Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Indian-white Relations in CanadaUniversity of Toronto Press, 1989 - Broj stranica: 329 In the five centuries since Europeans landed on Atlantic shores they have pursued aspirations at variance, and sometimes in direct conflict, with those of the Indian people who were here before them. As a result, they history of the Indian-white relations has often been a troubled one. J.R. Miller presents the first comprehensive account of that history, from the early, cooperative era of the fur trade to today's confrontations. For three hundred years the European newcomers were driven by the search for fish and furs, the desire to explore the land, and the will to evangelize the native people. The Indians chose to tolerate the Europeans' fishing, to embrace the fur trade, to help with exploration, and ignore, for the most part, attempts to harvest their souls. With the triumph of the agricultural frontier, however, the native people became an obstacle to the progress of the Europeans' plans. Co-operation gave way to coercion and, inevitably, coercion led to confrontation. Today, native organizations are strengthening to pursue their land claims and other objectives, and the aboriginal peoples are re-emerging as a force in Canadian life. They are cautioning other Canadians with the words of Micmac poet Rita Joe: 'while skyscrapers hide the heavens, they can fall.' In charting the course of these developments, Miller casts new light on a range of controversial subjects: the Northwest Rebellion, the policies of education, cultural assimilation, and political control from the 1880s to the 1950s, and the development of political relations since the Second World War. |
Iz unutrašnjosti knjige
Rezultati 1 - 3 od 73.
Stranica 10
... commercial transactions with those traversing their region or with people to whom they could travel themselves . Similarly , some Algonkians , such as the nation that controlled the Ottawa River , found that their locations near travel ...
... commercial transactions with those traversing their region or with people to whom they could travel themselves . Similarly , some Algonkians , such as the nation that controlled the Ottawa River , found that their locations near travel ...
Stranica 44
... commercial , and compatible with the customs and economic activities of the continent . Even harder to gauge than expansion through exploration and the planting of small commercial and administrative centres were the effects of contact ...
... commercial , and compatible with the customs and economic activities of the continent . Even harder to gauge than expansion through exploration and the planting of small commercial and administrative centres were the effects of contact ...
Stranica 121
... commercial transactions . After the English established themselves on the bay , some Ojibwa moved northwest to take advantage of the commercial opportuni- ties that presented themselves . Gradually , however , it was the Cree and ...
... commercial transactions . After the English established themselves on the bay , some Ojibwa moved northwest to take advantage of the commercial opportuni- ties that presented themselves . Gradually , however , it was the Cree and ...
Sadržaj
Indians and Europeans at the time of contact | 3 |
COOPERATION | 21 |
Early contacts in the eastern woodlands | 23 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 18
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Indian-white Relations in Canada James Rodger Miller Ograničeni pregled - 2000 |
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
aboriginal title agricultural Alberta Algonkians alliance allies American assimilation Assiniboine bands began Beothuk Big Bear Blackfoot British Columbia Canadian Indian chief Christian claims colonial commercial cooperation Cree cultural economic efforts established Euro-Canadian European federal government fish France French frontier fur trade fur-trade Gradual Civilization Act Hudson's Bay Company hunting Huron Ibid important Indian Act Indian Affairs Indian lands Indian nations Indian policy Indian society indigenous population Inuit Iroquoians Iroquois Jesuits Lake leaders Louis Riel Manitoba Manitoba Act Maritime ment Métis Micmac military missionaries mixed-blood native groups native political negotiations newcomers North America northern Northwest officials Ojibwa Ontario Ottawa Pacific political potlatch prairie programs promises province Quebec Red River region relations relationship reserve lands residential schools Riel Saskatchewan self-government settlement settlers seventeenth century social St Lawrence territory tion Toronto traditional treaty tribes Trudeau Tsimshian Upper Canada warfare western Canada western Indians white paper