"Being a Half-Breed": Discourses of Race and Cultural
Syncreticity in the Works of Three Metis Women Writers
Beyond the Frame: Tom King’s Narratives of Resistment
Blood (and) Memory
Braving New Worlds: Breed Fictions, Mixedblood Identities
Captivity and Conversion: William Apess, Mary Jemison, and Narratives of Racial Identity
The Construction of Identity in the Life Writing of Native Canadian Women
Cree Narrative Memory
Ethnicity, Indian Identity, and Indian Literature
Excavating the Past: (Re)Writing Continuity in Postcolonial Native American and Jamaican Literature
Fragments That Rune Up the Shores: Pushing the Bear, Coyote Aesthetics, and Recovered History
Indigenous Knowledge and Colonial Power: The Oral Narrative as a Site of Resistance
Indigenous Women and Colonization: Feminism and Aboriginal Women's Activism
Insider and Outsider: An Inari Saami Case
Intercultural Identity in James Welch's Fools Crow and The Indian Lawyer
Interviewing Inuit Elders: Introduction
Introduction [Oral History Forum, Vol. 19-20, 1999-2000]
Keep These Words Until the Stones Melt: Language, Ecology, War and the Written Land in Nineteenth Century United States-Indian Relations
Keepers of the Earth
Language and Identity: An Inuit Perspective
[Last Standing Woman]
The Last Travellers--Gypsies and Lapps on the Way to Modern Society
Lisandro Mendez's "Coyote and Deer": On Reciprocity, Narrative Structures, and Interactions
Maori Voices in the Construction of Indigenous Models of Counselling Theory and Practice
"Métis, c'est ma nation. 'Your own people,' comme on dit": Life Histories from Eva, Evelyn, Priscilla and Jennifer Richard
Mixedblood Messages: Literature, Film, Family, Place
Multivocal Narration and Cultural Negotiation: Dorris's A
Yellow Raft in Blue Water and Cloud Chamber
Northern Resident Helps Bridge the Gap Between Cultures
Brief profile of Mitiarjuk Attasie Nappaaluk, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation in the Heritage and Spirituality category. Mitiarjuk is a Nunavik storyteller and teacher of Inuit culture, history, language and traditional knowledge.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.36.
“Not Exactly Like Heaven”: Theological Imperialism
in The Surrounded
"Only the Drum is Confident": Simulations and Syncretisms in Native American Fiction
"Please Eunice, Don't Be Ignorant": The White Reader as Trickster in Lee Maracle's Fiction
Discusses how Lee Maracle leads her readers to see the realities of a world that is rigid and unequally divided by using "we", "I" and "you" to flip the idea of "others".
The Politics of the Border in Linda Hogan’s
Mean Spirit
Putting the Mother Back in the Language: Maria Campbell's Revisionary Biogeographies and Margaret Laurence's The Diviners
(Re)invention and Contextualization in Contemporary Native American Fiction
(Re)membering the Colonized Body: The Politics of Mixed-Identity in Novels by Mourning Dove and Cather, Silko and Morrison
Realizing the Pedagogy of White Privilege
Reddening The Hearts And Minds: The Frontier Myth And American Identity In Vietnam War Literature
Relocations upon Relocations: Home, Language, and Native American Women's Writings
Reviews
Reviews
Tiffany Midge
Reviews [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, Vol. 7, No.2, Summer 1995]
The Simultaneity of Experience: Multiple Identities and Symbolic Uses of Language Among Mexican-Americans
"The Story of Rehearsal Never Ends": Rehearsal, Performance, Identity in Settler Culture Drama
Survival's Song: Beth Brant and the Power of the Word
"They Never Told Us They Wanted to Help Us": An Oral History of Saint Joseph's Indian Industrial School
Traditional Approach Solves New Problems
Discussion with Margaret Wapass, who intends to utilize traditional holistic counseling in order to address residential school syndrome, intergenerational impacts, crime prevention, corrections services and addictions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.