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The Anguish of Snails: Native American Folklore in the West
The Artificial Horizon: Imagining the Blue Mountains
The Canoe Is the People: Indigenous Navigation in the Pacific
Accompanying Materials: Teacher's Guide; Learner's Text; Pacific Map; Navigation
Coast Salish Laws Relating to Child and Caregiver Nurturance and Safety Toolkit
Coyote's Eyes: Native Cognition Styles
Crazy Man and the Plums
The Cry of the Chickadee
The Curtain Within: Haida Social and Mythical Discourse
Fear and Temptation: The Image of the Indigene in Canadian, Australian and New Zealand Literatures
The First American Women
First Nations Curatorial Incubator
The Future of Print Narratives and Comic Holotropes: A Conversation with Gerald Vizenor
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).
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.
How "They" See "Us": Native American Images of Tourists
Imagining Difference: Legend, Curse and Spectacle in a Canadian Mining Town
Indigenous Knowledge and Our Connection to the Land
Lesson plans which can be used with a variety of grades.
Indigenous Storytelling with Elder Hazel
Iroquois Creation Story: John Arthur Gibson; and J.N.B. Hewitt's Myth of the Earth Grasper
John Wayne's Teeth: Speech, Sound and Representation in Smoke Signals and Imagining Indians
Lessons from the Earth and Beyond: Bringing Indigenous Knowledge Systems into the Classroom: Educator Resources
Website includes curriculum connections, lesson plans and inquiry-based activities for primary, junior and intermediate grades for three topics: lessons from the earth, lessons from the water, and lessons from beyond.
Living Sideways: Social Themes and Social Relationships in Native American Trickster Tales
A Man who Became Black - the Ship-Totem Myth
[Module 8]: The Spiritual and the Aesthetic in the Circumpolar World
Mount Diablo as Myth and Reality: An Indian History Convoluted
Myths of the North in the Canadian Ethos
Nápi and the City: Blackfoot Creation Narratives Revisited
Ogawa v. Hokkaido (Governor), the Ainu Communal Property Trust (Trust Assets ) Litigation
On Domestication, Permanent and Temporary: Qoranje, Elwelu, and Akweqor
An analysis of two Yupik traditional stories and what they teach about Indigenous beliefs and connections to both tame and wild animals.
One River, Two Cultures: A History of the Bella Coola Valley
"The Orders of the Dreamed": George Nelson on Cree and Northern Ojibwa Religion and Myth, 1823
"The Orders of the Dreamed": George Nelson on Cree and Northern Ojibwa Religion and Myth, 1823
Part of the Land, Part of the Water: A History of the Yukon Indians
Postindian Survivance and the Trickster Condition of In-Betweenness: Reading Sherman Alexie and Gerald Vizenor in the World of Postmodernism
Primitive Echoes: The Capturing and Conjuring of Native American Music
Promoting Healthy Medication Use Through Indigenous Knowledge Sharing: A Coyote Story
Looks at the creation of a traditional Coyote story as a strategy to address Polypharmacy, "when multiple medications are being taken and the benefits no longer outweigh the risks", for Indigenous patients.