Don Amero - [Windspeaker Confidential]
Interview with Métis acoustic musician Don Amero.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.19.
"Don't Speak For Me": Practicing Oral History Amidst the Legacies of Conflict
A Double-Bladed Knife: Subversive Laughter in Two Stories by Thomas King
Analysis of two short stories, Joe the Painter and the Deer Island Massacre and One Good Story, That One, commenting on King's use of irony and humor.
Doubleweaving Two-Spirit Critiques: Building Alliances between Native and Queer Studies
Dreaming With the Ancestors: Black Seminole Women in Texas and Mexico
Dreams and Dream Interpretation
Driving, Wandering, Recollecting: The Legacy of Coyote's Twin Brother
Drowning in Fire by Craig S. Womack
Due Diligence, or How I lost Ten Pounds
Dying Saints, Vanishing Savages: "Dying Indian Speeches" in Colonial New England Literature
The Early Chickasaws: Profile of Courage
The Earth Made New: Plains Indian Stories of Creation
Earthboy's Return--James Welch's Act of Recovery in Winter in the Blood
Eastern Cherokee Creation and Subsistence Narratives: A Cherokee and Religious Interpretation
The Education of Frank Waters, 1902-1969: Finding a Southwestern Literary Voice
Educator's Guide: Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Uses chapters from book by Daniel Heath Justice as a tool to educate teachers.
Effective Counseling With American Indian College Students: Counselors' Perspectives
Elder Brother, the Law of the People, and Contemporary Kinship Practices of Cowessess First Nation Members: Reconceptualizing Kinship in American Indian Studies Research
[Elements of Indigenous Style: A Guide for Writing By and About Indigenous People]
[Elngug: An Eskimo Girl's Childhood in the Alaska Wilderness]
Embracing My Identity: Reflections on Jorge González Camarena's Painting El Abrazo
"EnCountering" Colonial Latin American Indian Chronicles: Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala's History of the "New" World
Encountering the More-Than-Human: Narration, Abjection and Pardon in Three Day Road
The End of Old Bill Pigeon, Just the Way it Was Told to Me - More or Less
End Times for Ruby
Engagement
Epistemological Distinctiveness and the Use of "Guided History" Methodology for Writing Native Histories
Equality Among Women
Discussion on the power of women and the inequality of paternalism, racism, sexism, and the materialistic society. Attached is a short poem titled The Red in Winter by Emma LaRocque. Entire issue on one pdf.
Scroll down to page 133 to read article.
Erdrich, Momaday and Silko in the Context of Czech Translation
Escape from Albuquerque: An Apache Memorate
Escape Stories: Narratives and Native Americans in Sherman Alexie's The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven
Ethnographic Information and Anthropological Interpretations in a Native Title Claim: The Yorta Yorta Experience
The Ethnographically Contextualized Case Study Method: Exploring Ambitious Achievement in an American Indian Community
Ethnohistory's Ethnohistory: Creating a Discipline from the Ground Up
"Even Our Bones Nourish Change": Trauma, Recovery, and Hybridity in Tracks and Four Souls
Everything You Know About Indians is Wrong
[Everything You Know About Indians Is Wrong]
The Evolution of a Poem: An Interview with Tiffany Midge
Exotic Norths? Representations of Northern Scandinavia in S. H. Kent's Within the Arctic Circle and Bayard Taylor's Northern Travel
Experiences of Microaggressions among American Indian and Alaska Native Students in Two Post-Secondary Contexts
An Exploration of Collaboration In Indigenous Language Revitalization In A First Nation Community
Exploration, the Fur Trade and Hudson's Bay Company
Explorations in Canadian History:; What Can We Learn about Local First Nations Families and Residential Schools from Canada’s History?
Lesson plan uses the books : Shi-Shi-Etko, Shin-Chi’s Canoe, and Stolen Words.
Exploring the Impact of Ongoing Colonial Violence on Aboriginal Students in the Postsecondary Classroom
Exploring the Night Sky Indigenous Inquiry Kit
Includes annotated bibliography, book critiques, and four lessons plans appropriate for sixth grade.