1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910459943103321

Autore

Miller J.R.

Titolo

Reflections on Native-Newcomer Relations : Selected Essays / / J.R. Miller

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Toronto : , : University of Toronto Press, , [2017]

©2004

ISBN

1-4426-2334-9

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource

Collana

Heritage

Disciplina

971.004/97

Soggetti

Indians of North America - Canada - Government relations

Indians of North America - Canada - Historiography

Indians of North America - Canada - History

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / Native American Studies

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Historiography -- Bringing Native People In from the Margins: The Recent Evolution and Future Prospects of English-Canadian Historiography on Native-Newcomer Relations -- From Riel to the Métis -- Methodology -- 'I can only tell what I know': Shifting Notions of Historical Understanding in the 1990s -- Reading Photographs, Reading Voices: Documenting the History of Native Residential Schools -- Policy -- Owen Glendower, Hotspur, and Canadian Indian Policy -- Great White Father Knows Best: Oka and the Land Claims Process -- Canada and the Aboriginal Peoples, 1867-1927 -- The State, the Church, and Indian Residential Schools in Canada -- The Crown -- Petitioning the Great White Mother: First Nations' Organizations and Lobbying in London -- 'I will accept the Queen's hand': First Nations Leaders and the Image of the Crown in the Prairie Treaties -- Academe -- Devil's Island, Marijuana U., and the League of the Six Nations: Models for Governing the University -- Aboriginal Peoples and the Academy -- Bibliography

Sommario/riassunto

The twelve essays that make up Reflections on Native-Newcomer Relations illustrate the development in thought by one of Canada's



leading scholars in the field of Native history - J.R. Miller. The collection, comprising pieces that were written over a period spanning nearly two decades, deals with the evolution of historical writing on First Nations and Métis, methodological issues in the writing of Native-newcomer history, policy matters including residential schools, and linkages between the study of Native-newcomer relations and academic governance and curricular matters. Half of the essays appear here in print for the first time, and all use archival, published, and oral history evidence to throw light on Native-Newcomer relations.Miller argues that the nature of the relationship between Native peoples and newcomers in Canada has varied over time, based on the reasons the two parties have had for interacting. The relationship deteriorates into attempts to control and coerce Natives during periods in which newcomers do not perceive them as directly useful, and it improves when the two parties have positive reasons for cooperation. Reflections on Native-Newcomer Relations opens up for discussion a series of issues in Native-newcomer history. It addresses all the trends in the discipline of the past two decades and never shies from showing their contradictions, as well as those in the author's own thinking as he matured as a scholar.