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Alien Language: Indian Words Mediation and Representation in American Indian Contemporary Fiction
Alutiiq Ethnicity
American Indian Literature: A Tradition of Renewal
The Anthropology of Northwest Coast Oral Traditions Bibliographic Essay
[Artistry in Native American Myths]
The Beginning of the Cree World
The traditional story of how Wisakedjak caused the great flood and how, with the help of Muskrat, he was able to remake the world.
Extract from Native Voices edited by Freda Ahenakew, Breanda Gardipy, and Barbara Lafond.
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Chance and Ritual: The Gambler in the Texts of Gerald Vizenor
Changing the Subject: Objectivity, Trickster and the Transformation of the Western Academy
Circularity, Myth, and Storytelling in the Short Fiction of Leslie Marmon Silko
Circularity, Myth, and Storytelling in the Short Fiction of Leslie Marmon Silko
The Codical Warrior: The Codification of American Indian Warrior Experience in American Culture
Coming To Life: Native American Cultural Renewal & Emerging Identity in Michigan Ojibwe Narratives and in Erdrich's The Antelope Wife
Coyote, He/She Was Going There: Sex and Gender
in Native American Trickster Stories
Cry For Luck: Sacred Song and Speech Among the Yurok, Hupa, and Karok Indians of Northwestern California
Dreaming of Double Woman: The Ambivalent Role of the Female Artist in North American Indian Myth
First Nations Identity
Fleur Pillager’s Bear Identity in the Novels of
Louise Erdrich
From Bobtail to Brer Rabbit: Native American Influences on Uncle Remus
From Fish Weir to Waterfall
[From Our Eyes: Learning From Indigenous Peoples]
A Gift From the Little People
Billy Wapass Jr. presents his family's version of the ancient legend that depicts the origin of the Hand Games.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.13.
Gooniyandi Stories of Early Contact with Whites
Halfact
Harold of Orange: A Screenplay
He Said / She Said: Writing Oral Tradition in John Gunn's "Ko-pot Ka-nat" and Leslie Silko's
How Can This Be Cinderella if There is No Glass Slipper? Native American “Fairy Tales”
How Squire Coyote Brought Fire to the Cahrocs
Indian Fall: The Last Great Days of the Plains Cree and Blackfoot Confederacy
Indian Legends: Nanabush, the Ojibbeway Saviour. Moosh-Kuh-Ung, or, The Flood
Klee Wyck: The Eye of the Other
Focuses on several facets of Emily Carr's book Klee Wyck: the feminist tone; the effect of modernism on native life; examination of the sketches; the message of disintegration, loss and of hope.
Ko-pat Ka-nat
ȽÁU,WELṈEW̱
WSANEC (Saanich) great flood story. Text in a mixture of English and SENĆOŦEN.
Related material: Lesson Plan by Shauna White and Kathryn Godfrey appropriate for Grade 6 language arts/ social studies.