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Canadian Indigenous Writers Bibliography
Material divided into seven categories: graphic novel, nonfiction, novel, play, poetry, short stories, and stories. Each entry contains summary, information about the author and list of titles also written by them.
“Captive Woman?”: The Rewriting of Pocahontas
in Three Contemporary Native American Novels
Captivity and Conversion: William Apess, Mary Jemison, and Narratives of Racial Identity
Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West
Cartographic Lessons: Susanna Moodie’s Roughing It in the Bush and Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water
Centering Words: Writing a Sense of Place
A Change of Subject: Perspectivism and Multinaturalism in Inuit Depictions of Interspecies Transformation
Charles Alexander Eastman: Sioux Storyteller and Historian
Checking Under the Bed for My Guests
Questions about the legendary little people are raised by the author after someone tugged on a house guest's hair.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Chipmunk Meets Old Witch (At-At-A'Tia)
Children's book retells a traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-2.
Related material: Lesson Plan.
The Chippewa Landscape of Louise Erdrich
The Clay We Are Made Of: Haudenosaunee Land Tenure on the Grand River
Closed Stranger Adoption, Māori and Race Relations in Aotearoa New Zealand, 1955-1985
Cloven Hoof: Historical Drama and the Construction of Narrative Theology
Collective and Individual Memories: Narrations about the
Transformations in the Nenets Society
Colonialism and Race Relations in Remote Inland Australia: Observations from the Field of Australian Indigenous Studies
Colonizing Bodies: Aboriginal Health and Healing in British Columbia, 1900-50
[The Colour of Resistance: A Contemporary Collection of Writing by Aboriginal Women]
Coming Out Stories: Two Spirit Narratives in Atlantic Canada: Final Report
Commercial Fishing
Historical note:
A video made by the La Ronge Communications Society for La Ronge Community Television about commercial fishing on Lac La Ronge in the 1970s.“Common Disaster”?!: Three Works Revealing the Importance of Inuit Presence and Inuit Oral History [On the Writings about the Man in Charge / the Men Aboard / the Unceasing Searching for the Erebus and Terror]
Communicating Effectively with Indigenous Clients: An Aboriginal Legal Services Publication
Companion to James Welch's "The Heartsong of Charging Elk"
A Comparative Post-Colonial Reading of Kristjana Gunnars' The Prowler and Robert Kroetsch's What the Crow Said
The Concept of Duality in Culture and Myths of Lakota Indians
Considering Colonialism and Oppression: Aboriginal Women, Justice and the 'Theory' of Decolonization
The Construction of Identity in the Life Writing of Native Canadian Women
Consuming, Incarcerating, and “Transmoting” Misery: Border Practice in Vizenor’s Bearheart and Jones’s The Fast Red Road
Contemporary American Indian Storytelling: An Outsider's Perspective
Cornus versus dentus et autres modalités d’association des animaux dans l’imaginaire inuit
The Cosmological Liveliness of Terril Calder's The Lodge: Animating Our Relations and Unsettling Our Cinematic Spaces
Courtship and Seduction in American Indian Myths and Legends
Coyote Pedagogy: Knowing Where the Borders are in Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water
Coyote Places the Stars [by] Harriet Peck Taylor
Designed to accompany retelling of traditional Wasco story about how stars came to be arranged in the shapes of animals. Recommended for use with Grade 3 students.
Coyote Sings to the Moon
Coyote Tales: Written by Thomas King; Illustrated by Byron Eggenschwiler
Guide for book containing two humorous trickster stories.
For use with Grades 1 to 4.