Linguists and students of reservation-period Indian lore should welcome this finely crafted book. The heart of the work is a series of recordings of Alice Ahenakew, a prominent elderly Plains Cree woman from northern Saskatchewan. These are the memoirs of her life, lived in a haunted half-way world between a subarctic foraging culture and the twentieth- century industrial West
RESPONSE TO REVIEW Jennifer S. H. Brown reviewed Edward Ahenakew\u27s Voices of the Plains Cree (rep...
Life Stages and Native Women unearths the vital teachings of fourteen diverse Indigenous elder oral ...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Linguists and students of reservation-period Indian lore should welcome this finely crafted book. Th...
The late Sarah Whitecalf was born on the Moosomin Reserve in Western Saskatchewan in 1919 and grew u...
Voices of the Plains Cree was first published in 1973 by McClelland & Stewart. As it has been out of...
Metis scholar and activist Jo-Ann Episkenew examines the potential of literature to assist Canadian ...
This collection of essays acknowledges and celebrates Aboriginal oral traditions in contemporary Abo...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
Organized as a series of imagined conversations between Virginia Sutter and her great-grandmother ...
This book is tremendously valuable as a tool for understanding not only linguistic research but for ...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
Within contemporary Aboriginal discourse, there is a growing tendency to ignore the multilayered his...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
In recent years a number of related academic fields have explored the connections between museums an...
RESPONSE TO REVIEW Jennifer S. H. Brown reviewed Edward Ahenakew\u27s Voices of the Plains Cree (rep...
Life Stages and Native Women unearths the vital teachings of fourteen diverse Indigenous elder oral ...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Linguists and students of reservation-period Indian lore should welcome this finely crafted book. Th...
The late Sarah Whitecalf was born on the Moosomin Reserve in Western Saskatchewan in 1919 and grew u...
Voices of the Plains Cree was first published in 1973 by McClelland & Stewart. As it has been out of...
Metis scholar and activist Jo-Ann Episkenew examines the potential of literature to assist Canadian ...
This collection of essays acknowledges and celebrates Aboriginal oral traditions in contemporary Abo...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
Organized as a series of imagined conversations between Virginia Sutter and her great-grandmother ...
This book is tremendously valuable as a tool for understanding not only linguistic research but for ...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
Within contemporary Aboriginal discourse, there is a growing tendency to ignore the multilayered his...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
In recent years a number of related academic fields have explored the connections between museums an...
RESPONSE TO REVIEW Jennifer S. H. Brown reviewed Edward Ahenakew\u27s Voices of the Plains Cree (rep...
Life Stages and Native Women unearths the vital teachings of fourteen diverse Indigenous elder oral ...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...