Search
"Beyond All Age": Indigenous Water Rights in Linda Hogan's Fiction
Changemakers Lesson Plans: Remote Learning
Lesson plans focus on Native Americans who are fighting invisibility and creating change through their work, contributions from the past, and current actions which will impact the future.
Concepts of Cabralism: A Review
Earth Beings: Ecologies of Practice Across Andean Worlds
Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. Volume One: Summary "Honouring the Truth, Reconciling for the Future"
Giving Back
Imagining Sovereignty: Self-Determination in American Indian Law and Literature
In Conversation: [Romeo Saganash]
(Indigenous) Place and Time as Formal Strategy Healing Immanent Crisis in the Dystopias of Eden Robinson and Richard Van Camp
Indigenous Writers and Christianity in Canada, The US, and Peru: Select Case Studies From Across the Hemisphere
Jeannette Armstrong's Slash and the Indigenous Reinvention of Young Adult Literature
The Land We Are: Artists and Writers Unsettle the Politics of Reconciliation and The Poetics of Land and Identity Among British Columbia Indigenous Peoples
Laura Cornelius Kellogg: Our Democracy and the American Indian and Other Works
Learning to Walk Again: Indigenous Female "Healing Activism" in Cherie Dimaline's Short Story "Room 414" and Contemporary Activist Movements
Letter to a Just-Starting-Out Indian Writer—and Maybe to Myself
Living in Indigenous Sovereignty: Relational Accountability and the Stories of White Settler Anti-Colonial and Decolonial Activists
Living on the Land: Indigenous Women's Understanding of Place
Magical Resistance: Louise Erdrich’s Use of Magic Realism in Tracks and The Plague of Doves
"Métis": Race, Recognition, and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood
Book review of: "Métis" by Chris Andersen.
Mining and Communities in Northern Canada: History, Politics, and Memory
Native Women and Land: Narratives of Dispossession and Resurgence by Stephanie J. Fitzgerald
Reconciliation: The Children's Version
Reimagining Resistance: Achieving Sovereignty in Indigenous Science Fiction
Rewriting Billie and Asserting Rhetorical Sovereignty in Linda Hogan's Power
Rewriting the Narrative of American History: American Indian Identity and the Process of Recovery
Unit looks at how the authors of Tulsa: From Creek Town to Oil Capital (Angie Debo), Custer Died for Your Sins (Vine Deloria, Jr.), and Winter in the Blood (James Welch) repond to certain crises in Native American history. Designed for 11th grade Advanced Placement Language and Composition classes. Some focus on Oklahoma history.
Setting the Inuit Record Straight on Cultural Prejudice and the Seal Hunt
Sounding Thunder: The Stories of Francis Pegahmagabow
"There are No Two Sides to This Story": A Interview with Elizabeth Cook-Lynn
Unpacking Pimachesowin as a Framing Concept for Indigenous Self-Determination + Eyapachitayak Pimachesowin ta Othastamasoyak Nehithaw tipethimisowin
Discusses how traditional Cree stories and lessons reflect the traditional Cree world view of pimatsiwin (life) and how pimatsiwin itself can better help the understanding Indigenous self-determination.