Keyword [American indian] Result: 101 - 120 | Page: 6 of 7 |
101. | The American Indian art world and the (re-)production of the primitive: Hopi pottery and potters |
102. | American Indian tribal colleges: Mission statements, degrees and certificates, and American Indian courses |
103. | Native American Indian adolescents: Response to a culturally tailored, school -based substance abuse intervention |
104. | Sentimental Ideology, Women's Pedagogy, and American Indian Women's Writing: 1815-1921 |
105. | Conceptualizing American Indian literary theory: Oral theories and written traditions |
106. | Homelands: Politics, identity, and place in the American Indian novel |
107. | Seeing red: Anger, feminity, and the American Indian of nineteenth-century sentimental literature |
108. | A Public History Meditation: Collaboration's Role in Public History with Two of Louisiana's American Indian Tribe |
109. | Evaluation of cultural identification and coping strategies as predictors of percentage of graduate degree completed by American Indian students |
110. | The politics of disease: Imperial medicine and the American Indian, 1797--1871 |
111. | Rationalizing epidemics: Historical accounts of American Indian health disparities |
112. | The rhetoric of persuasion in selected works of Mary Austin |
113. | Culturally responsive computing for American Indian youth: Making activities with electronic textiles in the Native Studies classroom |
114. | Exploring American Indian student-teacher relationships through reflective narratives |
115. | Red and white and blue: Whiteness and identity in American Indian fiction |
116. | Qualitative evaluation of violence exposure among American Indian and Alaska Native children |
117. | 'Joined together in history': Politics and place in African American and American Indian women's writing |
118. | Painting the American Indian at the turn of the century: Joseph Henry Sharp and his patrons, William H. Holmes, Phoebe A. Hearst, and Joseph G. Butler, Jr |
119. | Re -wor(l)ding Indian survival: Language and sovereignty in Native American literature |
120. | Dance: Celebration and resistance. Native American Indian intertribal powwow performance |
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