The eighteen essays collected in Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision provide, finally and in one volume, a substantive and reasonably comprehensive analysis by the first generation of Indigenous scholars of the present and future role of Indigenous Knowledge and the emerging Indigenous cultural renaissance in the global context of neocolonial Western culture and science. The book springs from an International Summer Institute at the University of Saskatchewan on the cultural restoration of oppressed Indigenous peoples held in 1996 and attended by mostly Indigenous scholars from Canada, the US, India, and New Zealand. This is not yet another book, produced by Western scientists, preoccupied with the current fashion of proving whether Indi...
As its editors note, this collection is the first work on language ideology especially devoted to Na...
From our current vantage point, the true legacy of Vine Deloria Jr.\u27s scholarship and activism ca...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
The eighteen essays collected in Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision provide, finally and in one ...
This text comprises a book review of Visioning a Mi’kmaw Humanities: Indigenizing the Academy edited...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
The fertile mind of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has produced essays, lectures, and papers on an array of iss...
Science and Native American Communities, a provocative collection of essays from an unprecedented 19...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
This collection of writings by aboriginal authors, all of whom are academics from a wide range of di...
Susan Miller and James Riding In position this anthology as the first to collect historical work fro...
This paper is a review of author Jennifer Wemigwans’ book, A Digital Bundle: Protecting and Promotin...
Metis scholar and activist Jo-Ann Episkenew examines the potential of literature to assist Canadian ...
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn is a Dakota who, born and raised to adulthood on the Crow Creek Indian Reservati...
Reclaiming Indigenous Research in Higher Education challenges basic assumptions of Western methodolo...
As its editors note, this collection is the first work on language ideology especially devoted to Na...
From our current vantage point, the true legacy of Vine Deloria Jr.\u27s scholarship and activism ca...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
The eighteen essays collected in Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision provide, finally and in one ...
This text comprises a book review of Visioning a Mi’kmaw Humanities: Indigenizing the Academy edited...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
The fertile mind of Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has produced essays, lectures, and papers on an array of iss...
Science and Native American Communities, a provocative collection of essays from an unprecedented 19...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
This collection of writings by aboriginal authors, all of whom are academics from a wide range of di...
Susan Miller and James Riding In position this anthology as the first to collect historical work fro...
This paper is a review of author Jennifer Wemigwans’ book, A Digital Bundle: Protecting and Promotin...
Metis scholar and activist Jo-Ann Episkenew examines the potential of literature to assist Canadian ...
Elizabeth Cook-Lynn is a Dakota who, born and raised to adulthood on the Crow Creek Indian Reservati...
Reclaiming Indigenous Research in Higher Education challenges basic assumptions of Western methodolo...
As its editors note, this collection is the first work on language ideology especially devoted to Na...
From our current vantage point, the true legacy of Vine Deloria Jr.\u27s scholarship and activism ca...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...