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Can Museums Promote Community Healing?: A Healing Museum Model for Indigenous Communities
Canada's Dark Secret
Canadian Crusoes: A Tale of the Rice Lake Plains
Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected and Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians: 2017-2018
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.
Canadian Native Literature and the Sixties: A Historical and Bibliographical Survey
Discussion on the early writings by Aboriginal authors and the lack of Aboriginal fiction and poetry in the sixties.
Canadian Studies: An Introductory Reader
Captivity Narratives Bibliography
Caught Up: Indigenous Re/presentations of Colonial Captivity
The Ceded Landscape of Gerald Vizenor’s Fiction
Cetaceousness and Global Warming Among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
A Change of Subject: Perspectivism and Multinaturalism in Inuit Depictions of Interspecies Transformation
Changes in Methods for Self-Identification as Exemplified by Characters in the Novels of Louise Erdrich
Chasing Sitting Bull & Crazy Horse: Two Fourteenth U.S. Infantry Diaries of the Great Sioux War
Chitty Harjo
Christie Palmerston: A Reappraisal
Christine Quintasket
Chronicles the life and works of the novelist and advocate of Aboriginal land rights.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Claiming Voice, Writing Difference: A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous Women's Life Writing in Australia and North America
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
Collaboration and the Complex World of Literary Rights
Collaboration or Colonialism: Text and Process in Native American Women's Autobiographies
The Collapse of Certainty: Contextualizing Liminality in Botswana Fiction and Reportage
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
Coming Out Stories: Two Spirit Narratives in Atlantic Canada: Final Report
“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
Community Profile of Lhileltalets: Spiritual Importance Amongst Human and Natural Forces
Companion to James Welch's "The Heartsong of Charging Elk"
Competing Land Claims and Racial Hierarchies in the Works of Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Alexander Posey, Helen Hunt Jackson, and Charles Lummis
The Concept of Duality in Culture and Myths of Lakota Indians
Congress Examines Role of Arts Within Aboriginal Community
Overview of Gordon Tootoosis and Maria Campbell's speeches at the 2007 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences. The two speakers talked about the importance of theatre in Aboriginal culture and the hurdles they faced in their careers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.25.
Conjuring the Colonizer: Alternative Readings of Magic Realism in Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
Consuming, Incarcerating, and “Transmoting” Misery: Border Practice in Vizenor’s Bearheart and Jones’s The Fast Red Road
Contact Zones: Aboriginal and Settler Women in Canada's Colonial Past
Contemporary Mi'kmaq Relationships Between Humans and Animals: A Case Study of the Bear River First Nation Reserve in Nova Scotia
A Conversation with Ki-ke-in
Copper Thunderbird by Marie Clements: Study Guide
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
Could That Really Be Kokom In The Mirror?
Coyote, Contingency, and Community: Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water and Postmodern Trickster
Coyote Discovers America: The Cultural Survival of the Trickster in the Novels of Thomas King
Coyote Learns to Make a Storybasket: The Place of First Nations Stories in Education
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 Tales: Written by Thomas King; Illustrated by Byron Eggenschwiler
Guide for book containing two humorous trickster stories.
For use with Grades 1 to 4.