By the People, for the People: The Community Development Story of the Thunder Bay Indian Youth Friendship Centre
Call Me Ishmael: Memories of an Inuvialuk Elder
Campaigning in the North West Territories
Can Museums Promote Community Healing?: A Healing Museum Model for Indigenous Communities
Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected and Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians and Educators: 2019/20
Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected & Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians and Educators, 2018/19
Canadian Indigenous Children's Books through the Lense of Truth and Reconciliation
Primary source for titles was Amazon Best Sellers in Children’s Native Canadian Story Books, as well as publishers' web pages, and library and authors' lists. Objective was to identify fiction books for ages 0-18 written by Indigenous authors that contained reconciliation-related themes. More than 150 books met the inclusion criteria.
Canadian Studies: An Introductory Reader
Captive Selves, Captivating Others: The Politics and Poetics of Colonial American Captivity Narratives
Captivity & Sentiment: Cultural Exchange in American Literature, 1682-1861
The Captors' Narrative: Catholic Women and Their Puritan Men on the Early North American Frontier, 1653-1760.
Cartographies of Desire: Captivity, Race, and Sex in the Shaping of an American Nation by Rebecca Blevins Faery
Catching the Native Dreams: Interpreting American Indian Dream Stories
Caught Up: Indigenous Re/presentations of Colonial Captivity
Celebrating Indigenous Languages
Cetaceousness and Global Warming Among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Changes
Changing the Subject: Objectivity, Trickster and the Transformation of the Western Academy
Child-Targeted Assimilation: An Oral History of Indian Day School Education in Kahnawà:ke
Christine Quintasket
Chronicles the life and works of the novelist and advocate of Aboriginal land rights.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Circle As Methodology: Enacting an Aboriginal Paradigm
Circularity, Myth, and Storytelling in the Short Fiction of Leslie Marmon Silko
Circularity, Myth, and Storytelling in the Short Fiction of Leslie Marmon Silko
Claiming Voice, Writing Difference: A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous Women's Life Writing in Australia and North America
Claims to Native Identity in Children’s Literature
Colin's Story
Collaborative Game Development with Indigenous Communities: A Theoretical Model for Ethnocultural Empathy
The Collapse of Certainty: Contextualizing Liminality in Botswana Fiction and Reportage
Colonial Violence in Sixties Scoop Narratives: From In Search of April Raintree to A Matter of Conscience
[Colonizing Bodies: Aboriginal Health and Healing in British Columbia, 1900-50]
Coming-of-Age Notables
Coming To Life: Native American Cultural Renewal & Emerging Identity in Michigan Ojibwe Narratives and in Erdrich's The Antelope Wife
Commentary: Saulteaux Indigenous Knowledge: Elder Danny Musqua
Community Profile of Lhileltalets: Spiritual Importance Amongst Human and Natural Forces
Competing Land Claims and Racial Hierarchies in the Works of Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Alexander Posey, Helen Hunt Jackson, and Charles Lummis
Confronting HIV and AIDS: A Personal Account
Congress Examines Role of Arts Within Aboriginal Community
Overview of Gordon Tootoosis and Maria Campbell's speeches at the 2007 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences. The two speakers talked about the importance of theatre in Aboriginal culture and the hurdles they faced in their careers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.25.