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- Digital Price: $24.00 USD (All sales final)
- Biography
- University of Hawai'i Press
- issue
- Volume 39, Number 3, Summer 2016
- Contributors
- Introduction: Indigenous Conversations about Biography
- Telling stories at the kitchen table, or Lessons from my Father
- Sitting and Listening: Continuing Conversations About Indigenous Biography
- Gathered Together: Listening to Musqueam Lived Experiences
- Grounded in Durable Indigenous Biographies
- Mānava: The Biography of Living Objects
- Te Ao Hurihuri O Ngā Taonga Tuku Iho: The Evolving Worlds of Our Ancestral Treasures
- Feeling, Disrupting
- Subjectivity and Comparison
- Making Connections and Attachments: Writing the Lives of Two Nineteenth-Century Aboriginal Men
- Stories: Making Soup, Baking Bread
- Yarning with Other Tough Old Women
- “They were tough, those old women before us”: The Power of Gossip in Isabel Meadows’s Narratives
- On Familiarity, Settler Colonialism, and Shifting Narratives
- Biographies of Marble, Wood, Paint, and Paper
- “Kei Wareware”: Remembering Te Rauparaha
- Everything Is Speaking
- Telling “Us” in the “Days Destined to You”
- Life-Telling: Indigenous Oral Autobiography and the Performance of Relation
- Tubitsinakururu: Listen Closely
- Night Ceremony
- A Conversation with Helen Haig-Brown, Lisa Jackson, and Elle-Máijá Apiniskim Tailfeathers, with Some Thoughts to Frame the Conversation
- Indigenous Biography, Genealogy, and Webs of Relation
- For you, K. Tsianina Lomawaima
- A Principle of Relativity through Indigenous Biography
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