A colleague and I were asked recently to speak at the Midwest regional conference for LGBTQ and ally-identified college students. We teach an Indigenous language (Anishinaabemowin), one of us has lived in a same-sex relationship, both of us are allies, but the politics and theory of the community are daunting. As we looked across a sea of young faces, empowered by proximity, we saw hope and we said, gego bigidnike aanji\u27igwa. This phrase, don\u27t let them change you, has long served us teaching about identity, freedom, and survival in Native communities and was perfect for the gathering of young LGBTQ students and supporters. It is also part of the underlying theme of the essays in Queer Indigenous Studies as they explore the way sc...
Writing Indian, Native Conversations provides keen discussion across three decades of Native America...
Review of We Are Our Language: An Ethnography of Language Revitalization in a Northern Athabaskan Co...
Indigenous queer people often experience a conflict in identity, feeling torn between long-standing ...
A colleague and I were asked recently to speak at the Midwest regional conference for LGBTQ and ally...
The editors of this volume recognize politics, activism, and culture as three areas where Indigenous...
Lester Brown\u27s edited volume acquaints social workers with two spirits, that is, those Native A...
The eighteen essays collected in Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision provide, finally and in one ...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
As its editors note, this collection is the first work on language ideology especially devoted to Na...
Devon Mihesuah has written a powerful book about the impact of colonization on the indigenous people...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Review of Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives: Life Stories and Essays by the F...
This book grew out of the ninth biennial Maple Leaf and Eagle Conference on North American Studies h...
Indigenous American sexual minorities and alternatively gendered voices went underground due to Euro...
Mark Rifkin\u27s second monograph. When Did Indians Become Straight, is an intellectually rigorous a...
Writing Indian, Native Conversations provides keen discussion across three decades of Native America...
Review of We Are Our Language: An Ethnography of Language Revitalization in a Northern Athabaskan Co...
Indigenous queer people often experience a conflict in identity, feeling torn between long-standing ...
A colleague and I were asked recently to speak at the Midwest regional conference for LGBTQ and ally...
The editors of this volume recognize politics, activism, and culture as three areas where Indigenous...
Lester Brown\u27s edited volume acquaints social workers with two spirits, that is, those Native A...
The eighteen essays collected in Reclaiming Indigenous Voice and Vision provide, finally and in one ...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
As its editors note, this collection is the first work on language ideology especially devoted to Na...
Devon Mihesuah has written a powerful book about the impact of colonization on the indigenous people...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Review of Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives: Life Stories and Essays by the F...
This book grew out of the ninth biennial Maple Leaf and Eagle Conference on North American Studies h...
Indigenous American sexual minorities and alternatively gendered voices went underground due to Euro...
Mark Rifkin\u27s second monograph. When Did Indians Become Straight, is an intellectually rigorous a...
Writing Indian, Native Conversations provides keen discussion across three decades of Native America...
Review of We Are Our Language: An Ethnography of Language Revitalization in a Northern Athabaskan Co...
Indigenous queer people often experience a conflict in identity, feeling torn between long-standing ...