American Histories, Native American Narratives
American Indian Literature Appropriate for Secondary and Middle-Level Students
American Indian Women's Poetry: Strategies of Rage and Hope
Appropriation of Aboriginal Oral Traditions
Arctic Dreams & Nightmares
An Art of Saying: Joy Harjo's Poetry and the Survival of Storytelling
Auntie Angie's Cheyenne Affair
Authored Animals Creature Tropes in Native American Fiction
The Autobiographings of Mourning Dove
Discusses importance of three books: Cogewea the Half-Blood, Coyotes Stories, and Morning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography.
aztecs nd sun
The Baffin Writer's Project
Looks at a project that encourages Inuit people to begin writing their stories and, in this way, pass on Inuit culture and language to the next generation.
The Bear-Walker & Other Stories
"Beatty, Reginald Bird-Diary & Correspondence"
"Being a Half-Breed": Discourses of Race and Cultural
Syncreticity in the Works of Three Metis Women Writers
"The Belly of This Story": Storytelling and Symbolic Birth
in Native American Fiction
Between Heaven and Earth: The Art of Alex Jacobs
Between Two Points : Drinking From a Hose
Between Voice and Text: Bicultural Negotiation in the Contemporary Native American Novel
Beyond the Nineteenth Century: Thomas King's Decolonization of the Literary Image of the Native
Bigtime (at Chaw’se Sowwa)
The Bingocentric Worlds of Michel Tremblay and Tomson Highway: Les Belles-Soeurs vs. The Rez Sisters
Looks at the parallels between two plays in terms of the subject matter and the dramatic techniques used. For example, bingo, is used as a symbol and illustration of women's consumerism and of the spiritual emptiness in their lives.
Black Elk and Flaming Rainbow: Personal Memories of the Lakota Holy Man and John Neihardt
Blood Thirsty Savages
The Book of Jessica: The Healing Circle of a Woman's Autobiography
Discusses a play, The Book of Jessica, that illustrates the struggle women have in understanding what being "a woman" means, including across the barriers of race, culture, privilege and age.
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Books in Review
Books in Review
Books in Review
Books to Avoid
Borderland Voices in Contemporary Native American Poetry
Briefly Noted [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.3]
Campaigning in the North West Territories
The Care-Takers: The Re-Emergence of the Saanich Indian Map
Catholic Nuns and Ojibwa Shamans: Pauline and Fleur in Loise Erdrich's Tracks
Cattle Camp, Murrie Drovers and Their Stories ; Auntie Rita
Chanco
Chiwid
A Choctaw Odyssey: The Life of Lesa Phillip Roberts
Co-Editor's Note : Editor's Note
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.2]
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.3]
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2, no.4]
The Communicative Difficulties of Integrating Traditional Environmental Knowledge Through Wildlife and Resource Co-Management
Contemporary Native Women's Voices in Literature
Looks at one way to cross the cultural boundary in Aboriginal literature by examining the purpose of author Maria Campbell, in Halfbreed, Beatrice Culleton, in In Search of April Raintree, and Lee Maracle, in I Am Woman.