Describing her first encounters with contemporary Indigenous literature in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Okanagan writer and educator Jeannette Armstrong remembers listening to Duke Redbird read his poems on CBC radio, or hunting through Indian newspapers to search out poems “scattered like gems” in their pages. To her, these works reflected “[n]ot unrequited love and romance, not longing for motherland, not taming the wilderness nor pastoral beauty … nor placing the immigrant self,” standard themes of Canadian literary criticism at the time, but rather “our own collective colonized heritage of loss, pain, anger and resistance, and of our pride and identity as Native.” Armstrong defines the early stages of a literature in Canada which is ...
Advisors: Kathleen J. Renk.Committee members: Melissa Adams-Campbell; Ibis Gomez-Vega.In the current...
This dissertation reads the spaces of connection, overlap, and distinction between nêhiyaw (Cree) po...
This thesis considers the critical implications of a cross-cultural reading of First Nations women’s...
Jeannette Armstrong is an internationally recognized writer, teacher, artist, sculptor, and activist...
Indigenous writers today are the living legacy of our elders and ancestors who survived Indian resid...
"Delgamuukw. Sixties Scoop. Bill C-31. Blood quantum. Appropriation. Two-Spirit. Tsilhqot’in. Status...
Literature offers the opportunity to encounter worlds beyond one’s own circumstances, environment, a...
The present essay is dedicated to reflecting upon Jeannette Armstrong’s Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water,...
From the late fifteenth century onward the new world has been described, imagined, and created via t...
This article explores selected poems from Dumont’s A Really Good Brown Girl and The Pemmican Eaters ...
This thesis is concerned with contexts of Aboriginal textuality and the discursive, critical, and po...
Dr. Armstrong is Syilx Okanagan. As an award-winning writer and activist, novelist, and poet, she is...
This study attempts to reach toward a critical understanding of selected contemporary Native Canadia...
Dispossessed Indigeneity: Literary Excavations of Internalized Colonialism begins with the premise t...
First Nations, Metis and Inuit writers must, in many respects, be the yard-stick against which the r...
Advisors: Kathleen J. Renk.Committee members: Melissa Adams-Campbell; Ibis Gomez-Vega.In the current...
This dissertation reads the spaces of connection, overlap, and distinction between nêhiyaw (Cree) po...
This thesis considers the critical implications of a cross-cultural reading of First Nations women’s...
Jeannette Armstrong is an internationally recognized writer, teacher, artist, sculptor, and activist...
Indigenous writers today are the living legacy of our elders and ancestors who survived Indian resid...
"Delgamuukw. Sixties Scoop. Bill C-31. Blood quantum. Appropriation. Two-Spirit. Tsilhqot’in. Status...
Literature offers the opportunity to encounter worlds beyond one’s own circumstances, environment, a...
The present essay is dedicated to reflecting upon Jeannette Armstrong’s Enwhisteetkwa Walk in Water,...
From the late fifteenth century onward the new world has been described, imagined, and created via t...
This article explores selected poems from Dumont’s A Really Good Brown Girl and The Pemmican Eaters ...
This thesis is concerned with contexts of Aboriginal textuality and the discursive, critical, and po...
Dr. Armstrong is Syilx Okanagan. As an award-winning writer and activist, novelist, and poet, she is...
This study attempts to reach toward a critical understanding of selected contemporary Native Canadia...
Dispossessed Indigeneity: Literary Excavations of Internalized Colonialism begins with the premise t...
First Nations, Metis and Inuit writers must, in many respects, be the yard-stick against which the r...
Advisors: Kathleen J. Renk.Committee members: Melissa Adams-Campbell; Ibis Gomez-Vega.In the current...
This dissertation reads the spaces of connection, overlap, and distinction between nêhiyaw (Cree) po...
This thesis considers the critical implications of a cross-cultural reading of First Nations women’s...