Aboriginals in Canada
- The Royal Proclamation of 1763 & the Quebec Act of 1774 (25 August 2021)
- Residential Schools (26 June 2021)
- Racism in Canada: Notes (8 June 2020)
- Gabriel Dumont, a Métis Leader (10 May 2018)
- King Philip’s War (20 September 2015)
- Bernard-Anselme and Joseph d’Abbadie: sons of a different mind (16 September 2015)
- Jean-Vincent d’Abbadie, Baron de Saint-Castin (11 September 2015)
- The Métis in Canada (4 June 2015)
- The Red River Settlement (30 May 2015)
- Canada’s Amerindians: Enfranchisement (24 May 2015)
- Residential Schools for Canada’s Amerindians (21 May 2015)
- The Art of Kenojuak Ashevak (19 May 2015)
- Inuit Art (17 May 2015)
- Au pays des jours sans fin (16 May 2015)
- Aboriginals in Canada (14 May 2015)
- The Royal Proclamation of 1763 (Indigenous Foundations) (6 May 2015)
- Louis Riel as Father of Confederation (22 May 2012)
Aboriginals in the United States
- Welsh Native Americans: Madoc’s Story (11 October 2015)
- The Ten Lost Tribes: Native Americans (24 September 2015)
- King Philip’s War (20 September 2015)
- “The Song of Hiawatha,” completed (1 September 2015)
- “The Song of Hiawatha,” as Amerindian Lore (29 August 2015)
- “The Song of Hiawatha,” a Prologue (27 August 2015)
- Comments on Aboriginal Tales (23 August 2015)
- The Deluge and other Amerindians Myths (21 August 2015)
- Collecting Amerindian Folklore (17 August 2015)
Fiction (Complete text)
- “The Humming-bird and the Crane” (14 August 2015)
- “How the Bear Lost its Tale,” a Cherokee Fable (4 August 2015)
Collections online
- An Argosy of Fables (1921), selected and edited by Frederic Taber Cooper, illustrated by Paul Bransom
- Myths of the Cherokee (1902), James Mooney
© Micheline Walker
22 May 2015
WordPress
Lovely art work. Thanks for stopping by my blog again.
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That art work is lovely and I enjoy dropping in.
Thank you Connie
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Thank you. It’s a fascinating subject and their story must be told. Thank you for writing.
Take care,
Micheline
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What a lovely surprise to see this art work by Kenojuak Ashevak on a blog post. Thank you for keeping her spirit alive.
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Artists live for a very long time…
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