American Indian Studies (AIS)
Series editor: Jill Doerfler
The American Indian Studies series seeks to develop deeper understandings of American Indian/Indigenous cultures and identities and the place(s) of American Indian/Indigenous people in today’s world. The series is open to a wide variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches. It includes works by junior and senior scholars that significantly contribute to scholarship and are of interest beyond specialized audiences. We are especially interested in works centered in the Great Lakes region in the US/Canada.
Please direct AIS questions and proposals to Jill Doerfler and Elizabeth Demers.
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Stick Houses
Stories
Indigenous Journeys, Transatlantic Perspectives
Relational Worlds in Contemporary Native American Literature
As Sacred to Us
Simon Pokagon’s Birch Bark Stories in Their Contexts
Encountering the Sovereign Other
Indigenous Science Fiction
Louise Erdrich's Justice Trilogy
Cultural and Critical Contexts
Aazheyaadizi
Worldview, Language, and the Logics of Decolonization
Famine Pots
The Choctaw–Irish Gift Exchange, 1847–Present
Picturing Worlds
Visuality and Visual Sovereignty in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
Settler City Limits
Indigenous Resurgence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie West
