelf
Diplomatic Aesthetics: Globalization and Contemporary Native Art
Doorways to Home: Indigenous/Newcomer Neighbourhood Dialogues
[Eden Robinson (August 20, 2012)]
Edward S. Curtis, Above the Medicine Line: Portraits of Aboriginal Life in the Canadian West
Elder Murdena Marshall - Honoured
Excerpts from Olive's Letters to Her Sister Alice (1942-1947)
Letters from historian Olive Patricia Dickason during her time spent at Notre Dame College in Wilcox, Saskatchewan.
Father's Day: The Missing Conversation
Female Archetypes in Select Canadian Writing
Field Man: Life as a Desert Archaeologist
[Following Nimishoomis: The Trout Lake History of Dedibaayaanimanook Sarah Keesick Olsen]
From "Orphan" to "Settler": The Making of the Reverend Henry Budd
Discusses the early life of Budd (sakachuwescum), who was of Cree-HBC employee parentage and became the first ordained Indigenous missionary in British North-West America.
Sample chapter from Prophetic Identities: Indigenous Missionaries on British Colonial Frontiers, 1850-75.