Formatted Bibliography A-B

Preformatted Bibliographical References

This list is a compilation of the published references cited in Papers of the Algonquian Conference/Actes du congrès des Algonquinistes Vol. 32- 35, and illustrates the revised bibliographical style that was introduced with Volume 33. It was last updated 22 October 2004. In spite of the imperfections which undoubtedly persist, it may be useful to some contributors, and help to speed along the editorial and production process. Please feel free to cut and paste wherever you find it helpful.

A-B

Abler, Thomas S. 1990. Micmacs and Gypsies: Occupation of the peripatetic niche. Papers of the 21st Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-11. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Acheson, James M. 1988. The lobster gangs of Maine. Hanover, New Hampshire: University Press of New England.
Adams, Arthur T., ed. 1961. The explorations of Pierre Esprit Radisson: From the original manuscript in the Bodleian Library and the British Museum. Minneapolis: Ross & Haines.
Adelson, Naomi. 1992. “Being alive well:” Indigenous belief as opposition among the Whapmagoostui Cree. Ph.D. thesis, McGill University.
Adney, Edwin Tappan. [n.d.]. Papers. Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.
Adney, Edwin Tappan, & Howard I. Chapelle. 1964. The bark canoes and skin boats of North America. Smithsonian Institution, United States National Museum, Bulletin 230, Washington.
Agbo, Seth A. 1990. A study of teacher satisfaction in isolated communities of northwestern Ontario. M.Ed thesis, Lakehead University.
Ahenakew, Alice. 2000. âh-âyîtaw isi ê-kî-kiskêyihtahkik maskihkiy / They knew both sides of medicine: Cree tales of curing and cursing told by Alice Ahenakew, ed. by H.C. Wolfart & Freda Ahenakew, ed. & tr. by H.C. Wolfart & Freda Ahenakew. Publications of the Algonquian Text Society / Collection de la Société d’édition des textes algonquiens, Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.
Ahenakew, Freda. 1987. Cree language structures: A Cree approach. Winnipeg: Pemmican Publications.
Ahenakew, Freda, & H.C. Wolfart. 1983. Productive reduplication in Plains Cree. Actes du 14e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 369-377. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aksu-Koç, Ayhan A., & Dan I. Slobin. 1986. A psychological account of the development and use of evidentials in Turkish. Evidentiality: The linguistic coding of epistemology, ed. by Wallace Chafe & Johanna Nichols, pp. 159-167. Norwood, New Jersey: Ablex.
Alford, Dan. 1975. Linguistic speculation on the pre-history of the Cheyenne people. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 10-29. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Alford, Thomas Wildcat. 1929. The four gospels of Our Lord Jesus Christ in Shawnee Indian language. Xenia, Ohio: W.A. Galloway.
Alford, Thomas Wildcat. 1936. Civilization, and the story of the Absentee Shawnees. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. [reprinted 1979]
Allen, Robert S. 1992. His Majesty’s Indian allies: British policy in the defence of Canada, 1774-1815. Toronto: Dundurn Press.
Alstrup, Kevin M. 2003. “The song – that’s the monument:” Eskasoni Mi’kmaw tribal culture in the music-making of Rita Joe and Thomas George Poulette. Ph.D. thesis, Brown University.
Alstrup, Kevin M. 2004. Mi’kmaq atukwaqann and aural symbolism in the music-making of Thomas George Poulette. Papers of the 35th Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 1-12. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Andersen, Chris, & Claude Denis. 2003. Urban Natives and the nation: Before and after the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 40:373-390.
Anderson, Benedict. 1983. Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. New York: Verso.
Anderson, Jeffrey. 2001. The four hills of life: Northern Arapaho knowledge and life movement. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Anderson, Jeffrey. 2003. One hundred years of Old Man Sage: An Arapaho life. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Anderson, Lloyd B. 1986. Evidentials, paths of change, and mental maps: Typologically regular asymmetries. Evidentiality: The linguistic coding of epistemology, ed. by Wallace Chafe & Johanna Nichols, pp. 261-272. Norwood, New Jersey: Ablex.
[anonymous V]. [n.d.]. Grammaire, dictionnaire, petit et grand catéchisme. ASSM 107, Archives du Séminaire de Saint-Sulpice, Montréal.
[anonymous]. [n.d.]. A synopsis of the history of Wikwemikong. Manuscript, Holy Cross Mission Archives, Wikwemikong, Ontario.
Appadurai, Arjun. 1991. Global ethnoscapes: Notes and queries for a transnational anthropology. Recapturing anthropology: Working in the present, ed. by Richard G. Fox, pp. 191-210. Santa Fe, New Mexico: School of American Research Press.
Arcand, Bernard, & Serge Bouchard. 1995. Du pâté chinois, du baseball et autres lieux communs. Québec: Boréal.
Armstrong, Benjamin G. 1892. Early life among the Indians. Ashland, Wisconsin: Press of A.W. Bowron.
Arsenault, Daniel. 1995. A unique pictograph site in the context of political and ideological conflicts. Papers of the 27th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 1-10. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Artuso, Christian. 1998. Language change across four generations of an Algonquin family: Some preliminary findings. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 1-17. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Asch, Michael. 1992. Errors in Delgamuukw: An anthropological perspective. Aboriginal title in British Columbia: Delgamuukw v. The Queen, ed. by Frank Cassidy, pp. 221-243. Lantzville, British Columbia: Oolichan Books & Institute for Research on Public Policy.
Asch, Michael, & Ives Goddard. 1981. Synonymy (Slavey). Handbook of North American Indians, ed. by June Helm, v. 6: Subarctic, pp. 347-348. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
Assikinack, Francis. 1858. The Odahwah Indian language. Canadian Journal of Industry, Science, and Art, n.s. 3:481-485.
Assikinack, Francis. 1860. Remarks on the paper headed “The Odahwah Indian language”. Canadian Journal of Industry, Science, and Art, n.s. 5:182-186.
Attorney General for Ontario v. Bear Island Foundation. 1984. Reasons for Judgment in the Supreme Court of Ontario between the Attorney General for the Province of Ontario (Plaintiff) and the Bear Island Foundation and Gary Potts, William Twain and Maurice McKenzie Jr. … (Defendants).
http://www.landclaimsdocs.com/court/html/agontvfran.htm
Atwood, Margaret. 1972. Survival: A thematic guide to Canadian literature. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
Aubin, George F. 1975. The Edison insight and the Williams materials. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 180-195. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Aubin, George F. 1976. Color terms in Narragansett. Papers of the 7th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 105-114. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1977. Quelques aspects du système consonnantique du narragansett. Actes du 8e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 151-155. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1978. Toward the linguistic history of an Algonquian dialect: Observations on the Wood vocabulary. Papers of the 9th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 127-137. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1979. Golden Lake Algonquin: A preliminary report. Papers of the 10th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 121-125. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1980. Comments on Cotton’s Vocabulary. Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 54-60. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1981. Remarks on Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 12th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 39-46. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1982. Ethnographic notes from Golden Lake. Papers of the 13th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 47-52. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1983. A Lord’s Prayer in Wampanoag? Actes du 14e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 239-244. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1984. Verb paradigms in Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 15th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 217-224. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1987. Three texts in Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 18th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-6. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1988. “Girls hunting groundhogs:” A text in Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 19th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-5. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1989. Some verb paradigms in Golden Lake Algonquin: II. Actes du 20e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-16. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1991. Comments on some demonstratives in Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 22nd Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-10. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1992. Comments on “A pocket vocabulary of terms alphabetically arranged, 1822”. Papers of the 23rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-11. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1994. A look at the Ojibwa vocabulary of Baudry des Lozières. Actes du 25e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-12. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Aubin, George F. 1995. The French-Algonquin dictionary fragment in ASSM manuscrit 14 (Anonyme VI): A first look. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 1-14. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 1996. The French-Algonquin dictionary fragment in ASSM manuscrit 14 (Anonyme VI): Some further comments. Papers of the 27th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 11-24. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 1997. The Principes algonquins of ASSM manuscript 104 (1661). Papers of the 28th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 1-13. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 1998. Kinship terms in Golden Lake Algonquin. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 18-29. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 1999. Golden Lake Algonquin: A look at some interesting data. Papers of the 30th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 1-11. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 2001. The Algonquin-French manuscript ASSM 104 (1661). Actes du 32e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 1-16. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 2003. The Algonquin-French manuscript ASSM 104 (1661): Miscellanea. Papers of the 34th Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 1-17. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Aubin, George F. 2004. Number terms in three Old Algonquin manuscripts. Papers of the 35th Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 13-34. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Axtell, James. 1975. The European failure to convert the Indians: An autopsy. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 274-290. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Axtell, James. 1980. Last rights: The acculturation of Native funerals in colonial North America. Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 96-112. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Ayoungman-Clifton, Elaine. 1995. Humour in the Siksika (Blackfoot) language. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 15-21. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba. Backhouse, C., & D. McRae. 2002. Report to the Canadian Human Rights Commission on the treatment of the Innu of Labrador by the Government of Canada. Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa.
Baker, Mark C. 1996. The polysynthesis parameter. New York: Oxford University Press.
Bakker, Peter. 1988. Basque Pidgin vocabulary in European-Algonquian trade contacts. Papers of the 19th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 7-15. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bakker, Peter. 1990. The genesis of Michif: A first hypothesis. Papers of the 21st Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 12-35. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bakker, Peter. 1991. The Ojibwa element in Michif. Papers of the 22nd Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 11- 20. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bakker, Peter. 1994. Is John Long’s Chippeway (1791) an Ojibwa Pidgin? Actes du 25e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 13-31. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bakker, Peter. 1997. A language of our own: The genesis of Michif, the mixed Cree-French language of the Canadian Métis. New York: Oxford University Press.
Bakker, Peter, & Lynn Drapeau. 1994. Adventures with the Beothuks in 1787: A testimony from Jean Conan’s autobiography. Actes du 25e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 32-45. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Baraby, Anne-Marie. 1986. Flexions verbales dans le montagnais de Sheshatshiu. Actes du 17e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-14. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Baraby, Anne-Marie. 1989. Changement linguistique dans le dialecte montagnais de Natashquan. Actes du 20e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 17-30. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Baraby, Anne-Marie, A. Bellefleur-Tetaut, L. Canapé, C. Gabriel, & M.P. Mark. 1990. Iapjiw’ewemigwite’taqn. Se’sus ugs’tqamuiteg aq maljewe’juiteg [The childhood of Jesus]. Canadian Bible Society, Toronto.
Baraby, Anne-Marie, A. Bellefleur-Tetaut, L. Canapé, C. Gabriel, & M.P. Mark. 2002. Incorporation of body-part medials in the contemporary Innu (Montagnais) language. Papers of the 33rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 1-12. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Baraga, Frederic. 1850. A theoretical and practical grammar of the Otchipwe language. Detroit: Jabez Fox.
Baraga, Frederic. 1878. A dictionary of the Otchipwe language, explained in English. A new edition, by a missionary of the Oblates. Part I: English-Otchipwe. Montréal: Beauchemin & Valois.
Baraga, Frederic. 1878-80. A dictionary of the Otchipwe language, explained in English. A new [2nd] edition, by a missionary of the Oblates. Montréal: Beauchemin & Valois. 2 vols.
Baraga, Frederic. 1880. A dictionary of the Otchipwe language, explained in English. A new edition, by a missionary of the Oblates. Part II: Otchipwe-English. Montréal: Beauchemin & Valois.
Barbour, Philip L. 1975. Notes on Anglo-Algonkian contacts 1605-1624. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 112-127. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Barbour, Philip L. 1976. Ocanahowan and recently discovered linguistic fragments from Southern Virginia, c. 1650. Papers of the 7th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 2-17. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Barbour, Philip L. 1977. The antecedents of the Virginia massacre of 1622: An aide-memoire. Actes du 8e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 222-229. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Barbour, Philip L. 1978. Indians and Englishmen as themselves: Notes for an inquiry into basic biases. Papers of the 9th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 188-194. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Barbour, Philip L. 1979. Variant English spellings of Virginia and Maryland Indian place-names before 1620. Papers of the 10th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 43-59. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Barbour, Philip L. 1980. The manuscript “Instructions for a Voyage to New England” (1608-1610?). Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 135-142. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Barbour, Philip L. 1981. The feasibility of establishing key-spellings for Indian place-names in the index to the complete works of Captain John Smith. Papers of the 12th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 21-30. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bar-El, Leora. 1998. Intonational pauses in Plains Cree. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 30-42. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Barnouw, Victor, ed. 1977. Wisconsin Chippewa myths and tales and their relation to Chippewa life: Based on folktales collected by Victor Barnouw, Joseph B. Casagrande, Ernestine Friedl, and Robert E. Ritzenthaler. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Barrow, John, ed. 1852. The geography of Hudson’s Bay, being the remarks of Captain W. Coats, in many voyages to that locality, between the years 1727 and 1751. London.
Bartlett, William S. 1853. The frontier missionary: A memoir of the life of the Rev. Jacob Bailey, A.M., missionary at Pownalborough, Maine; Cornwallis and Annapolis, N.S. with illustrations, notes, and an appendix, with a preface by Right Rev. George Burgess, D.D. Boston: Ide & Dutton.
Barton, Benjamin Smith. 1797. New views of the origin of the tribes and nations of America. Philadelphia.
Battiste, Marie. 1994. People of the dawn: The Keepers of the Eastern Door. Mi’kmaq Resource Centre Report 212. University College of Cape Breton.
Battiste, Marie, ed. 2000. Reclaiming indigenous voice and vision. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
Bauer, Brigitte. 2000. Archaic syntax in Indo-European: The spread of transitivity in Latin and French. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Baxter, James P., ed. 1869-1916. Documentary history of the State of Maine, containing the Baxter Manuscripts. Portland: Maine Historical Society. 24 vols.
Bayer, Josef. 1996. Directionality and logical form: On the scope of focusing particles and wh-in-situ. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
Bédard, Rachel, Alan Ford, & Marie Andrée Hammond. 1980. Les rapports morphologiques entre les verbes TI, TA et AI en montagnais. Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 274-282. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Béland, Jean-Pierre. 1978. Atikamekw morphology and lexicon. Ph.D. thesis, University of California, Berkeley.
Bélanger, Michel, & Jean Campeau. 1991. Rapport de la Commission sur l’avenir politique et constitutionnel du Québec. Québec.
Belanger, Yale. 2001. “The region teemed with abundance:” Interlake Saulteaux concepts of territory and sovereignty. Actes du 32e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 17-34. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Bennett, Jo Anne, & John W. Berry. 1989. The meaning and value of the syllabic script for Native people. Actes du 20e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 31-42. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bennett, Jo Anne, & John W. Berry. 1990. Notions of competence in people of Northern Ontario. Papers of the 21st Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 36-50. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bennett, Jo Anne, & John W. Berry. 1992. Changing concepts of self in Northern Ontario communities and some implications for the future. Papers of the 23rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 12-21. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Benveniste, Émile. 1971. Problems in general linguistics, tr. by Mary Elizabeth Meek. Coral Gables: University of Miami Press.
Berbaum, Sylvie. 1997. Activité onirique et forme musicale dans la culture ojibwa. Papers of the 28th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 14-22. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Berinstein, Ava. 1979. A cross-linguistic study on the perception and production of stress. UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics 47:1-59.
Berkes, Fikret. 1986. Chisasibi Cree hunters and missionaries: Humour as evidence of tension. Actes du 17e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 15-26. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bernhardt, Barbara Handford, & Joseph Paul Stemberger. 1998. Handbook of phonological development. San Diego: Academic Press.
Bhat, D.N.S. 1999. The prominence of tense, aspect and mood. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Bierhorst, John. 1976. The Red Swan: Myths and tales of the American Indians. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
Bierhorst, John. 1985. The mythology of North America. New York: William Morrow.
Bishop, Charles A. 1970. The emergence of hunting territories among the Northern Ojibwa. Ethnology 9:1-15.
Bishop, Charles A. 1972. Demography, ecology and trade among the Northern Ojibwa and Swampy Cree. Western Canadian Journal of Anthropology 3:58-71.
Bishop, Charles A. 1974. The Northern Ojibwa and the fur trade: An historical and ecological study. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart & Winston of Canada.
Bishop, Charles A. 1975. The origin of the speakers of the Severn dialect. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 196-208. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Bishop, Charles A. 1975. Ojibwa, Cree and the Hudson’s Bay Company in Northern Ontario: Culture and conflict in the eighteenth century. Western Canada past and present, ed. by Anthony W. Rasporich, pp. 150-162, 217-219. Calgary: McClelland & Stewart West.
Bishop, Charles A. 1976. The emergence of the Northern Ojibwa: Social and economic consequences. American Ethnologist 3:39-54.
Bishop, Charles A. 1976. The Henley House massacres. The Beaver 307.3:36-41.
Bishop, Charles A. 1981. Territorial groups before 1821: Cree and Ojibwa. Handbook of North American Indians, ed. by June Helm, v. 6: Subarctic, pp. 158-160. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
Bishop, Charles A. 1982. The Indian inhabitants of northern Ontario at the time of contact: Socio-territorial considerations. Approaches to Algonquian archaeology: Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Conference, ed. by Margaret G. Hanna & Brian Kooyman, pp. 253-273. Calgary: Archaeology Association of the University of Calgary.
Bishop, Charles A. 1983. The Bear Island (Temagami) land claims case. Paper read at the 11th International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Quebec.
Bishop, Charles A. 1984. The first century: Adaptive changes among the Western James Bay Cree between the early seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. The subarctic fur trade: Native social and economic adaptations, ed. by Shepard Krech, III, pp. 21-53. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
Bishop, Charles A. 1986. Territoriality among Northeastern Algonquians. Anthropologica 18.1/2:37-63.
Bishop, Charles A. 1989. The question of Ojibwa clans. Actes du 20e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 43-61. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bishop, Charles A. 1994. Northern Algonquians, 1550-1760; Northern Algonquians, 1760-1821. Aboriginal Ontario: Historical perspectives on the First Nations, ed. by Edward S. Rogers & Donald B. Smith, pp. 275-288, 289-306. Toronto: Dundurn Press.
Bishop, Charles A. 1998. The politics of property among Northern Algonquians. Property in economic context, ed. by Robert C. Hunt & Antonio Gilman, pp. 247-267. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.
Bishop, Charles A. 2002. Northern Ojibwa emergence: The migration. Papers of the 33rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 13-109. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Bishop, Charles A., & Shepard Krech, III. 1980. Matriorganization: The basis of aboriginal subarctic social organization. Arctic Anthropology 17:34-45.
Bishop, Charles A., & Arthur J. Ray. 1976. Ethnohistoric research in the Central Subarctic: Some conceptual and methodological problems. Western Canadian Journal of Anthropology 4.1:116-144.
Bishop, Charles A., & M. Estellie Smith. 1975. Early historic populations in northwestern Ontario: Archaeological and ethnohistorical interpretations. American Antiquity 40:54-63.
Black, M. Jean. 1989. Nineteenth-century Algonquin culture change. Actes du 20e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 62-69. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Black Rogers, Mary. 1982. Algonquian gender revisited: Animate nouns and Ojibwa ‘power’ – an impasse? Papers in Linguistics 15.1:59-76.
Black Rogers, Mary. 1990. Fosterage and field data: The Round Lake study 1989. Papers of the 21st Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 51-71. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Black Rogers, Mary. 1993. A tale of two ethnicities: Identity and ethnicity at Lake of Two Mountains, 1721-1850. Papers of the 24th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-7. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Black Rogers, Mary, & Edward S. Rogers. 1980. Adoption of patrilineal surname system by bilateral Northern Ojibwa: Mapping the learning of an alien system. Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 198-230. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Black Rogers, Mary, & Edward S. Rogers. 1983. The Cranes and their neighbours, 1770-1970. Actes du 14e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 91-124. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Blackbird, Andrew Jackson. 1887. History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan: A grammar of their language, and personal and family history of the author. Ypsilanti: Ypsilantian Job Printing House.
Blackmore, William. 1869. The North American Indians: A sketch of some of the hostile tribes, together with a brief account of General Sheridan’s campaign of 1868 against the Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapahoe, Kiowa and Comanche Indians. Journal of the Ethnological Society of London, n.s. 1:287-320.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1987. Speech of the Lower Red River Settlement. Papers of the 18th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 7-16. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1992. A prosodic look at Ojibwa reduplication. Papers of the 23rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 22-44. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1995. Emphatic wiya in Plains Cree. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 22-34. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1996. A moraic analysis of syllables in Ojibwe. Nikotwâsik iskwâhtêm, pâskihtêpayih! Studies in honour of H.C. Wolfart, ed. by John D. Nichols & Arden C. Ogg, pp. 35-59. Algonquian and Iroquoian Linguistics Memoir 13. Winnipeg.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1998. The role of hierarchies and alignment in direct/inverse. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 53-56. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Blain, Eleanor M. 1999. Nêhiyawêwin nominal clauses. Papers of the 30th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 12-27. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Blain, Eleanor M., & Rose-Marie Déchaine. 2002. Evidential marking across the Cree dialect continuum. Paper read at the 7th Workshop on the Structure and Constituency of the Languages of the Americas, University of Alberta.
Blair, Emma Helen. 1911-12. The Indian tribes of the upper Mississippi valley and region of the Great Lakes. Cleveland. 2 vols.
Blick, Jeffrey P. 2000. The archaeology and ethnohistory of the dog in Virginia Algonquian culture as seen from Weyanoke Old Town. Papers of the 31st Algonquian Conference, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 1-17. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1920-40. [Notes on the Menominee language]. Manuscript, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1920-1949. Leonard Bloomfield Papers. National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1928. Menomini texts. Publications of the American Ethnological Society 12, New York.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1930. Sacred stories of the Sweet Grass Cree. National Museum of Canada Bulletin 60, Ottawa.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1946. Algonquian. Linguistic structures of Native America, ed. by Harry Hoijer et al., pp. 85-129. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 6. New York.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1958. Eastern Ojibwa: Grammatical sketch, texts and word list, ed. by Charles F. Hockett. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1962. The Menomini language, ed. by Charles F. Hockett. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1975. Menomini lexicon, ed. by Charles F. Hockett. Milwaukee Public Museum Publications in Anthropology and History 3.
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1984. Cree-English lexicon. New Haven, Connecticut: Human Relations Area Files. 2 vols.
Bloomfield, Leonard, & John D. Nichols. 1988. Birch Island texts (Gregor McGregor with C.F. Voegelin). An Ojibwe text anthology, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 107-194. Studies in the Interpretation of Canadian Native Languages and Cultures, 2. Centre for Research and Teaching of Canadian Native Languages, University of Western Ontario, London.
Blythe, Jennifer M., et al. 1985. “I was never idle:” Women and work in Moosonee and Moose Factory. TASO Report 21. McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario.
Bock, Philip. 1978. Micmac. Handbook of North American Indians, ed. by Bruce G. Trigger, v. 15: Northeast, pp. 109-122. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
Boeder, Winfried. 1979. Ergative syntax and morphology in language change: The South-Caucasian languages. Ergativity: Towards a theory of grammatical relations, ed. by Frans Plank, pp. 435-480. London: Academic Press.
Boling, Jerry. 1981. Selected problems in Shawnee syntax. Ph.D. thesis, Indiana University.
Bourque, Gilles, & Jules Duchastel. 2001. L’union conféderale n’est pas une réforme du fédéralisme. Le Devoir, 29 May 2001. Montréal.
Bragdon, Kathleen J. 1979. Probate records as a source for Algonquian ethnohistory. Papers of the 10th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 136-141. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bragdon, Kathleen J. 1981. Linguistic acculturation in Massachusett: 1663-1771. Papers of the 12th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 121-132. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Bragdon, Kathleen J. 1986. Native economy on eighteenth century Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket. Actes du 17e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 27-42. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Brandão, J.A., & William A. Starna. 1996. The treaties of 1701: A triumph of Iroquois diplomacy. Ethnohistory 43:209-244.
Branigan, Phil, & Marguerite MacKenzie. 1999. A double-object constraint in Innu-aimun. Papers of the 30th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 28-33. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Branigan, Phil, & Marguerite MacKenzie. 2001. How much syntax can you fit in a word: The grammar of Innu-aimun verbal agreement. Proceedings of WSCLA 5: The Workshop on Structure and Constituency in Languages of the Americas, ed. by S. Gessner, S. Oh & K. Shiobara, pp. 37-52. UBC Working Papers in Linguistics 5. Vancouver.
Branigan, Phil, & Marguerite MacKenzie. 2002. Word order variation at the left periphery in Innu-aimûn. Papers of the 33rd Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 110-119. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Brasser, Ted J. 1976. “Bo’jou, Neejee!” Profiles of Canadian Indian art. Ottawa: National Museum of Man.
Brasser, Ted J. 1990. Firebags of the fur trade. Eye of the angel: Selections from the Derby Collection, ed. by David Wooley, pp. 35-39. Northampton, Massachusetts: White Star Press.
Bright, William. 1957. The Karok language. University of California Publications in Linguistics 13, Berkeley.
Bright, William. 1984. A Karok myth in ‘measured verse:’ The translation of a performance. American Indian linguistics and literature, by William Bright, pp. 91-100. The Hague: Mouton.
Brightman, Robert. 1993. Grateful prey: Rock Cree human-animal relationships. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Brittain, Julie. 1996. Two negative morphemes in Sheshâtshît Montagnais (innu-aimun): apû and ekâ. Papers of the 27th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 25-36. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Brittain, Julie. 1997. A metrical analysis of primary stress placement in southern East Cree. Papers of the 28th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 23-33. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Brittain, Julie. 1999. A reanalysis of transitive animate theme signs as object agreement: Evidence from Western Naskapi. Papers of the 30th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 34-46. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Brittain, Julie. 2001. The morphosyntax of the Algonquian conjunct verb: A minimalist approach. New York: Garland.
Brody, Hugh. 1981. Maps and dreams: Indians and the British Columbia frontier. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
Brody, Hugh. 2000. The other side of Eden: Hunters, farmers and the shaping of the world. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
Broselow, Ellen, Su-I Chen, & Marie Huffman. 1997. Syllable weight: Convergence of phonetics and phonology. Phonology 14:47-82.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1975. Fur traders, racial categories, and kinship networks. Papers of the 6th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 209-222. National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper 23. Ottawa.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1977. James Settee and his Cree tradition: An Indian camp at the mouth of Nelson River Hudsons Bay. Actes du 8e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 36-49. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1980. Strangers in blood: Fur trade company families in Indian country. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1982. The track to heaven: The Hudson Bay Cree religious movement of 1842-1843. Papers of the 13th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 53-63. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1983. Charles Thomas Isham. Dictionary of Canadian biography 5:450-451.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1985. Central Manitoba Salteaux [sic] in the 19th century. Papers of the 16th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-8. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1986. Northern Algonquians from Lake Superior and Hudson Bay to Manitoba in the historic period. Native peoples: The Canadian experience, ed. by R. Bruce Morrison & C. Roderick Wilson, pp. 208-236. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 1987. A.I. Hallowell and William Berens revisited. Papers of the 18th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 17-27. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Brown, Jennifer S.H. 2001. Partial truths: A closer look at fur trade marriages. From Rupert’s Land to Canada: Essays in honour of John E. Foster, ed. by Theodore Binnema, Gerhard J. Ens & R.C. Macleod, pp. 59-80. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.
Brown, Jennifer S.H., & Robert Brightman. 1988. “The orders of the dreamed:” George Nelson on Cree and Northern Ojibwa religion and myth, 1823. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.
Brown, [Mrs.] W. Wallace. 1892. ‘Chief-making’ among the Passamaquoddy Indians. Journal of American Folk-Lore 5:57-59.
Bruening, Benjamin. 2001. Constraints on dependencies in Passamaquoddy. Actes du 32e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 35-60. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Bruening, Benjamin. 2001. Syntax at the edge: Cross-clausal phenomena and the syntax of Passamaquoddy. Ph.D. thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Bryant, Hubbard Winslow. 1890. Rev. Eugene Vetromile: A brief sketch of his life and philologic labors. Collections and Proceedings of the Maine Historical Society, 2d series 1:309-312. [Read before the MHS 21 December 1883]
Bryce, Robert. 1998. Bible translation in Algonquian languages. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 57-61. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Buchanan, Roberta, ed. [forthcoming]. It is all so grand and beautiful: The Labrador diaries of Mina Benson Hubbard and George Elson Roberta Buchanan, with a biography of Mina Benson Hubbard by Anne Hart, and new maps, scientific results and canoeing analysis by Bryan Green. Kingston & Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Buffalo, Paul Peter. 1971. When everybody called me Gah-bay-bi-nayss: “Forever-Flying-Bird.” An ethnographic biography of Paul Peter Buffalo, ed. by Tim Roufs.
http://www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/Buffalo/pbwww.html
Bull, John. 1977. The Audubon Society field guide to North American birds: Eastern region, ed. by John Farrand, Jr. New York: Knopf.
Bunyan, Ian, Jenni Calder, Dale Idiens, & Bryce Wilson. 1993. No ordinary journey: John Rae, arctic explorer 1813-1893. Edinburgh: National Museums of Scotland.
Büring, Daniel, & Katharina Hartmann. 2001. The syntax and semantics of focus-sensitive particles in German. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 19:229-281.
Burke, Adrian L. 2001. Témiscouata: Traditional Maliseet territory and connections between the St Lawrence Valley and the St. John River Valley. Actes du 32e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by John D. Nichols, pp. 61-73. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Burleson, Richard. 1987. Opposition of musical order in a Cree round-dance song. Papers of the 18th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 29-38. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burleson, Richard. 2004. The time-pitch axis in traditional music of the First Nations. Papers of the 35th Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 35-44. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1976. Algonquian languages in Indian education. Papers of the 7th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 436-449. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1980. Writing in recently alphabetized languages. Papers of the 11th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 159-165. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1981. Language shift in Northern Ontario. Papers of the 12th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 114-120. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1982. On the success of school programmes involving a Native language. Papers of the 13th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 251-259. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1983. Towards a national policy for language in Native education. Actes du 14e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 3-11. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1984. Orthography characteristics for real readers. Papers of the 15th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 1-14. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1985. Promoting Native writing systems in Canada. Toronto: OISE Press.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1986. Speakers of Canadian Aboriginal languages: Perspectives from the 1981 census. Actes du 17e Congrès des Algonquinistes, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 43-63. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1987. English language curriculum development for Algonquian-speaking children. Papers of the 18th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 39-48. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 1993. Aboriginal teaching personnel: Contradictions and dilemmas. Papers of the 24th Algonquian Conference, ed. by William Cowan, pp. 8-16. Ottawa: Carleton University.
Burnaby, Barbara. 2004. The linguistic situation of the Innu in Labrador in light of Fishman’s model. Papers of the 35th Algonquian Conference, ed. by H.C. Wolfart, pp. 45-60. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Burnaby, Barbara, & R. Beaujot. 1986. The use of Aboriginal languages in Canada: An analysis of 1981 Census data. Ottawa: Department of the Secretary of State.
Burnaby, Barbara, Marguerite MacKenzie, & Luci Bobbish Salt. 1998. Factors in Aboriginal mother tongue education: The Cree School Board case. Papers of the 29th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 62-73. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Burnham, Dorothy K. 1992. To please the caribou: Painted caribou-skin coats worn by the Naskapi, Montagnais, and Cree hunters of the Quebec-Labrador peninsula. Toronto: Royal Ontario Museum.
Burns, Elizabeth. 1997. Nested hexagons: Central place theory. Ten geographic ideas that changed the world, ed. by Susan Hanson, pp. 163-181. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press.
Burpee, Lawrence J., ed. 1927. Journals and letters of Pierre Gaultier de Varennes de la Vérendrye and his sons. Champlain Society Publications 16. Toronto.
Burton, Frederick R. 1909 American primitive music, with especial attention to the songs of the Ojibways. New York: Moffat, Yard.
Buszard-Welcher, Laura. 1997. Language use and language loss in the Potawatomi community: A report on the Potawatomi Language Institute. Papers of the 28th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland, pp. 34-43. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
Bybee, Joan, & Suzanne Fleischman, eds. 1995. Modality in grammar and discourse. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Bybee, Joan, Revere Perkins, & William Pagliuca. 1994. The evolution of grammar: Tense, aspect, and modality in the languages of the world. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.