Stories, Humor, and Survival in Jim Northrup’s
Walking the Rez Road
Stories of Indian Days: O-ge-mas-es Relates Many Incidents Of Early Life in the West.
Compilation, edited and annotated, mainly consisting of newspaper articles published between 1920 and 1921. Text in bold, footnotes and words in square brackets are the editor's.
Stories of Success in Career Decision-Making: Listening to Indigenous Women
The Story Of Stony Rapids' Boniface Mercredi
Storytellers and Their Listener-Readers in Silko's "Storytelling" and Storyteller
Storytelling and Strength: Voices from Indigenous Theatre in Canada
Storytelling: The Art of Knowledge
Storytelling to Stage: The Growth of Native Theatre in Canada
Discussion on how theatre is an ever-growing extension of storytelling with metaphorical, philosophical, and psychological implications.
Strong Patsaujaarjuk
Structure, Metaphor, and Iconicity in Koyukon Shamanistic Stories
Student Absenteeism: An American Indian/Native American Community Perspective
A Study of the Indian Captivity Narrative as a Popular Literary Genre, ca. 1675-1875
A Study Tour of New Zealand
"Survivance" in Native American Literature: Form and Representation
Talking Back: Six First Nations Women's Stories of Recovery From Childhood Sexual Abuse and Addictions
[Teacher's Guide]: No Time to Say Goodbye by Sylvia Olsen
Stories in book are based on accounts from Indigenous people who attended Kuper Island Residential School. Lesson plan is intended for use with Grades 9 and 10.
Teaching Contemporary American Ethnic Women's Literature: Literary and Extra-Literary Traditions
Teaching on Stolen Ground
Teachings of the Seven Prophets: The Seven Fires
"Tell Me a Woman's Story": The Question of Gender in the Construction of Waheenee, Pretty-Shield, and Papago Woman
Telling about Bear in N. Scott Monaday's The Ancient Child
Tewahia : ton Tipaacimowin -- Two Stories Seen Intertribally: The First Novels of Ruby Slipperjack and Thomas King
"That Is What I Said To Him": American Women's Narratives About Indians, 1879-1934
That the People Might Live: Native American Literatures and Native American Community
"There Was More to It, but That Is All I Can Remember": The Persistence of History and the Autobiography of Delfina Cuero
They Did It Themselves: Reminiscences of Seventy Years
This Distant and Unsurveyed Country: A Woman's Winter at Baffin Island, 1857-1958
Thomas Major Interview
Thoreau and the American Indians
Thunder and the Mosquito
Children's book retells Muckleshoot traditional story.
Thunder Finder
Thunderbird Women: Indigenous Women Reclaiming Autonomy through Stories of Resistance
A Tiwi Lady's Tale
To Hell or Pine Ridge: Legislation, Literature, and The Tran-Atlantic Development of The Reservation
Tootoosis In Film Board Picture
Tough Stories From a Master: [Final Edition]
Toward a New Flagstaff
"Toxic Masculinity", and Gender Entanglement
Tradition and Modernity: The Cultural Work of Marius Barbeau
Traditional - From The Ancestral Times: How The Milky Way Was Created: The Catfish and Crow Myth
Traditional: From the Ancestral Times: The Heroic Fisherman: The Munjurr Myth
Traditional - From the Ancestral Times: The Morning Star: The Barnumbir Myth
Transnational Narratives of Conflict and Empire, the Literary Art of Survivance in the Fiction of Gerald Vizenor
Tribute to Mary TallMountain
Trickster Gone Golfing: Vizenor's Heirs of Columbus and the Chelh-ten-em Development Controversy
The True Spirit and Intent of Treaty 7
Truth and Reconciliation in Postcolonial Hockey Masculinities
Truthful Engagement: Making the Witness Blanket, an Ongoing Process of Reconciliation
Turning Pages: Harold R. Johnson on Peace and Good Order
Writer, activist and former lawyer discusses his book, Peace and Good Order, the effects of incarceration on Indigenous communities, and the way that jailhouse culture fills the cultural void left by residential schools. Duration: 28:08