Home
About Us
Journal
Conferences
Contact Us
Current IssueArchived Issues
 
   
 

Vol. 26

Indigenous Peoples: Historical Understanding, Contemporary Challenges and Canadian Approaches

Guest Editor: Tracie Scott

. October 2011

Tracie Scott - Birkbeck College, University of London

Introduction: Between Past and Future pp. 1-8

Tricia Logan - Royal Holloway, University of London

Memory of Atrocity in Canada: How do you Engage Canadian Civil Society in Truth and Reconciliation? pp. 9-25

Heather Devine - University of Calgary

The Alberta Dis-Advantage: Métis Issues and the Public Discourse in Wild Rose Country pp. 26-62

Robert E. Sanderson and James W. Parins - Associate Directors of the Sequoyah National Research Center,

University of Arkansas at Little Rock

Through Native Eyes:  Reliability of Sources in Indian Studies pp. 63-73

Gundula Wilke -University of Osnabrueck

Weesageechak Meets Nanabush, or: Why Does Native Drama Mean For Canada What The Native American Novel Represents For The USA? pp. 74-90

Sarah Henzi - University of Montreal

Unveiling the Rhetorics of Apology: Strategies of Reappropriation in First Nations Literatures pp. 91-116

 


Acknowledgements

We are grateful for the generous financial and other encouragement from the Government of Canada (London High Commission) that has enabled both the publication of this journal and the maintenance of the London Conference for Canadian Studies (LCCS).

Authors alone are responsible for the opinions expressed in the articles. The Journal is published by the London Conference for Canadian Studies.