Contains fulltext : 284863.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)This essay demonstrates how Richard Wagamese employs oral storytelling techniques to make the complex idea of Indigenous dispossession sensually and intellectually accessible to readers of his novel, Indian Horse. The Wabseemoong First Nation writer depicts the devastating effects of white entitlement when rendering character Saul Indian Horse’s experiences in Canada’s residential schools and the effect those schools had on his subsequent life. Using narrative analysis, it will be shown how Saul loses his ability to perceive places as being alive and resonant, and is thereby disposse...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
In this project paper, I explore the domination and subjugation of Indigenous people that the Canadi...
This essay frames systemic patterns of mental abuse against women of color and Indigenous women on T...
This essay demonstrates how Richard Wagamese employs oral storytelling techni...
The narratives of Anishinaubae author Richard Wagamese, whether autobiographical or fictional, are r...
This paper purports to explore the narrative devices which enable the Anishinaabe Canadian author Ri...
Indian Residential Schools were a “central element” in “Canada’s Aboriginal policy” for over a centu...
This article aims to contribute to discourses of healing, Indigenous resurgence and spiritual regene...
This research explores representations of colonial trauma and Indigenous heal-ings in a selection of...
[Abstract] This paper studies how the Native Canadian author Tomson Highway depicts the terrible eff...
Indian residential schools operated in Canada from the 1880s to the closing decades of the 20th cent...
Whilst it is the heinous acts of physical violence that are often foregrounded when imagining fronti...
William Yellow Robe Jr.’s Where the Pavement Ends: Five Native American Plays is his representative ...
Bibliography: pages 124-132.This study explores the symptoms of alienation witnessed in Indian chara...
Peer reviewedThe history of relations between the Indigenous populations of Canada and its colonial ...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
In this project paper, I explore the domination and subjugation of Indigenous people that the Canadi...
This essay frames systemic patterns of mental abuse against women of color and Indigenous women on T...
This essay demonstrates how Richard Wagamese employs oral storytelling techni...
The narratives of Anishinaubae author Richard Wagamese, whether autobiographical or fictional, are r...
This paper purports to explore the narrative devices which enable the Anishinaabe Canadian author Ri...
Indian Residential Schools were a “central element” in “Canada’s Aboriginal policy” for over a centu...
This article aims to contribute to discourses of healing, Indigenous resurgence and spiritual regene...
This research explores representations of colonial trauma and Indigenous heal-ings in a selection of...
[Abstract] This paper studies how the Native Canadian author Tomson Highway depicts the terrible eff...
Indian residential schools operated in Canada from the 1880s to the closing decades of the 20th cent...
Whilst it is the heinous acts of physical violence that are often foregrounded when imagining fronti...
William Yellow Robe Jr.’s Where the Pavement Ends: Five Native American Plays is his representative ...
Bibliography: pages 124-132.This study explores the symptoms of alienation witnessed in Indian chara...
Peer reviewedThe history of relations between the Indigenous populations of Canada and its colonial ...
Subjectivity coded in Indigenous and non-Indigenous minds maintains a fictional spectre of Aborigina...
In this project paper, I explore the domination and subjugation of Indigenous people that the Canadi...
This essay frames systemic patterns of mental abuse against women of color and Indigenous women on T...