Search
Boundary Breaking: Mestiza Writers and Innovations in Form
Chipmunk Meets Old Witch (At-At-A'Tia)
Children's book retells a traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-2.
Related material: Lesson Plan.
Collaboration and the Complex World of Literary Rights
Dàanì Tatsǫ̀ Weèhdà Dikǫdeèwò = How Raven Lost His Beak
Retelling of the Tłı̨chǫ traditional story. Text in Tłı̨chǫ (Dogrib) and English.
Danish Greenland: Its People and Products; Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo
The Development of the Trickster in Children's Narrative
An Essential Personal Journey Through Iroquois Myths, Legends, Icons and History
Forging New Stories: The Intertextuality of Culture and Text
From the Glittering World: A Navajo Story
How Cottontail Lost His Fingers
Children's book retells traditional story. Suitable for use with elementary students.
How Daylight Came To Be
Children's book retells a Skokomish traditional story. Suitable for use with elementary students.
How Squire Coyote Brought Fire to the Cahrocs
Indian Legends: Nanabush, the Ojibbeway Saviour. Moosh-Kuh-Ung, or, The Flood
Insects Off to War
Children's storybook retells the Northern Cheyenne traditional story about insects who go to war because they have nothing to do. Suitable for use with elementary students.
The Lenâpé and Their Legends; With the Complete Texts and Symbols of the Walam Olum: A New Translation, and an Inquiry into Its Authenticity
The Lynx in Time: Haudenosaunee Women's Traditions and History
The Míkmaw Concordat
Myth, Folk Tale and Ritual in Anna Lee Walters's "The Warriors"
Narrative Forms: Modern American Short Story Cycles by Louise Erdrich and Amy Tan
Native American Indian Art
Nick Sikkuark: "I Do Love the Carvings Themselves"
Oceanal Man: An Aboriginal View of Himself
Out of the Sea: Sculpture and Graphics in the Inuit Art Collection
Paula Gunn Allen's Grandmothers: Toward a Responsive Feminist-Tribal Reading of Two Old Women
Police Zones: Territory and Identity in Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony
Pragmatism and American Indian Thought
Prayers Shrieked to Heaven: Humor and Folklore in Contemporary American Indian Literature
Raven Helps the Indians
Children's story retells the Skokomish traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-3.
Related Material: Lesson Plan.
Revenge of the Pebble Town People: A Raid on the Tlingit as Told by Richard of the Middle-gîtî'ns to John R. Swanton
REVIEWS [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, Vol. 9, No. 4, Winter, 1997]
Rough Knowledge and Radical Understanding: Sacred Silence in American Indian Literatures
The Sissauch Dance
Skunk
Children's book retells the Muckleshoot traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-3.
Related Material: Lesson Plan.
Storytelling to Stage: The Growth of Native Theatre in Canada
Discussion on how theatre is an ever-growing extension of storytelling with metaphorical, philosophical, and psychological implications.
Strong Patsaujaarjuk
Structure, Metaphor, and Iconicity in Koyukon Shamanistic Stories
Tales Of Coyote and Other Legends
Children's book retells five traditional stories. Suitable for use with elementary school students.
"That Is What I Said To Him": American Women's Narratives About Indians, 1879-1934
Tradition and Modernity: The Cultural Work of Marius Barbeau
Traditional - From The Ancestral Times
Traditional - From the Ancestral Times: The Man Who Became Black: The Ship-Totem Myth
Two Men Walking
The White Stone Canoe: A Legend of the Ottawas
Why Bluejay Hops
Children's book retells the Skokomish traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-5.
Related Material: Lesson Plan.