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Native American and Indigenous Studies
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Native American and Indigenous Studies
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Talkin’ Up to the White Woman
Indigenous Women and Feminism
Aileen Moreton-Robinson
2021 Fall
A twentieth-anniversary edition of this tour de force in feminism and Indigenous studies, now with a new preface
Remembering Our Intimacies
Moʻolelo, Aloha ʻĀina, and Ea
Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio
2021 Fall
Recovering Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) relationality and belonging in the land, memory, and body of Native Hawai’i
Grandmother’s Pigeon
Louise Erdrich
2021 Fall
A grandmother’s sudden departure leaves her family with an even more puzzling, and wondrous, surprise in this enchanting story from the National Book Award–winning author—at last back in print
Written by the Body
Gender Expansiveness and Indigenous Non-Cis Masculinities
Lisa Tatonetti
2021 Fall
Examining the expansive nature of Indigenous gender representations in history, literature, and film
As We Have Always Done
Indigenous Freedom through Radical Resistance
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
2021 Spring
How to build Indigenous resistance movements that refuse the destructive thinking of settler colonialism
The Range Eternal
Louise Erdrich
2020 Fall
The story of a girlhood lived in the glow of a woodstove from one of the country’s most distinguished and beloved authors, now back in print
In the Night of Memory
A Novel
Linda LeGarde Grover
2020 Fall
Two lost sisters find family, and themselves, among the voices of an Ojibwe reservation
Hungry Listening
Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies
Dylan Robinson
2020 Spring
Reimagining how we understand and write about the Indigenous listening experience
Walking the Old Road
A People’s History of Chippewa City and the Grand Marais Anishinaabe
Staci Lola Drouillard
2019 Fall
The story of a once vibrant, now vanished off-reservation Ojibwe village—and a vital chapter of the history of the North Shore
Johnny’s Pheasant
Cheryl Minnema
2019 Fall
An encounter with a pheasant (which may or may not be sleeping) takes a surprising turn in this sweetly serious and funny story of a Native American boy and his grandma
Queering Colonial Natal
Indigeneity and the Violence of Belonging in Southern Africa
T. J. Tallie
2019 Fall
How were indigenous social practices deemed queer and aberrant by colonial forces?
Standing with Standing Rock
Voices from the #NoDAPL Movement
Nick Estes and Jaskiran Dhillon, Editors
2019 Spring
Dispatches of radical political engagement from people taking a stand against the Dakota Access Pipeline
Translated Nation
Rewriting the Dakhóta Oyáte
Christopher Pexa
2019 Spring
How authors rendered Dakhóta philosophy by literary means to encode ethical and political connectedness and sovereign life within a settler surveillance state
The Fourth World
An Indian Reality
George Manuel and Michael Posluns
2018 Fall
A foundational work of radical anticolonialism, back in print
Gichi Bitobig, Grand Marais
Early Accounts of the Anishinaabeg and the North Shore Fur Trade
Timothy Cochrane
2018 Fall
The journals of two clerks of the American Fur Company recall a lost moment in the history of the fur trade and the Anishinaabeg along Lake Superior’s North Shore
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