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  2. We Deserve The Full Range Of Indigenous Identity On-Screen - AOL

    www.aol.com/deserve-full-range-indigenous...

    What makes this era different is that you have [Indigenous] people in positions of influence both in front of and behind the scenes. It feels like we’re just at the beginning of something really ...

  3. Things We Do - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Things_We_Do

    Things We Do is the first album from the band Indigenous, released in 1998 under the Pachyderm Records label. [1]In 1999, Indigenous won three Native American Music Awards for this record, including two top honors: Album of the Year and Group of the Year.

  4. Ute music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ute_Music

    Group of Native American Utes. Ute music constitutes the music of the Indigenous Northern American Ute tribe. Much of this music has been recorded and preserved. Each song of the Ute tribe has a meaning or is based on an experience. These experiences may be social, religious or emotional. Many Ute songs are social songs.

  5. I'm an Indian Too - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I'm_an_Indian_Too

    Native Americans did protest outside the New York theatre, as well as movie theaters, holding picket signs stating: "Don't See "Annie Get Your Gun". [ citation needed ] Many contemporary productions have omitted the song from their revivals, both in response to the stereotypes in the lyrics, as well as part of an overall restructuring of the ...

  6. Camino del Indio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camino_del_Indio

    One analyst wrote that the song "painted a nostalgic landscape very different from cynical, urban tango lyrics, invoking the timelessness of indigenous Argentina." [ 4 ] Another writer described the song as poignant in its depiction of "a rural path as the window through which we see the sufferings of the Indian of the campo, or countryside."

  7. Australian Aboriginal English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Aboriginal_English

    Speakers have been noted to tend to change between different forms of AAE depending on whom they are speaking to, e.g. striving to speak more like Australian English when speaking to a non-Indigenous English-speaking person. [5] This is sometimes referred to as diglossia or codeswitching and is common among Aboriginal people living in major cities.

  8. Indigenous music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_music

    Indigenous music is a term for the traditional music of the indigenous peoples of the world, that is, the music of an "original" ethnic group that inhabits any geographic region alongside more recent immigrants who may be greater in number. [1]

  9. Truganini (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truganini_(song)

    "Truganini" is a song by Australian rock band Midnight Oil from their eighth studio album, Earth and Sun and Moon (1993). It was inspired by Truganini, a Nuenonne woman from south-east Tasmania. [1] The song uses a recurring Australian issue—drought—to pose the question "what for?", meaning "why did Europeans bother to colonise this harsh ...