This project paper discusses the Cree mythology present in Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen. I contend that Highway’s conflation of the two mythological characters, Weesageechak and Weetigo, in the figure of the Fur Queen allows the dramatization of the interaction and confrontation between the aboriginal culture and colonizing culture. Through careful attention to imagistic references to the Cree Weetigo tradition, I contend that the Fur Queen is a complex metaphorical representation of the complicated reality faced by Highway’s characters. Through the Fur Queen, Weesageechak, the trickster, acts as a positive figure overseeing the success of her Aboriginal charges, while the cannibal Weetigo aspects of the Fur Queen represent the ne...
The trickster is a powerful figure of transformation in many societies, including Native Canadian an...
This thesis explores the trickster character through the lens of his role as a cultural hero. The tw...
This thesis works towards deconstructing stereotypical images of Indigenous women that frequent the ...
This project paper discusses the Cree mythology present in Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen. I...
[Abstract] This paper studies how the Native Canadian author Tomson Highway depicts the terrible eff...
This paper explores and compares the ways in which novelist and playwright Tomson Highway and visual...
In this project paper, I explore the domination and subjugation of Indigenous people that the Canadi...
In this thesis I examine the relationship between the healing of cultural trauma and connections to...
Submitted by Michele Fernanda (michele_fernandas@hotmail.com) on 2012-08-15T06:30:29Z No. of bitstre...
This paper analyzes Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen. From the viewpoint of language wider ide...
v, 107 leaves ; 28 cm.This study examines the foundation of contemporary Cree performance, tracing i...
“oskisihcikêwak/New Traditions in Cree Two-Spirit, Gay and Queer Narratives” works in a field where ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Whereas non-Native American fictional fearsome figures...
Nêhiyawîhcikêwin, Plains Cree Culture, is an oral culture that shares their wisdom, insights, teachi...
grantor: University of TorontoLittle attention has been paid to the Contemporary Native Li...
The trickster is a powerful figure of transformation in many societies, including Native Canadian an...
This thesis explores the trickster character through the lens of his role as a cultural hero. The tw...
This thesis works towards deconstructing stereotypical images of Indigenous women that frequent the ...
This project paper discusses the Cree mythology present in Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen. I...
[Abstract] This paper studies how the Native Canadian author Tomson Highway depicts the terrible eff...
This paper explores and compares the ways in which novelist and playwright Tomson Highway and visual...
In this project paper, I explore the domination and subjugation of Indigenous people that the Canadi...
In this thesis I examine the relationship between the healing of cultural trauma and connections to...
Submitted by Michele Fernanda (michele_fernandas@hotmail.com) on 2012-08-15T06:30:29Z No. of bitstre...
This paper analyzes Tomson Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen. From the viewpoint of language wider ide...
v, 107 leaves ; 28 cm.This study examines the foundation of contemporary Cree performance, tracing i...
“oskisihcikêwak/New Traditions in Cree Two-Spirit, Gay and Queer Narratives” works in a field where ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Whereas non-Native American fictional fearsome figures...
Nêhiyawîhcikêwin, Plains Cree Culture, is an oral culture that shares their wisdom, insights, teachi...
grantor: University of TorontoLittle attention has been paid to the Contemporary Native Li...
The trickster is a powerful figure of transformation in many societies, including Native Canadian an...
This thesis explores the trickster character through the lens of his role as a cultural hero. The tw...
This thesis works towards deconstructing stereotypical images of Indigenous women that frequent the ...