Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities
The growing body of Indigenous literature is serving to heal individuals who are dealing with the legacy of colonialism and residential schools, and contribute to strong communities, says Dr. Jo-Ann Episkenew, Head of the English Department at First Nations University of Canada. She will discuss the...
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External Relations, University of Regina
2007
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ftunivregina:oai:ourspace.uregina.ca:10294/4671 2023-10-09T21:51:31+02:00 Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities External Relations, University of Regina 2007-02-23 text/html text/css http://hdl.handle.net/10294/4671 English eng External Relations, University of Regina http://hdl.handle.net/10294/4671 Jo-Ann Episkenew First Nations University of Canada Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank Centre for Continuing Education Credit Studies Division Creating Community: A Roundtable on Canadian Aboriginal Literatures Other 2007 ftunivregina 2023-09-16T22:13:43Z The growing body of Indigenous literature is serving to heal individuals who are dealing with the legacy of colonialism and residential schools, and contribute to strong communities, says Dr. Jo-Ann Episkenew, Head of the English Department at First Nations University of Canada. She will discuss the role Aboriginal literature plays in healing both individuals and Aboriginal communities in the latest installment of the Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank lecture series. Staff no Other/Unknown Material First Nations oURspace - The University of Regina's Institutional Repository Canada |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
oURspace - The University of Regina's Institutional Repository |
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ftunivregina |
language |
English |
topic |
Jo-Ann Episkenew First Nations University of Canada Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank Centre for Continuing Education Credit Studies Division Creating Community: A Roundtable on Canadian Aboriginal Literatures |
spellingShingle |
Jo-Ann Episkenew First Nations University of Canada Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank Centre for Continuing Education Credit Studies Division Creating Community: A Roundtable on Canadian Aboriginal Literatures External Relations, University of Regina Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
topic_facet |
Jo-Ann Episkenew First Nations University of Canada Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank Centre for Continuing Education Credit Studies Division Creating Community: A Roundtable on Canadian Aboriginal Literatures |
description |
The growing body of Indigenous literature is serving to heal individuals who are dealing with the legacy of colonialism and residential schools, and contribute to strong communities, says Dr. Jo-Ann Episkenew, Head of the English Department at First Nations University of Canada. She will discuss the role Aboriginal literature plays in healing both individuals and Aboriginal communities in the latest installment of the Nourishing Thoughts at the Food Bank lecture series. Staff no |
format |
Other/Unknown Material |
author |
External Relations, University of Regina |
author_facet |
External Relations, University of Regina |
author_sort |
External Relations, University of Regina |
title |
Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
title_short |
Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
title_full |
Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
title_fullStr |
Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
title_full_unstemmed |
Release: Aboriginal Literature Helps to Heal Communities |
title_sort |
release: aboriginal literature helps to heal communities |
publisher |
External Relations, University of Regina |
publishDate |
2007 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10294/4671 |
geographic |
Canada |
geographic_facet |
Canada |
genre |
First Nations |
genre_facet |
First Nations |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/10294/4671 |
_version_ |
1779314640109436928 |