Leaving Tracks: The Legacy of Chippewa History in the Novels of Louise Erdrich
Legal Aid Courtworker, and Public Legal Education and Information Needs in the Northwest Territories: Final Report
The Lenâpé and Their Legends; With the Complete Texts and Symbols of the Walam Olum: A New Translation, and an Inquiry into Its Authenticity
Leslie Marmon Silko: Reading, Writing, and Storytelling
Lesson No. 1: Shed Your Indian Identity
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
Life as a Clock
"A Life Has Only One Author": Twice-Told Aboriginal Life Narratives
Examines how collaboratively produced life narratives radically mutate when they are re-told and re-framed.
Listening to the Trickster Voice in Walter Dyk's Navajo Ethnography Son of Old Man Hat
Little Buffalo River (Book)
"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
Macdougall, Brenda, Discusses the Community of Ile a la Crosse (01)
Make Yourself (Un)Comfortable: Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun at the Museum
The Making of Treaty 8 in Canada's Northwest
Manitoba First Nations Oral History Survival Booklet
The Many Lives of Justiniano Roxas: The Centenarian Fantasy in American History and Memory
Mapping the Web of Native American Dramaturgy
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”
"Memory Alive": Race, Religion, and Métis Identities
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.
Mii maanda ezhi-gkendmaanh = This Is How I Know, Written by Brittany Luby, Illustrated by Joshua Mangeshig Pawis-Steckley, Translated by Alvin Ted Corbiere and Alan Corbiere
"An Anishinaabe child and her grandmother explore the natural wonders of each season in this lyrical, bilingual story-poem." Intended for use with ages 3 to 7.
Mind, Memory, and the Five-Year-Old
Minogondaagan: The Good Voice
Mitoni niya nêhiyaw - nêhiyaw-iskwêw mitoni niya = Cree is Who I Truly Am - Me, I Am Truly a Cree Woman: A Life
Mnisose / the Missouri River: A Comparative Literary Analysis of River Stories from the Lewis and Clark Expedition to the #NoDAPL Movement
The Moccasin Project: Understanding a Sense of Place through Indigenous Art Making and Storytelling
Modern American Poetry: N. Scott Momaday [1934- ]
Monahsetah, Resistance, and Other Markings on Turtle’s Back: A Lyric History in Poems and Essays (Maurice Kenny) and The Homing Place: Indigenous and Settler Literary Legacies of the Atlantic (Rachel Bryant)
Monique Verdin's Louisiana Love: An Interview
Monkey Beach
Moon of the Crusted Snow: Reading Guide
To accompany book written by Waubgeshig Rice which tells the story of a small northern Anishinaabe community which finds itself completely isolated from the external world just as winter sets in. The key to survival is reconnecting with the land. Guide is arranged around the themes of land, colonialism, community, gender, language, traditions and culture, and real world events.o accompany story written by