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Ulirnaisigutiit : an Inuktitut-English dictionary of Northern Quebec, Labrador and Eastern Arctic dialects (with an English-Inuktitut index)

Ulirnaisigutiit : an Inuktitut-English dictionary of Northern Quebec, Labrador and Eastern Arctic dialects (with an English-Inuktitut index)

Lucien Schneider

An English–Inuktitut dictionary of dialects spoken Northern Quebec, Labrador, and the Eastern Arctic.

Subjects: Northern Quebec, Eastern Arctic, Indigenous peoples, Inuit, Inuktitut, Inuktitut dialects, Inuktitut Dictionary, Inuktitut language, Labrador

  • Kind
    • Printed document
  • Access
    • Print Document
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
Umiujaq. ᐅᒥᐅᔭᖅ. Inuit Views on the Landscape. ᐃᓄᐃᑦ ᓯᓚᒥ ᑕᑯᒡᓇᓂᒡᓇ

Umiujaq. ᐅᒥᐅᔭᖅ. Inuit Views on the Landscape. ᐃᓄᐃᑦ ᓯᓚᒥ ᑕᑯᒡᓇᓂᒡᓇ

Fabienne Joliet

Trilingual album (French, Inuktitut, English) of amateur photographs taken in the region of Imiujaq (Nunavik) and addressing the idea of landscape among the Inuit.
(Fabienne Joliet, Montréal, Imaginaire|Nord, coll. «Isberg», 2012, 150 p.)

Subjects: Landscapes, Photographs, Inuit, Nunavik

  • Kind
    • Free - Open Access
  • Access
    • Open Access
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
What I remember, what I know: The life of a high Arctic exile

What I remember, what I know: The life of a high Arctic exile

Larry Audlaluk

Larry Audlaluk was born in Uugaqsiuvik, a traditional settlement west of Inujjuak in northern Quebec, or Nunavik. He was almost three years old when his family was chosen by the government to be one of seven Inuit families relocated from Nunavik to the High Arctic in the early 1950s.They were promised a land of plenty. They were given an inhospitable polar desert. (Larry Audlaluk, Iqaluit, Inhabit Media, 2020.)

Subjects: Cultural identity, Inuit, Nunavik

  • Kind
    • Free - BAnQ Subscribers
  • Access
    • BAnQ Subscribers
  • Domain
Wrestling with colonialism on steroids: Quebec Inuit fight for their homeland

Wrestling with colonialism on steroids: Quebec Inuit fight for their homeland

Zebedee Nungak

In this book, Zebedee Nungak provides his account of The Battle of James Bay from 1971-1975, where Inuit and Cree communities fought for their lands and waters against the Quebec government’s James Bay hydro project. (Zebedee Nungak, Montreal, Véhicule Press, 2017, 129p.)

Subjects: Indigenous authors, Inuit, James Bay, Quebec, Colonialism

  • Kind
    • Printed document
  • Access
    • Print Document
  • Domain
    • Humanities and Social Sciences
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