Native American Women Photographers as Storytellers
Native Americans and American Identities in the Early Republic
Native Americans in Picture Books Recommended for Early Childhood Classrooms, 1945--1999
Native Canadian Gothic Refigured: Reading Robinson's Monkey Beach
Native Languages of the Americas: Preserving and Promoting American Indian Languages
A Native Tradition: Relocating the Indian in American Literature, 1820-40
Native Wisdom on Belonging
Never Cry Fraud: Remembering Grey Owl, Rethinking Imposture
Night Sky, Morning Star. Evelina Zuni Lucero.
Night Spirits: The Story of the Relocation of the Sayisi Dene
Nightland and the Mythic West
No Beginning, No End: The Sami Speak Up
Nomadic Circle of Life
North of Athabasca: Slave Lake and Mackenzie River Documents of the North West Company, 1800-1821
Northern Dene Bibliography
Northern Visions: New Perspective on the North in Canadian History: Challenging Northern Historiography
Northern Writes 9: Entries from the 2001 NWT Writing Contest
Northwest Saskatchewan Métis Perspectives of Miyo Pimatisiwin + Kiwetinohk Saskatchewan Otipemisiwak Kayisi Wapahtakwaw Miyo Pimatisiwin
Looks at the Métis phrase miyo-pimatisiwin (good life) and how it connects the Métis past with the present.
A Note on Native American Literatures and Standardized Tests
Novel Resolutions: Revising the Romance Plot, The Women's Movement and American Women Novelists 1870-1930
The Novels of Louise Erdrich: Stories of Her People. Connie A. Jacobs
Ojibwe Oral Tradition
Adaptations of sixteen traditional stories, most relating to Wenebojo.
"Old Maps" and "New Roads": Confronting Neocolonial Despair in Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
The Omnipresent Voice: Authorial Intrusion in Rudy Wiebe's "Games for Queen Victoria"
One Successful Aboriginal Health Worker: A Case Study
Only A Working Girl: The Story of Marie Joussaye Fotheringham
The Only Real Indian is a Dead Indian: The Desire for Authenticity in James Welch’s The Death of Jim Loney
"Onward ever, backward never": Student Life and Students' Lives at Haskell Institute, 1884-1920s
"Open Containers": Sherman Alexie's Drunken Indians
Oral Histories: [Personal Histories of Some Mi'kmaq People]
Oral Traditions of the Woodland Cree (Nihithawak) in Northern Saskatchewan: Links to Cultural Identity, Ways of Knowing, Language Revitalization, and Connections to the Land + Nehithāwi – Kiskethihtamiwin: Kayās Āchimowina Ekwa Āchithohkewina. Nihithowewin, Nihithawihtāwin Mena Mithopimāchihowin
Discuss the significance of oral history to the Woodland Cree to reinforce their cultural worldview into the modern era.
Origin of Day and Night by Paula Ikuutaq Rumbolt, illustrated by Lenny Lishchenko: Educator's Resource
Retelling of a traditional Inuit story. Recommended for Kindergarten to Grade 3 students.
"The Original in Ourselves": Native American Women Writers and the Construction on Indian Women's Identity
Other Narratives: Representations of History in Four Postcolonial Native American Novels
The Other Proletarians: Native American Literature and Class Struggle
Our Experience With Research
"Our Mountains Are Our Pillows": An Ethnographic Overview of Glacier Nations Park
Focuses on the K'tunaxa and Piikáni, and draws on documentary research and consultation with Piikáni Elders.
Overturning the (New World) Order: Of Space, Time, Writing, and Prophecy in Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac of the Dead
Padlaya Qiatsuk: Encouraging Young Carvers to Persevere
Paper Yabber: The Messenger and the Message
The Parents Have to Do Their Part: A Tohono O'odham Language Autobiography
The Path to the Milky Way Leads through Los Angeles
Patterns of Physical Activity Among American Indian Children: An Assessment of Barriers and Support
Peace and Friendship: Living with the Land
Interviews conducted with Alan Syliboy, Albert Marshall, Michelle Marshall-Johnson, Catherine Anne Martin, Morgan Toney, Gerald Gloade, and Michelle Syliboy.
Performing Pauline Johnson: Representations of "the Indian Poetess" in the Periodical Press, 1892-95
Peter Palvik: "I'm Just Not Surrealistic"
Pimachesowin for the Sakha (Yakut) People of Northeastern Siberia + Кри норуот Пимачисуин өйдөбүлэ Сибиир хотугулуу-илин Саха норуотугар
Examines the parallels between the Sakha concept Aiyy Yorege and the Cree word Pimachesowin towards each group's journey to self-determination.