Bridging Storytelling Traditions with Digital Technology
[Bringing Them Home: Oral History Interviews]
Bud Pocha Interview
'Building Alternatives to the Colonial Relationship'
Brief interview with a University of British Columbia professor regarding the Idle No More movement and the direction it will be taking.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Building on Conceptual Interpretations of Aboriginal Literacy in Anishinaabe Research: A Turtle Shaker Model
Bungling Host, Benevolent Host: Louis Simpson's "Deer and Coyote"
"But It's Our Story. Read It.": Stories My Grandfather Told Me and Writing for Continuance
Examines Indigenous writers' ethical, methodological, and theoretical responsibilities for transcribing, and preserving oral history.
The Buz'Gem Blues
Campaigning in the North West Territories
Carriers of Water: Aboriginal Women's Experiences, Relationships, and Reflections
Cathy Smith Exhibition
Cell Traffic: New and Selected Poems
[Centering Anishinaabeg Studies: Understanding the World Through Stories]
Centering Anishinaabeg Studies: Understanding the World through Stories
Chair of Tears
Challenging Tradition, Challenging Pop Art: Sonny Assu
Change Can Happen at Any Age
Changing Core Beliefs - The Goose Who Believes
Changing Is Not Vanishing: A Collection of American Indian Poetry to 1930 edited by Robert Dale Parker
Chasing Shakespeare
Chicago American Indian Oral History Pilot Project: Transcript Description and Index
Interviewees were: Leroy Wesaw, Pat Wesaw, Rose Maney, Amy Lester Skendandore, Floria Forcia, Clarise Krause, Phyllis Fastwolf, Peggy DesJarlait, Rosebud Yellow Robe, Willard LaMere, Mae Chevalier, Marlene Straus, Ada Powers, Roselle Mars, Claire Young, Inez Running Bear Dennison, Susan Powers, Cornelia Penn, Vince Catches, Ann Lim, Dan Battise, Margaret Redcloud, Joe White, and Joan Takahara.
[Children's Author Peter Eyvindson About Kookum's Red Shoes]
Clarence Joseph Trotchie Interview
The Clash of Two Cultures in Ceremony
Comforting Discomfort: A Review of Warrior Women: Remaking Postsecondary Places Through Relational Narrative Inquiry
Coming Full Circle: Looking to Grandmother Moon
Communal Buffalo Hunting among the Plains Indians: An Ethnographic and Historic Review
Community-Based Archaeology: Research With, By, and For Indigenous and Local Communities
Community-Based Mental Health Initiatives in a First Nations Health Centre: Reflections of a Transdisciplinary Team
Comparative Indigeneities of the Américas: Towards a Hemispheric Approach
Consistency in the Reporting of Sensitive Behaviors by Adolescent American Indian Women: A Comparison of Interviewing Methods
Conspiracy of Silence: Queensland's Frontier Killing-Times
Constitutional Reform at the White Earth Nation
La Construction des Domaines Temporel et Spirituel dans la Poésie de Louis Riel
The Construction of Sami Identity, Health, and Old Age in Policy Documents and Life Stories: A Discourse Analysis and a Narrative Study
Contact, Mediation, and Myth in Early Latin American Literatures
Conveying Traditional Indigenous Culture: From Ethnographic Film to Community-Based Storytelling
Copy of Official Reports (116H) from Major General Middleton, C.B. (Commanding North-West Field Force), Concerning the Engagements at Fish Creek, on the 24th April, 1885, Poundmaker's Camp (Near Cree's Reserve) 2nd May, 1885, Batoche, 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th May, 1885
[Corpse Whale]
"Counting Coup" on Children's Literature About American Indians: Louise Erdrich's Historical Fiction
Cowboys and Indians: The Image of the Indian in American Literature
A Coyote Columbus Story
Humorous short story that tells the story of Columbus from an Indigenous point of view.
Excerpt from One Good Story, That One by Thomas King.