Indians Are Us? is a collection of commentaries on American Indian political and social affairs, written in the truculent tone that readers have come to expect from writer Ward Churchill. Like its predecessors, Fantasies of the Master Race and Struggle far the Land, this latest Churchill project consists largely of polemical pieces hastily compiled from obscure leftist publications
The three books reviewed here--Henry Goldschmidt’s Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Cro...
This collection of essays, a number of which first appeared in a special issue of the journal Film a...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
Deborah L. Madsen REVIEW ESSAY: Expanding Settler Colonial Theory Empire of the People: Settler Colo...
A Contemporary Tribe of Poets Kenneth Lincoln I weave the night, I cross the weft with stars and the...
This review essay examines the books Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in t...
Being asked to review a book from a Native American perspective raises a basic question about the pe...
Genocide of the Mind is hardly the happiest of titles. Not only is the metaphor itself a muddle impo...
In his recent collection of essays, associate curator at the National Museum of the American Indian ...
With the Quincentenary upon us, it was predictable that some groups, once again, would seek to set t...
Review of the book 'The two faces of American freedom', by Aziz Rana, published by Harvard Universit...
REVIEW ESSAY: Naamiwan’s Drum: the Story of a Contested Repatriation of Anishinabe Artefacts (Mauree...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Reviewing: SEEMA SOHI, ECHOES OF MUTINY: RACE, SURVEILLANCE, AND INDIAN ANTI-COLONIALISM IN NORTH AM...
Review of Songs Upon the Rivers: The Buried History of the French-Speaking Canadiens and Métis from ...
The three books reviewed here--Henry Goldschmidt’s Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Cro...
This collection of essays, a number of which first appeared in a special issue of the journal Film a...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...
Deborah L. Madsen REVIEW ESSAY: Expanding Settler Colonial Theory Empire of the People: Settler Colo...
A Contemporary Tribe of Poets Kenneth Lincoln I weave the night, I cross the weft with stars and the...
This review essay examines the books Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in t...
Being asked to review a book from a Native American perspective raises a basic question about the pe...
Genocide of the Mind is hardly the happiest of titles. Not only is the metaphor itself a muddle impo...
In his recent collection of essays, associate curator at the National Museum of the American Indian ...
With the Quincentenary upon us, it was predictable that some groups, once again, would seek to set t...
Review of the book 'The two faces of American freedom', by Aziz Rana, published by Harvard Universit...
REVIEW ESSAY: Naamiwan’s Drum: the Story of a Contested Repatriation of Anishinabe Artefacts (Mauree...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Reviewing: SEEMA SOHI, ECHOES OF MUTINY: RACE, SURVEILLANCE, AND INDIAN ANTI-COLONIALISM IN NORTH AM...
Review of Songs Upon the Rivers: The Buried History of the French-Speaking Canadiens and Métis from ...
The three books reviewed here--Henry Goldschmidt’s Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Cro...
This collection of essays, a number of which first appeared in a special issue of the journal Film a...
Readers will no doubt react favorably to the descriptions of eight unusual people, classified genera...