FourDirectionsTeachings.com
[Frank Weasel Head's Interview on Dance with the Unique History of Blackfoot Dance June 16, 2005]
Frantz Fanon and the Decolonization of Psychiatry
Friendship With Jailer Inspired Riel Poem
Frog and Toad Confronted the Alterity of Otherness
Frog Loses Sleep Puzzling Over Parallel Universes
From Misrepresentation to Misapprehension: Discursive Resistance and the Politics of Displacement in Native America
From One Colonization Road to Another? Everyday Memories of the Social and Economic Conditions in Minnewakin, Stone Lake, and Lundar, Manitoba, 1940-1960
From Quilts to Fish Stories
From Sodomy to Indian Death: Sexuality, Race and Structures of Feeling in Early American Execution Narratives
from Swift Cinder
From Trickster Poetics to Transgressive Politics: Substantiating Survivance in Tomson Highway's Kiss of the Fur Queen
[The Future of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Broadcasting: Conversation & Convergence Series: Edmonton Gathering, April 21st, 2017]
[The Future of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Broadcasting: Conversation & Convergence Series: Winnipeg Gathering, February 17, 2017]
The Future of Print Narratives and Comic Holotropes: A Conversation with Gerald Vizenor
Gambling on Authenticity: Gaming, the Noble Savage, and the Not-So-New Indian
Gathering Knowledge: Indigenous Methodologies of Land/Place-Based Visual Storytelling/Filmmaking and Visual Sovereignty
Gee Meeyo Pimawtshinawn (It Was a Good Life): Saskatchewan Métis Road Allowance Memories: A Living Heritage Project
Gender Balance and Cultural Renewal in Oyate / Sioux Literature
[George Sword's Warrior Narratives: Compositional Processes in Lakota Oral Tradition]
Gerald Vizenor's Transnational Aesthetics in Blue Ravens
Gigawaabaa-bye-bye
The Girl Who Lived with the Bears
Retelling of traditional Tlingit story. Lesson plan for Grades 4-6.
Related Material: Teacher resource including Tlingit language wall cards, retelling materials, transformation story elements, reader's theatre script for The Woman Who Married a Bear, and calendar icons.
"God of the Whiteman! God of the Indian! God Al-fucking-mighty!": The Residential School Legacy in Two Canadian Plays
The Good Mind and Trans-Systemic Thinking in the Two-Row Poems of Mohawk Poet Peter Blue Cloud
Goodbye, Columbus: Take Two
Compares the treatment of the "discovery" of North America in two children's books: Encounter by Jane Yolen and A Coyote Columbus Story by Thomas King.
Excerpt from A Broken Flute: The Native Experience in Books for Children edited by Doris Seale and Beverly Slapin.
Grade 5 Social Studies: People and Stories of Canada to 1867: A Foundation for Implementation
Modules: First Peoples, Early European Colonization (1600 to 1763), Fur Trade, and From British Colony to Confederation (1763 to 1867).
The Grandmother Language: Writing Community Process in Jeannette Armstrong's Whispering in Shadows
Grateful For the Push: A Tribute to Lavonne Ruoff
Growing Up in the Torres Strait Region: A Report from the Footprints in Time Trials
Guest Editor's Preface : Studies in American Indian Literatures
A Guide For Mobile Mine Workers
Gwayakwaajimowin: Truth Telling: Police Responses to Sexual Violence in Urban Indigenous Communities
'Hang on to these words': Johnny David's Delgamuukw Evidence
[Hank Williams First Nation: Screenplay]
Happiness That Sleeps With Sadness
Harmon's Journal, 1800-1819
Haunted by Pehin Hanska
Havasu Ba Qwawa (The Language of the People)
Have Some Old Fashioned Christmas Fun at Rez
Healing Art: Tribal Consciousness, Narrative, and Trauma in Contemporary American Indian Poetry
Help or Hindrance?: The Role of Collaborative Autobiography in the Quest for Inuit Self-Determination
Integrated Studies Project (M.A)--Athabasca University, 2006.
Please Note: Must be viewed in Firefox browser.
Here's a Good One: Leaping the Native Cultural Divide with Teasing, Parodies and Jokes
The Hero's Journey in Jame's Welch's Fools Crow and Traditional Pikuni Sacred Geography
Hidden in Plain Sight: Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture, vol. 1
High Alaskan Adventure
Himwic`a: Our Legends: As Told by Our Hupačasath Elders
Retelling of seven traditional stories including: When the Eagle Went to Borrow Eyes from the Snail; The Shadow; Daughter of Sea Cucumber; The Thunderbird Has a Nest on Thunder Mountain; and When the Codfish Was Sad.
Written in English and Hupačasath.