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How Do You Say Watermelon?
How Does the Media Portray Drinking Water Security in Indigenous Communities in Canada?: An Analysis of Canadian Newspaper Coverage from 2000-2015
Search performed in Windspeaker, Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, and National Post yielded 256 relevant results. Analysis of articles found limited coverage focused of government responses rather than preventative measures.
I'm Not the Indian You Had in Mind
Short video featuring a poem by Thomas King challenging stereotypical portrayals of Aboriginal peoples. Duration: 5:28.
"I Should Not Be Wearing a Pilgrim Hat": Making an Indian Place in Urban Schools, 1945-75
Identified Indian Objects: An Examination of Category
Images of Pakeha-Moari: A Study of the Representation of Pakeha-Maori by Historians of New Zealand From Arthur Thomson (1859) to James Belich (1996)
Imagining Indigenous Digital Futures: An Afterword
Imperialism in a Wool Blanket? Aboriginal Iconography and Canadian Paper Monies
In the Eye of the Beholder: Representations of Australian Aborigines in the Published Works of Colonial Women Writers
In the Heard Museum Art Imitates Life
Indigenous Activists Who are Changing the World
Indigenous Illustration: Native American Artists and Nineteenth-Century US Print Culture
Indigenous Women as Newspaper Representations: Violence and Action in 1960s Vancouver
Intercultural Communications and Conductive Hearing Loss
International Women's Day Honours Contribution of Women
Invisible Indigeneity: First Nations and Aboriginal Theatre in Japanese Translation and Performance
Joe Highway: King of the North
Kent Monkman: A Trickster With a Cause Crashes Canada's 150th Birthday Party
Lakota Performers in Europe: Their Culture and the Artifacts They Left Behind
The Learning Circle: Five Voices of Aboriginal Youth in Canada, a Learning Resource For Ages 14 to 16
Life is Good in Wapos Bay
"The Lone Streetwalker": Missing Women and Sex Work-Related News in Mainstream Canadian Media
Looking Beyond Property: Native Americans and Photography
Managing Cultural Representation: Ainu and First Nations Museums in Japan and Canada
The Mechanics of Survivance in Indigenously-Directed Video-Games: Invaders and Never Alone
Media Arts: Protocols for Producing Indigenous Australian Media Arts
Montreal Premiere of Birth of a Family: Q & A with Director Tasha Hubbard
Native American Mystery, Crime and Detective Fiction
Never Alone: (Re)Coding the Comic Holotrope of Survivance
Of Two Spirits: American Indian and Africa American Oral Histories
Opening the Cache of Canadian Secrets: The Residential School Experience in Books for Children
Personal Reflections on Whiteness and Three Film Projects
Perspectives of Water and Health Using Photovoice with Youths Living on Reserve
Practicing Sovereignty: Colonial Temporalities, Cherokee Justice, and the "Socrates" Writings of John Ridge
Presentation of Self, Culture, and Other in Public Podium Talk: Constructing Indigenous/non-Indigenous Relations in Grassroots Popular Education
Pure Objects, Pure Persons: Artwriting and the Cultural Frame of Traditional Native American Art
Racism Against First Nations People and First Nations Humour as a Coping Mechanism
Re/framing Aboriginal Social Policy Issues in the News: Old Stereotypes and New Opportunities
Re-Imagining Indians: The Counter-Hegmonic Representations of Victor Masayesva and Chris Eyre
Reading Nanook's Smile: Visual Sovereignty, Indigenous Revisions of Ethnography, and Atanarjuat (The Fast Runner)
The Reading Red Report 2007: A Content Analysis of General-audience Newspapers in Circulation Areas With High Percentages of Native Americans
Redskins: Insult and Brand
Remembering Settlement, Forgetting Dispossession: Saskatchewan’s Pioneer Questionnaires
Research Reveals Discrimination, Explodes Stereotypes
Michael Mendelson, a senior scholar at the Caledon Institute of Social Policy in Toronto, suggests discrimination on the part of Canadian government policies in regards to the delivering and funding of Aboriginal education.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Reset and Redefine: Never Alone (Kisima Ingitchuna) and the Rise of Indigenous Games
Responding to Concerning Posts on Social Media: Insights and Solutions from American Indian and Alaska Native Youth
Returning the People to the Circle: An Overview on Overcoming the Fracturing of American Indian Communities
Reviews
A Safer Sex Trade Explored Through Film
Examines a documentary exploring the lives of different types of sex trade workers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.