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Aboriginal Resource "Must Have" List 2019/2020
Extensive list of titles with the applicable grade levels and subjects.
Aboriginal Sports Coaches, Community, and Culture
Animkee
Anishinaabe Aadizokaanan: Our Teachings … Video Series
Anishinaabekwewag Teachings of Self-Determination
Applying Deloria’s Challenge: Indigenous and Mass Society’s Conceptions of Indian Self-determination
As I Remember It: Teachings (ɂɘms taɂaw) from the Life of a Sliammon Elder
At the Intersections of Empire: Ceremony, Transnationalism, and American Indian–Filipino Exchange
Ava and the Little Folk: Traditional Story Study
Geared toward Grades 6 to 8. Tells the story of an Inuit orphan who, abandoned by his village, ends up living with a group of magical dwarfs.
aztecs nd sun
The Baffin Writer's Project
Looks at a project that encourages Inuit people to begin writing their stories and, in this way, pass on Inuit culture and language to the next generation.
Bat Steals the Moon
Retelling of traditional story.
Source: Man in the Moon: Sky Tales from Many Lands collected by Alta Jablow and Carl Withers.
Battle of the Northern Lights
Traditional Sami story.
Source: The Storytelling Star by James Riordan.
Being an Indigenous CRC in the Era of the TRC #Notallitscrackeduptobe
“Between here and there”: Assertion of the Poetic Voice in the Poetry of Rita Bouvier and Marilyn Dumont
English Honors Thesis (BA) -- University of California, 2020.
Black Hawk in Translation: Indigenous Critique and Liberal Guilt in the 1847 Dutch Edition of Life of Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kiak
Book Guide for How Raven Got His Crooked Nose: An Alaskan Dena'ina Fable Retold by Barbara J. Atwater and Ethan J. Atwater, Illustrated by Mindy Dwyer
Recommended for Grade 3 students.
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Books about, or Featuring, American Indians That Are Not Recommended
Annotated list gives reasons why material is considered inappropriate.
Books in Review
Books in Review
Books in Review
Books to Avoid
Bowwow Powwow
Lesson plan for book written by Brenda J. Child and illustrated by Jonathan Thunder. Designed for Pre-K to Grade 2.
Briefly Noted [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.3]
The Buffalo, the Chickadee, and the Eagle: A Multispecies Textual History of Plenty Coups’s Multivocal Autobiography
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.
Celebrating Indigenous Languages
Centering Stories by Urban Indigiqueers/Trans/Two-Spirit People and Indigenous Women on Practices of Decolonization, Collective-Care and Self-Care
Chanco
Changed Forever: American Indian Boarding-School Literature. Volume II
Cherokee Modern
Child-Targeted Assimilation: An Oral History of Indian Day School Education in Kahnawà:ke
A Choctaw Odyssey: The Life of Lesa Phillip Roberts
Claims to Native Identity in Children’s Literature
Close to Home: An Indigenist Project of Story Gathering
Collaborative Game Development with Indigenous Communities: A Theoretical Model for Ethnocultural Empathy
Colonial Violence in Sixties Scoop Narratives: From In Search of April Raintree to A Matter of Conscience
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.2]
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2 no.3]
Commentary [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.2, no.4]
Communities of Grief: Surviving War in the Fiction of Ralph Salisbury
Connecting Myself to Indian Residential Schools and the Sixties Scoop
Delves into an Indigenous women sharing her own personal experiences in residential school and the sixties scoop with her daughter.
Contemporary Native Women's Voices in Literature
Looks at one way to cross the cultural boundary in Aboriginal literature by examining the purpose of author Maria Campbell, in Halfbreed, Beatrice Culleton, in In Search of April Raintree, and Lee Maracle, in I Am Woman.