University of Manitoba Press
Books from this publisher
First Nations Gaming in Canada
FitzGerald as Printmaker
A Catalogue Raisonné of the Frst Complete Exhibition of the Printed Works
For All We Have and Are
Regina and the Experience of the Great War
For King and Kanata
Canadian Indians and the First World War
For a Better World
The Winnipeg General Strike and the Workers' Revolt
Forest Prairie Edge
Place History in Saskatchewan
Formidable Heritage
Manitoba's North and the Cost of Development
Founding Folks
An Oral History of the Winnipeg Folk Festival
Freshwater Fishes of Manitoba
From the Inside Out
The Rural Worlds of Mennonite Diarists
From the Tundra to the Trenches
Gambling on Authenticity
Gaming, the Noble Savage, and the Not-so-New Indian
Gifts from Amin
Ugandan Asian Refugees in Canada
Grasslands Grown
Creating Place on the U.S. Northern Plains and Canadian Prairies
Growing Community Forests
Practice, Research, and Advocacy in Canada
Growing Resistance
Canadian Farmers and the Politics of Genetically Modified Wheat
Hidden Worlds
Revisiting the Mennonite Migrants of the 1870s
History, Literature and the Writing of the Canadian Prairies
Holocaust Survivors in Canada
Exclusion, Inclusion, Transformation, 1947-1955
Honouring the Strength of Indian Women
Plays, Stories, Poetry
Horse-and-Buggy Genius
Listening to Mennonites Contest the Modern World
I Will Live for Both of Us
A History of Colonialism, Uranium Mining, and Inuit Resistance
Icelanders in North America
The First Settlers
Icelandic Heritage in North America
Imagined Homes
Soviet German Immigrants in Two Cities
Imagining Winnipeg
History through the Photographs of L.B. Foote
Imperial Plots
Women, Land, and the Spadework of British Colonialism on the Canadian Prairies
Implicating the System
Judicial Discourses in the Sentencing of Indigenous Women
In Good Relation
History, Gender, and Kinship in Indigenous Feminisms
In Her Own Voice
Childbirth Stories from Mennonite Women
In Order to Live Untroubled
Inuit of the Central Artic 1550 to 1940
In Our Backyard
Keeyask and the Legacy of Hydroelectric Development