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A. J. Isbister: Artist of Visions
Aboriginal Participation in Canadian Military Service: Historic and Contemporary Contexts
Aboriginal Peoples: Resources Pertaining to First Nations, Inuit and Métis
Aboriginal Veterans: Stories of Honour and Herosim
Educational resource tells the story of Thomas George Prince.
Aboriginal Women by Degrees: Their Stories of the Journey Towards Academic Achievement
Aboriginality : The Literary Origins of British Columbia, Volume 2
Actor Gives Back Willingly
Brief profile of Cree actor, Carol Greyeyes, artistic director and principal of the Indigenous Theatre School. The article tells how Carol is able to fulfill her life goal of serving her community by bringing together theatre, directing and teaching in Saskatchewan.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.32.
Adam Tanuyak
Allan Houser (Haozous): Santa Fe Compound and Sculpture Garden
Allan Houser Haozous: The Lifetime Work of an American Master
Alter-Native Nations and Narrations: The World of DeWitt Clinton Duncan (Too-Qua-Stee), Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa) and E. Pauline Johnson
Alterity and Metafiction: Poetic Design in the Work of Michael Ondaatje
Always a People: Oral Histories of Contemporary Woodland Indians. Collected by Rita Kohn and W. Lynwood Montell; Foreword by Michael and Linda Shinkle; Preface and Acknowledgements by Rita Kohn and W. Lyn wood Montell; Introduction by R. Dave Edmunds; Portraits by Evelyn J. Ritter; Afterword by Project Consultant Michelle
Mannering.
The American Board's Single Missionary Women in American Indian Missions, 1810-1860
Andrea Menard
Angulalik's Trial
Apache Voices: Their Stories of Survival as Told to Eve Ball
Art: A Way to Cope with Peer Pressure
Artists of Change: Breaking Through the Millennium [Part 1]
Artists of Change: Breaking Through the Millennium [Part 2]
Artists of Change: Breaking Through the Millennium [Part 3]
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.Assuming Indian Voices: Western Women Writers, Alice Marriott, Muriel Wright, and Angie Debo
Autobiographical Writing as a Healing Process: Interview with Alice Masak French
Between Two Worlds
Bill Reid
Black Elk Lives: Conversations With the Black Elk Family
Blending Time: Dramatic Conventions in Yvette Nolan's Annie Mae's Movement
The Blood Runs Like a River through My Dreams: A Memoir by Nasdijj
"Bone of My Bone": Stories of a Black-Cherokee Family, 1790-1866
Book Reviews
[Book Reviews]
Book Reviews
Book Reviews:
Books in Review
Books in Review
Breaking Out of the Lens
Bright Child of Oklahoma: Lotsee Patterson and the Development of America's Tribal Libraries
"By Pen and Platform": The Cultural Work of Pauline Johnson
Call Me Ishmael: Memories of an Inuvialuk Elder
Carving Out a Future: Contemporary Inuit Sculpture of Third Generation Artists From Arviat, Cape Dorset and Clyde River
Challenging Boundaries: Seven Serigraphs by Kwakwaka'wakw Artist Francis Dick
A Choctaw Odyssey: The Life of Lesa Phillip Roberts
Chu Tesh Ha Timiux "HE WORKED HARD ON THE LAND" THE STORY OF JOEYASKA
Clear Goals and a Loving Family Help Youth Succeed
Brief profile of sixteen year old Alika LaFontaine, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award, the Rotary Club Service Award for academics and the Sherwood Co-operative Service Award. All the awards attest to his commitment to academic achievement, career goals, and community service.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.23.