Métis Week Resource List
Posted on: Nov 15, 2021In celebration of Métis Week and the IKRC’s talk with poet, writer, and professor, Marilyn Dumont, CUE Library has put together a list of resources that cover many aspects of Métis history, politics, identity, and culture.
Thank you to Danielle Powder, IKRC Manager, for help in selecting and highlighting these resources.
- A Girl Called Echo by Katherena Vermette
- A Really Good Brown Girl by Marilyn Dumont
- Approaching Fire by Michelle Porter
- Belonging Métis by Catherine Lynn Richardson
- Eastern Métis: Chronicling and Reclaiming a Denied Past by Michel Bouchard
- Green Girl Dreams Mountains by Marilyn Dumont
- Halfbreed by Maria Campbell
- Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, Métis & Inuit Issues in Canada by Chelsea Vowel
- Initiations: A Selection of Young Native Writings by Marilyn Dumont
- Métis Legacy : Michif Culture, Heritage, and Folkways by Lawrence J Barkwell
- Métis Pioneers Doris Jeanne MacKinnon
- Métis Spirits by Deborah L Delaronde
- Métis Politics and Governance in Canada by Kelly Saunders & Janique Dubois
- Métis-Crown Relations: Rights, Identity, Jurisdiction and Governance by Frederica Wilson & Melanie Mallet
- Quiet Revolution West: The Rebirth of Métis Nationalism by John Weinstein
- Stepping Up by Jody Kechego, Jo Calvert & Marilyn Dumont
- Stories of the Road Allowance People by Maria Campbell
- Stray Dog Moccasins by Marilyn Dumont & Cherie Dimaline
- That Tongued Belonging by Marilyn Dumont
- The North-West is Our Mother by Jean Teillet
- The Pemmican Eaters by Marilyn Dumont
- Une Vraie Bonne Petite Métisse: Poésie by Marilyn Dumont
- We Learn From the Sun by David Bouchard & Kristy Cameron
See the full catalogue list: https://concordia.on.worldcat.org/list/17300921
More Resources:
- Les Femmes Michif Otipemisiwak (LFMO)
- Metis In Space by Molly Swain & Chelsea Vowel (Podcast)
- Victim of Deceit and Self-Deceit: The Role of the State in Undermining Jim Brady’s Radical Métis Socialist Politics by Molly Swain
- Where No Michif Has Gone Before: The Form and Function of Métis Futurisms by Chelsea Vowel