[Daniels in Context]
Deadly Detectives: How Aboriginal Australian Writers are Re-creating Crime Fiction
Debating Cultural Appropriation
Lesson plan focuses on what cultural appropriation is, how it affects Indigenous peoples and whether it should be regulated by law.
Accompanying Material: Student Version.
Developed in conjunction with the documentary Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World.
Decolonization through Collaborative Filmmaking: Sharing Stories from the Heart
Decolonizing the Choctaws: Teaching LeAnne Howe's Shell Shaker
Decolonizing the Medium: How Indigenous Creators are Defying "Sidekickery” and Centering Indigenous Stories and Characters in the Comics Landscape
Deconstructing the Master's House with His Own Tools: Code-Switching and Double-Voiced Discourse as Agency in Gerald Vizenor's Heirs of Columbus
Defining Positive Mental Wellbeing for New Zealand-Born Cook Islands Youth
A Description of a Successful Indigenous Online High School: Perspectives of Teachers, Staff, Students, and Parents
Dialogue of Difference: Speaking for the Other in Aboriginal Writing
The Diamond Doorknob
Digital Archives Database
Digital Storytelling With First Nations Emerging Adults in Extensions of Care and Transitioning From Care in Manitoba
Dilemmas of an Indigenous Academic: A Native Hawaiian Story
The Dirt is Red Here: Art and Poetry fron Native California
Disease, Empire, and (Alter)Native Medicine in Louise Erdrich's Tracks and Winona LaDuke's Last Standing Woman
The Displacement of Irony in Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water and Michael Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion
"Diversity is our Strength"? Memory, Trauma and Social Critique in Contemporary Canadian Literature by Indigenous Women
Do You Recognize Who I Am? Decolonizing Rhetorics in Indigenous Rock Opera Something Inside is Broken
Does Becoming Professional Mean I Have to Become White?
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.
Dream Wheels: A Novel
Dreams and Nightmares in First Nations Fiction
Dreams Like Baseball Cards: Baseball, Bricoleur, and the Gap in Sherman Alexie's The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven
Dreams of Death in Novels by James Welch, Tim O'Brien, and Ron Arias: A Cognitive Approach
E. Pauline Johnson Tekahionwake: Collected Poems and Selected Prose
E. Pauline Johnson, Tekahionwake: Collected Poems and Selected Prose
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
L'écho des autres : l'analyse basique en anthropologie
Ecological Politics and Comic Redemption in Louise Erdrich's The Antelope Wife
Eden Robinson
Interview with the award winning author of Traplines and Monkey Beach.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Edmonton Pentimento: Re-Reading History in the Case of the Papaschase Cree
Educator's Guide: Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Uses chapters from book by Daniel Heath Justice as a tool to educate teachers.
Elders and Indigenous Healing in the Correctional Service of Canada: A Story of Relational Dissonance, Sacred Doughnuts, and Drive-Thru Expectations
[Elements of Indigenous Style: A Guide for Writing By and About Indigenous People]
"Elveland": Irony and Laughter as Power Media in Sea Sámi Folk-Song Tradition
Emergent and Revolutionary: Telling Native Peoples' Stories at Tribal Colleges
An Ensemble Performance of Indians in the Act: Native Theater Past and Present
Epicenter: Deep Mapping Place in Fiction and Nonfiction
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.