| Michael D. McNally - 2000 - 265 pages
The Ojibwe or Anishinaabe are a native American people of the northern Great Lakes region. 19th-century missionaries promoted the singing of evangelical hymns translated into ... | |
| Michael McCafferty - 2008 - 336 pages
A linguistic history of Native American place-names in Indiana In tracing the roots of Indiana place names, Michael McCafferty focuses on those created and used by local Native ... | |
| Graham Harvey - 2005 - 276 pages
How have human cultures engaged with and thought about animals, plants, rocks, clouds, and other elements of their natural surroundings? Do animals and other natural objects ... | |
| Graham Harvey - 2006 - 280 pages
How have human cultures engaged with and thought about animals, plants, rocks, clouds, and other elements of their natural surroundings? Do animals and other natural objects ... | |
| Graham Harvey - 2005 - 276 pages
How have human cultures engaged with and thought about animals, plants, rocks, clouds, and other elements of their natural surroundings? Do animals and other natural objects ... | |
| Brenda J. Child - 1998 - 184 pages
Looks at the experiences of children at three off-reservation Indian boarding schools in the early years of the twentieth century. | |
| James Howard Cox - 2006 - 364 pages
In "Muting White Noise," James H. Cox considers how Native authors have liberated our imaginations from colonial narratives. Cox takes his title from Sherman Alexie, for whom ... | |
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