Sigwan
Silencing the Past: Social Memory and the Archaeology of the White Mountain Apache and Mormons in the Forestdale Valley, Arizona
Silent No More
Silko’s Originality in Yellow Woman
Silko’s Vévé and the Web of Differing Versions
"Singing Of What They No Longer Are"?: The Role Of Traditional Inuit Myth and Legend in Contemporary Inuit Narrative and Visual Art
Sixties Scoop: More than Sorry
Skins: Contemporary Indigenous Writing
Smartberries: Interpreting Erdrich's Love Medicine
The Snow
[...So They Understand: Cultural Issues in Oral History]
Some Words on Study as a Process of Discovery
Song to Tsuguntsalala
The Speaking Landscape and Multicultural Memory in Haida Gwaii Fiction: A Bioregional Analysis
Spectacles and Specters of Indigenous Peoples in How Tasty Was My Little Frenchman
Spiderwoman Theater and the Tapestry of Story
Spiral of Fire
“Spirit, Safety, and a Stand-off ”: The Research-Creation Process and Its Roles in Relationality and Reconciliation among Researcher and Indigenous Co-Learners in Saskatchewan, Canada
Spokane Words: An Interview with Sherman Alexie
Spoken from the Heart: Indigenous Radio in Canada
Storied Dialogues: Exchanges of Meaning Between Storyteller and Anthropologist
Stories about Cancer among the Woodland Cree of Northern Saskatchewan
Stories From the Margins: Toward a More Inclusive British Columbia Historiography
Stories of Healing From Native Indian Residential School Abuse
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
Stories That Make the World: Oral Literature of the Indian Peoples of the Inland Northwest as Told by Lawrence Aripa, Tom Yellowtail, and Other Elders
Storying Presence: Aboriginal Literature, Critical Strategies, and Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
Storytelling and Strength: Voices from Indigenous Theatre in Canada
Strategies of Subversion: An Examination of Tomson Highway's The Rez Sisters and its Appropriation of Sonata Form
Strong Women Stories: Native Vision and Community Survival
The Subversion of Identity in D'Arcy McNickle's The Surrounded, Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony, Louise Erdrich's Love Medicine, and Michael Doris' A Yellow Raft in Blue Water
English Thesis (M.A.)--The University of New Brunswick, 1996.
Subversive Humour: Canadian Native Playwrights' Winning Weapon of Resistance
Surviving the Storm
"Taken From her own Mouth": Women's Captivity Narratives and the Uses of Female Authorship
Taku
Talk About the Horse of a Different Color
Humorous article on the issue of appropriate terms for Canada's original inhabitants.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.31.
Taloyoak: Stories of Thunder and Stone: Archaeological and Oral Narrative Project
Project undertaken to preserve Taloyoak history and connect oral stories to the archaeological survey of Netsilik area. Includes links to oral narratives, the survey, stories and legends as well as Grade Nine teaching module, Thunder and Stone.
Use HTML version. Flash Player no longer available.
Tangled, Lost and Bitter? Current Directions in Writing of Native History in Canada
[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.