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156 maliseet and Research Journal 21.4 (1997): 125–59; J. Ramirez, S. Yuen, and D. Ramey, Final Report: Longitudinal Study of Structured English Immersion Strategy, Early-Exit and Late-Exit Transitional Bilingual Education Programs for Language-Minority Children (Washington dc: United States Department of Education, 1991). 24. See Andrea Bear Nicholas, “Linguistic Decline and the Educational Gap: A Single Solution is Possible in the Education of Indigenous Peoples,” 2009, paper available from the Assembly of First Nations, Ottawa, or the author. 25. Francois Grin, “Economic Considerations in Language Policy,” in An Introduction to Language Policy, Theory and Method, ed. T. Ricento (Oxford: Blackwell’s, 2006), 77–94. 26. Ofelia Garcia, Tove Skutnabb-Kangas, and E. Maria Torres-Guzman, “Weaving Spaces and (De)Constructing Ways for Multilingual Schools: The Actual and the Imagined,” in Imagining Multilingual Schools: Languages in Education and Glocalization , ed. Ofelia Garcia, Tove Skutnabb-Kangas, and E. Maria Torres-Guzman (Clevedon UK: Multilingual Matters, 2006), 3–47. Further Reading maliseet authors Bear, Shirley. Virgin Bones. Toronto: McGilligan Books, 2006. Print. Commander, Brenda. “Maliseets Want Obama to Come to Their Defense.” Bangor (me) Daily News 25 Nov. 2009. Web. 21 Aug. 2011. Nicholas, Andrea Bear. “Gabriel Acquin.” Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online 2000. Web. 19 May 2011. —. “Linguicide: Submersion Education and the Killing of Languages.” Briarpatch 1 Mar. 2011. Web. 15 June 2011. —. “Noel Bear.” Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. 2000. Web. 15 June 2011. —. “The Spirit in the Land: The Native People of Aroostook.” The County, Land of Promise: A Pictorial History of Aroostook County. Norfolk va: Donning, 1989. Print. —. “Warning about the ‘Medicine Wheel’, a New Age Hoax.” 24 Apr. 2007. Kisikew (blog), http://kisikew.blogspot.com/2012/12/medicine-wheel-teaching-hoax.html. Web. 15 June 2011. Paul, Mihku. Look Twice: The Waponahki in Image and Verse. 2009. Exhibit. Abbe Museum, Bar Harbor me. —. 20th Century PowWow Playland. Greenfield Center ny: Bowman Books, 2012. Red Eagle, Henry. Aboriginally Yours, Chief Henry Red Eagle. Greenville me: Moosehead Communications, 1997. Print. Slagger, David. David Slagger Collection of Interviews (readings, transcripts, and recordings). Orono: Maine Folklife Center. 2008–2010. See http://umaine.edu /folklife/archives/collections/mf-153-david-slagger-collection/. Tomah, Francis, et al. “Petition of Maliseets at Kingsclear, N.B., January 10, 1843.” n. pag. Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Fredericton. Print. Further Reading 157 additional reading Garroutte, Eva Marie. Real Indians: Identity and the Survival of Native America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003. Print. Lawrence, Bonita, and Kim Anderson. Strong Women Stories: Native Vision & Community Survival. Toronto: Sumach Press, 2003. Print. Leavitt, Robert M. Maliseet & Micmac [Mi’kmaq]: First Nations of the Maritimes. Fredericton nb: New Ireland Press, 1995. Print. Mallery, Garrick. Picture Writing of the American Indians. Vol. 1. 1888–89 ed. Mineola ny: Dover Publications, 1972. Print. Parker, Everett. Chief Henry Red Eagle: A True Moosehead Legend. Greenville me: Moosehead Communications, 2008. Print. Phillips, Ruth B. “The Collection and Display of Souvenir Arts: Authenticity and the ‘Strictly Commercial.’” The Anthropology of Art: A Reader. Ed. Morgan Perkins and Howard Morphy. Malden ma: Blackwell Publishing, 2006. 431–53. Print. Potts, Dale. “Indian Storyteller in the Mainstream: Henry Perley of Maine and the Pulp-Fiction Market, 1910–1930.” Studies in American Indian Literatures 24.3 (Fall 2012): 53–70. Print. Teeter, Karl V., and Philip S. LeSourd. Tales from Maliseet Country: The Maliseet Texts of Karl V. Teeter. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2007. Print. Upton, L. F. S. “Francis Tomah.” Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online 2000. Web. 17 Aug. 2011. [18.116.63.236] Project MUSE (2024-04-23 21:28 GMT) ...

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