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Indigiqueer Perspectives

Indigenous Authors in the Spotlight Series

The Winter 2024 Indigenous Authors in the Spotlight edition highlights Indigiqueer, Two-Spirit, and LGBTQIA+ perspectives across genres of poetry, memoir, correspondence, short fiction, and academic texts. These authors and their works represent a variety of nations, communities, and intersections of identities and offer a starting point for further learning about the intersections between Indigeneity and queerness more broadly. Previous iterations of the Indigenous Authors in the Spotlight series are linked at the bottom of this page and in our Zotero bibliography.

Thank you to Rudi Aker, Indigenous Student Librarian 2023-2025 at Concordia Library, for conceptualizing, creating and curating this collection.

Indigiqueerness: A Conversation About Storytelling

Joshua Whitehead, in dialogue with Angie Abdou

2023

A reflective combination of dialogue and prose exploring life and queer identity.

Rehearsals for Living

Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Robyn Maynard

2022

A collaborative correspondence reflecting on Black and Indigenous feminisms, solidarity, and kinship.

A Two-Spirit Journey: The Autobiography of a Lesbian Ojibwa-Cree Elder

Ma-Nee Chacaby

2016

A powerful memoir of self-discovery and resilience from Ojibwa-Cree elder, Ma-Nee Chacaby.

Love After the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit & Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction

Various / Joshua Whitehead (Ed.)

2020

An anthology of queer Indigenous speculative fiction from both established and emerging writers across Turtle Island.

The Dawnhounds

Sascha Stronach

2022

Book one of The Endsong series, a queer, Maori-inspired fantasy trilogy.

Buffalo is the New Buffalo

Chelsea Vowel

2022

A collection of speculative fiction short stories interrogating genre tropes from a Métis perspecitive.

Green Fuse Burning

Tiffany Morris

2023

A debut novella delving into themes of life, death, connection, and loss.

A Minor Chorus

Billy-Ray Belcourt

2022

The debut novel from Billy-Ray Belcourt highlighting contemporary queer Indigenous experiences.

disintegrate/dissociate

Arielle Twist

2019

An award-winning poetry collection reflectioning on love, kinship, and transformation.

Kiskajeyi (I Am Ready)

Michelle Sylliboy

2019

A exploration of poetry and L'nuk hieroglyphics from artist and writer, Michelle Sylliboy.

Critically Sovereign: Indigenous Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies

Various authors

2017

An exploration of the connections between Indigenous expressions of gender and sexuality as forces of sovereignty and self-determination.

Queer Indigenous Studies: Critical interventions in theory, politics, and literature

Various authors

2011

A multidisciplinary anthology examining queerness, Indigeneity, and the intersections of identites.


Additional resources

Our Zotero bibliographies, while by no means exhaustive, feature many more relevant citations. For additional Concordia Library resources on a variety of topics see our Indigenous educational resources for faculty and students or First Peoples Studies Subject Guide. If you come across more works and authors that you think are missing at Concordia Library, let us know via our Suggest a Purchase form.

About the series

Our Indigenous Authors in the Spotlight Series aims to support and promote Indigenous authors and artists by featuring some of the library's materials with Indigenous content, specifically focusing on works by First Nations, Métis and Inuit authors and artists.

Previous editions

Inuit testimony, critique and practice (2022): writers, curators, visual and performing artists, chefs, scholars and Elders. A focus on authors from Inuit Nunangat but also including Kalaallit writers and editors. Both art and the arctic feature frequently throughout, and approaches range from funny to frightening, often with a mix of both.

Memoirs (2021): authors writing their own stories through prose, poetry or other forms of autobiographical expression(s), as well as Elders telling their stories through oral history interviews.

Indigenous Feminisms (2020): authors engaging with, and challenging, a wide range of feminist perspectives. Featured works include single-authored monographs, edited books, journal articles and even a podcast.

Science Fiction & Futurisms (Fall 2019): Authors exploring settler contact, colonialism, climate change, notions of progress and scifi tropes. They offer multiple visions of dystopias, utopias as well as contemporary realisms and futurisms.

Indigenous Poetry (Winter 2019): Spotlight on contemporary works, including Griffin Poetry Prize winners, older favourites and more difficult choices, long form poems and anthologies; the poetry covers topics such as representation, revolution, racism, and love.

Indigenous Research Methods (2018): Library materials exploring Indigenous research methodologies and Indigenous knowledges. Books that celebrate or examine non-Western ways of knowing such as plant- and land- based knowledges, storywork and ceremony. Written and edited by Indigenous authors from around the world.

Indigenous Authors in the Spotlight (2017): A selection of literature, art, drama, poetry, non-fiction by First Nations, Métis and Inuit authors and artists, including works by Indigenous faculty at Concordia, and a celebration of the work of the late Gail Guthrie Valaskakis.

Celebrating Authors and Great Reads (2016): Some of the library’s print and online books of relevance to Indigenous studies and issues, including non-fiction, fiction, poetry, art, children's books, and even manga. Most selections are recent, published within the last 5-10 years and authored First Nations, Métis and Inuit authors and artists.

See also our shared Zotero bibliographies for all these collections.