Australian Copyright vs Indigenous Intellectual and Cultural Property Rights: A Discussion Paper
Authored Animals Creature Tropes in Native American Fiction
The Autobiographings of Mourning Dove
Discusses importance of three books: Cogewea the Half-Blood, Coyotes Stories, and Morning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography.
Autumn Reading with Fun Activities: How Coyote Gave Fire to the People: A Native American Story
Traditional story about how coyote, with the help of other animals, stole fire from the Fire Protectors and gave it to humans so that they could stay warm during the winter months.
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.
The Bear Facts
Humourous animated short involves a ill-equipped European "discovering" the Inuit homeland and promptly planting flags everywhere as a sign of ownership and an Inuit hunter's response. Accompanying material: The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan.
Duration: 3:58.
The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan
Guide to accompany film, The Bear Facts. Target audience Grades one to three in the subject areas of History, Social Sciences, First Nations and Humanities.
The Bear-Walker & Other Stories
The Bearer of this Letter: Language, Ideologies, Literary Practices, and the Fort Belknap Indian Community
Book review of: The Bearer of this Letter by Mindy J. Morgan.
Beaver Steals Fire
"Becoming Minor": Reading The Woman Who Owned the Shadows
Becoming 'Real' Aboriginal Teachers: Attending to Intergenerational Narrative Reverberations and Responsibilities
The Beginnings of Contemporary Aboriginal Literature in Canada 1967-1972: Part Two
Behind the Blockades
Behind the Scenes: The Real Story of the Quileute Wolves
"Being a Half-Breed": Discourses of Race and Cultural
Syncreticity in the Works of Three Metis Women Writers
Being an Indigenous CRC in the Era of the TRC #Notallitscrackeduptobe
Being Indigenous: Perspectives on Activism, Culture, Language and Identity
"The Belly of This Story": Storytelling and Symbolic Birth
in Native American Fiction
Between Heaven and Earth: The Art of Alex Jacobs
Between Two Points : Drinking From a Hose
Between Voice and Text: Bicultural Negotiation in the Contemporary Native American Novel
Beyond False Boundaries
Beyond Recovery: Colonization, Health and Healing for Indigenous People in Canada
Beyond the Divide: The Use of Native Languages in Anglo-and Franco-Indigenous Theatre
Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
Beyond the Nineteenth Century: Thomas King's Decolonization of the Literary Image of the Native
Bigtime (at Chaw’se Sowwa)
The Bingocentric Worlds of Michel Tremblay and Tomson Highway: Les Belles-Soeurs vs. The Rez Sisters
Looks at the parallels between two plays in terms of the subject matter and the dramatic techniques used. For example, bingo, is used as a symbol and illustration of women's consumerism and of the spiritual emptiness in their lives.
Black Elk and Flaming Rainbow: Personal Memories of the Lakota Holy Man and John Neihardt
Black Elk Speaks: A Native American View of Nineteenth-Century American History
Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux
Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux
Black Hawk in Translation: Indigenous Critique and Liberal Guilt in the 1847 Dutch Edition of Life of Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kiak
'Black is Beautiful', and Indigenous: Aboriginality and Authorship in Australian Popular Music
Blackfoot Warrior Shirts
Blackfoot Warrior Shirts
Blood Thirsty Savages
Body, Mind and Spirit: Native Cooking of the Americas
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.
The Book of Jessica: The Healing Circle of a Woman's Autobiography
Discusses a play, The Book of Jessica, that illustrates the struggle women have in understanding what being "a woman" means, including across the barriers of race, culture, privilege and age.