Historical and Contemporary Realities: Movement Towards Reconciliation: The Traditional and Cultural Significance of the Lands Encompassing the District of Greater Sudbury and Area
Histories, Bodies, Stories, Hungers: The Colonial Origins of Diabetes as a Health Disparity among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
History and the Imagination: Gerald Vizenor's The People Named the Chippewa
History and the Imagination: Gerald Vizenor's "The People Named the Chippewa"
History of the Ojibway Nation
Honouring: Project of Heart / Speaking to Memory
Hopes and Dreams
The Horrors of St. Anne's
How Squire Coyote Brought Fire to the Cahrocs
"I Defy Analysis": A Conversation with Gerald Vizenor
I Lost My Talk
Image-based Storytelling: A Visual Narrative of My Family’s Story
A series of paintings and text written by the artist narrate pieces of her father’s story, and through the narrative offer a comparison of Dene and Western world-views and understandings of well-being. Journal has reversed the text of the third and fourth paintings.
The Importance of Native Oratory
“In search of our better selves”: Totem Transfer Narratives and Indigenous Futurities
In Search of Wakȟáŋ
In the Camp of Big Bear: Narrative Representations of the Frog Lake Uprising, 1885
Indi'n Humor: Bicultural Play in Native America
The Indian Captivity Narrative, 1550-1900
Indian Education
The Indian Half-Breed in Turn-of-the-Century Short Fiction
Indian Legends: Nanabush, the Ojibbeway Saviour. Moosh-Kuh-Ung, or, The Flood
Indian Literature and Critical Responsibility
Indigenous and Other Australians Since 1901: A Conversation between Professor Tim Rowse and Dr Miranda Johnson
Indigenous Literature and the Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission
English Thesis (PhD) -- University of Alberta, 2018.
Indigenous Perspectives: Stories from Indigenous Public Servants
Indigenous Rememberings and Forgettings: Sixteenth-Century Nahua Letters and Petitions to the Spanish Crown
Indigenous Spirituality in Monkey Beach by Eden Robinson and The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse by Louse Erdrich
Indigenous Voices
Indigitization: Toolkit for the Digitization of First Nations Knowledge
Infinitely Rehearsing Performance and Identity: Africa Solo and The Book of Jessica
Inquiry into Native American Literature and Mythology
"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
Interpreting Pawnee Star Lore: Science or Myth?
Intervening in the Archive: Women-Water Alliances, Narrative Agency, and Reconstructing Indigenous Space in Deborah Miranda’s Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
Introduction: ``To Get There it Had to Walk Through Hell``
Introduction to the Special Issue on Native Literature of The Canadian Journal of Native Studies
Inuit Literature in English: A Chronological Survey
The Inuit Sea Goddess
It's a Family Affair: Stó:lō Experiences in Repatriation
Jimmie Durham: Postmodernist "Savage"
Joy of Apex: Novel Study
Geared toward Grades 5 to 8. Story by Napatsi Folger is about a 10-year-old girl who is dealing with her parents' separation.
Kaupapa Kōrero: A Māori Cultural Approach to Narrative Inquiry
Keetsahnak / Our Missing and Murdered Indigenous Sisters
Kisiskâciwan: Indigenous Voices from Where the River Flows Swiftly
Kiviuq's Journey: Traditional Story Study
Students follow the adventures of an Inuit hunter who is swept out to sea in a storm and must find his way home. Geared toward Grades 10 to 12.
Klee Wyck: The Eye of the Other
Focuses on several facets of Emily Carr's book Klee Wyck: the feminist tone; the effect of modernism on native life; examination of the sketches; the message of disintegration, loss and of hope.