Indigenous Voices
Indigenous Women and Street Gangs: Survivance Narratives
Indigenous Worldviews in Digital Games: Sami Perspectives in
Gufihtara eallu (2018) and Rievssat (2018)
Indigitization: Toolkit for the Digitization of First Nations Knowledge
"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
“Interior Dancers”: Transformations of Vizenor’s Poetic Vision
Interpersonal Dialogue, Narrative, and Cultural Representations in Lakota (Sioux) Classrooms
Interpreting Our Own: Native Peoples Redefining Museum Education
Interpretive Guide and Hands-on Activites: The Alberta Foundation for the Arts Travelling Exhibition Program: ᐊᐧᐃᐧᓯᐦᒋᑲᐣ = Wawisihcikan = Adornment
Lesson plans for elementary and secondary school students for exhibition featuring works by Elaine Alexie, Erik Lee, and Carmen Miller. Topics include First Nations groups of central Alberta and the Boreal forest, brief survey of Indigenous art in the twentieth century, abstract art, and First Nations traditional art forms and materials.
Intervening in the Archive: Women-Water Alliances, Narrative Agency, and Reconstructing Indigenous Space in Deborah Miranda’s Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
Interview with Doreen Jensen
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, Vol. 9, No. 1, Spring, 1997]
Irony and the "Balance of Nature on the Ridges" in Mathews’s Talking to the Moon
It's a Family Affair: Stó:lō Experiences in Repatriation
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
Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy
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.
Knowing of Indigenous Ways: Fieldwork Dispatches from Atitlán, Guatemala
Laguna Woman: An Annotated Leslie Silko Bibliography
Lakota Recollections of the Custer Fight: New Sources of Indian-Military History
Language and Landscape in Mari Sandoz's Crazy Horse: Strange Man of the Oglalas
The Laughing People: A Tribute to My Innu Friends
The Leather-Stocking Tales
Legal and Tribal Identity in Gerald Vizenor’s The Heirs of Columbus
The Lenâpé and Their Legends; With the Complete Texts and Symbols of the Walam Olum: A New Translation, and an Inquiry into Its Authenticity
Lessons from the Earth and Beyond: Bringing Indigenous Knowledge Systems into the Classroom: Educator Resources
Website includes curriculum connections, lesson plans and inquiry-based activities for primary, junior and intermediate grades for three topics: lessons from the earth, lessons from the water, and lessons from beyond.
Letter from Thomas Quinn to George G. Mann
Liberation and Identity: Bearing the Heart of The Heirship Chronicles
Life as a Clock
Life Histories: A Metis Woman and Breast Cancer Survivor
Like "Reeds Through the Ribs of a Basket": Native Women Weaving Stories
Liminal Landscapes: Motion, Perspective, and Place in Gerald Vizenor’s Fiction
Literacies of Resistance: Script and Voice in Five Twentieth Century Women's Novels
"Loss Must Be Marked and It Cannot Be Represented": Memorializing Sex Workers in Vancouver's West End
Louise Erdrich’s The Round House, the Wiindigoo, and Star Trek: The Next Generation
The Lynx in Time: Haudenosaunee Women's Traditions and History
Magic and Memory in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues
Make Yourself (Un)Comfortable: Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun at the Museum
Manitoba First Nations Oral History Survival Booklet
The Many Lives of Justiniano Roxas: The Centenarian Fantasy in American History and Memory
Maria Tallchief, (Native) America's Prima Ballerina: Autobiographies of a Postindian Princess
Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again
Me & My Monster
Meeting Halfway: Reassessing “Cognizable to the Canadian Legal and Constitutional Structure”
The Mentoring of Miss Deloria: Poetics, Politics, and the Test of Tradition
Article examines Ella Cara Deloria’s life and career as an anthropologist in the context of her relationship with her mentors, relationship with the discipline of anthropology, and personal and community life.