Listening to Native American Voices from Wounded Knee, the Black Hills International Survival Gathering and the Tlingit Banishment
Listening to Silences in Ruby Slipperjack's Silent Words
Listening to the Spirits: An Interview with Leslie Marmon Silko
Literary Land Claims: The "Indian Land Question" from Pontiac's War to Attawapiskat
Literature
Locating Aboriginal Peoples in Canadian Law: One Aboriginal Woman's Journey Through Case Law and the Canadian Constitution
Lockbolted Letters to Turbo
"Mami To Nit Hi Tam O Win": "Reminiscing"
Māori as "Warriors" and "Locals" in the Private Military Industry
Māori Nurses' Experiences of the Nursing Entry to Practice Transition Programme
Mapping Culture Onto Geography: "Distance From the Fort" in Samuel Hearne's Journal
Marketing Desire: The "Normative/Other" Male Body and the "Pure" White Female Body on the Cover Art of Cassie Edwards' Savage Dream (1990), Savage Persuasion (1991), and Savage Mists (1992)
Art History Thesis (MA) -- McGill University, 2017.
Mary Brave Bird Speaks: A Brief Interview
Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again
The Meaning of Written English: A Place to Dream as One Pleases
Medicine through Comics: Wheels Are Turning on the Road to Healing: Native Americans through the Lens of Francophone Graphic Novels
Medicine Unbundled: A Journey through the Minefields of Indigenous Health Care
Medicine Unbundled: A Journey through the Minefields of Indigenous Health Care
[Michif Language Resources: An Annotated Bibliography]
Mii maanda ezhi-gkendmaanh = This Is How I Know, Written by Brittany Luby, Illustrated by Joshua Mangeshig Pawis-Steckley, Translated by Alvin Ted Corbiere and Alan Corbiere
"An Anishinaabe child and her grandmother explore the natural wonders of each season in this lyrical, bilingual story-poem." Intended for use with ages 3 to 7.
Minority Student Persistence in College: A Longitudinal, Qualitative Study
"A Mirror of Indian Newes": North American Indian Ethnographic Writing in Richard Hakluyt's Principall Navigations of the English Nation [1598-1600]
Mite Achimowin (Heart Talk): First Nations Women Expressions of Heart Health Study
Mite Achimowin (Heart Talk): [First Nations Women Expressions of Heart Health Study]
Mitoni niya nêhiyaw - nêhiyaw-iskwêw mitoni niya = Cree is Who I Truly Am - Me, I Am Truly a Cree Woman: A Life
Modernism's Ventriloquist Texts: American Poetry, Gender, and Indian Identity
Monkey Beach
Moon of the Crusted Snow: Reading Guide
To accompany book written by Waubgeshig Rice which tells the story of a small northern Anishinaabe community which finds itself completely isolated from the external world just as winter sets in. The key to survival is reconnecting with the land. Guide is arranged around the themes of land, colonialism, community, gender, language, traditions and culture, and real world events.o accompany story written by
Morality Destabilised: Reading Emma Lee Warrior’s "Compatriots"
Mother Earth, Brother Bear: Discerning Metaphors to Live by in Environmental Education
Muscogee Nation Indian Territory: From Oral History to Found Poetry
"My Parents, They Became Poor": The Socio-Economics Effects of the Expropriation and Relocation of Stoney Point Reserve #43, 1942
"My Uttermost Valleys": Patriarchal Fear of the Feminine in Robert Service's Poetry and Prose
Myth and Metaphor, Archetype and Individuation: A Study in the Work of Louise Erdrich
The Myth of Swan: The Case of Regina v. Taylor
Narrating Intimate Partner Violence: Reclaiming Indigenous Women's Voices
Narrative Possession in Stephen Graham Jones's Ledfeather
Narrative Resistance: Native American Collaborative Autobiography
"National Memory" and Its Remainders: Labrador Inuit Counterhistories of Residential Schooling
Native American Literature: Expanding the Canon
Native American Mystery, Crime and Detective Fiction
Native American Women Photographers as Storytellers
[Native Education Resource LIst]
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 Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
Never Cry Fraud: Remembering Grey Owl, Rethinking Imposture
Never Until Now: Indigenous & Racialized Women's Experiences Working in Yukon & Northern British Columbia Mine Camps
Research consisted of survey and semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions with 22 respondents. Study found: limited job opportunityand longevity of employment, inadequate pay scale for hours worked, uequal work expectations, limited opportunities for advancement, inadequate harm prevention, gender or race harassement/discrimination with absence of grievance mechanisms, poor environmental practices, and limited economic benefits to Indigenous people.