Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected and Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians: 2017-2018
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.
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 Studies News and Notes
CANDO Award Winners
CANDO Economic Developer of the Year Awards 2003: Utilizing Traditional Knowledge to Strive Towards Unity
CANDO Economic Developer of the Year Awards 2004
The Canoe Is the People: Indigenous Navigation in the Pacific
Accompanying Materials: Teacher's Guide; Learner's Text; Pacific Map; Navigation
Carol Couchie
Interview with the chair of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada's Aboriginal Health Issues Committee who helped create the Association of Aboriginal Midwifes and Aboriginal Midwifery Education Program.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.20.
"Catching the Tide"
Catharsis vis-à-vis Oppression: Contemporary Native American Political Humor
Caught Between Two Worlds: An Aboriginal Researcher's Experience Researching in Her Home Community
Celebrating Indigenous Languages
Ceremonial Tradition as Form and Theme in Sherman Alexie's The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven: A Performance-Based Approach to Native American Literature
The Challenge of First Nations History in a Colonial World
A Change of Subject: Perspectivism and Multinaturalism in Inuit Depictions of Interspecies Transformation
Chi Ka Sha Goes to Washington: Chickasaw Narratives on the NMAI
Child-Targeted Assimilation: An Oral History of Indian Day School Education in Kahnawà:ke
Chinook Sad Song in Alaska
Choosing America's Heroes and Villains: Lessons Learned from the Execution of Silon Lewis
Church that Once Brought Pain Now Soothes Soul of Lay Student
Circling Back, Closing in Remembering James Welch
Circular Taxonomies: Regulating European and American Women Through Representations of North American Indian Women
The Circumscribing Coyote: Native American Use of Signifying to Cast Their Message in Palatable Tropes
"Civilization Had Given Him a Vote": Citizenship and the Ballot in Sara Jeanette Duncan's The Imperialist
Claiming Kin
Claiming Place in Wor(l)ds: Linda Hogan's Solar Storms
Claims to Native Identity in Children’s Literature
The Clay We Are Made Of: Haudenosaunee Land Tenure on the Grand River
Close, Very Close, a B'gwus Howls": The Contingency of Execution in Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
Argues that the limitations of the medium or cultural materials and the offered resistance fuel the creative tension in the novel.