| . "Native American New Play Festival Features Comedy by Arigon Starr". Native Oklahoma, June 2018. 2018. | 8-9 | 2018 | Her play, "Round Dance", where Creeks meets West, is a comedy set in the 1950s. Directed by Carolyn Dunn, with lead roles by Wilson Daingkau and Angela Pruner Startz. | |
| Davis, Kathryn M. "Native Realities: Superherores of Past, Present, and Future, Form & Concept, 435 South Guadalupe Street". THE Magazine, vol. 25, issue 7 (February/March 2017). 2017. | 51 | 2017 | Includes color reproduction of Arigon Starr's 2016 digital illustration "Laguna Woman". | Review of the exhibition "Native Realities: Superheroes of Past, Present, and Future" held at the form & concept gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 11, 2016-December 31, 2016. | |
| Dean, Janet. Unconventional Politics: Nineteenth-Century Women Writers and U.S. Indian Policy. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. 2016. | 28, 201, 206-213 | 2016 | Includes the following four women authors: Sarah Wakefield, Lydia Huntley Sigourney, the Muscogee/Creek S. Alice Callahan, and the Cherokee Ora V. Eddleman, Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Masters of the American West Art Exhibition and Sale (2021 : Los Angeles, California). Masters of the American West®. Los Angeles, California: Autry Museum of the American West. 2021. | 18 | 2021 | Includes an announcement for "The New Adventures of Super Indian" created and written by Arigon Starr. | Virtual exhibition dates February 27, 2021-April 11, 2021; art sale date of miniatures February 27, 2021, and art sale date of major works March 13, 2021. | |
| Poet, J. "Musicians on a Mission". Native Peoples, vol. 13, no. 4 (June/July 2000). 2000. | 68 | 2000 | | |
| Pratt, Stacy. "Native Art World Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: a Sampling of Efforts by Indigenous Artists and Art Professors to Confront the Crisis". First American Art Magazine, issue no. 27 (summer 2020). 2020. | 19 | 2020 | Illustrated with a copy of a 2020 color digital poster by Arigon Starr entitled "Clean Hands Save Lives" and a color reproduction of a 2020 oil on facial mask by Craig George entitled "Stay Home". | |
| Schulman, Sandra Hale. "Graphic Novels and Super Indians". News from Indian Country, vol. 31, no. 1 (January 2017). 2017. | 11 | 2017 | Newspaper article. | |
| Starr, Arigon. "Cover Artist's Statement". Yellow Medicine Review, fall 2022. 2022. | cover, 9-10 | 2022 | Host issue guest edited by Gordon Henry, Devon Mihesuah, Trevino Brings Plenty, and Jacqueline Keeler. | |
| Starr, Arigon and David Cutler (illustrator). "Ue-Pucase: Water Master". In: Nicholson, Hope (editor) and Andy Stanleigh (book designer). Moonshot: the Indigenous Comics Collection: Volume 1. Canada: Alternate History Comics. 2015. | 66+ | 2015 | Host volume includes biographical sketch for Arigon Starr in the unpaged section "Biographies (Alphabetical)". | Story told in comic book form, story is based on the Muscogee Creek story "This Young Man Who Turned into a Snake". | |
| Starr, Arigon and Janet Miner (editor). "The Policeman". Oklahoma Today, vol. 69, no. 4 (July/August 2019). 2019. | 65-72 | 2019 | "Short-form graphic novel, Kickapoo artist, musician, actor, and Oklahoma native Arigon Starr ... weaves a mysterious tale of Native American origins, family secrets, and UFOs". | |
| Starr, Arigon, Janet Miner, and Lee Francis IV (editors). Tales of the Mighty Code Talkers: Volume One. Albuquerque, New Mexico: Native Realities. 2016. | | 2016 | First all-indigenous comic book anthology celebrating the many tribes who served as Code Talkers; features the talents of Weshoyot Alvitre, Kristina Bad Hand, Roy Boney, Jr., Johnnie Diacon, Lee Francis IV, Renee Nejo, Jonathan Nelson, Michael Sheyahshe, Arigon Starr, and Theo Tso. | |