Studies of the Red River Settlement, the Metis people, and their buffalo hunt are so numerous that historians in the wider fields of Aboriginal or western Canadian studies have become increasingly impatient with this phenomenon of Red River myopia. The question a reader must ask of this book is what new perspective Gerhard Ens brings to the existing material. According to Ens, Homeland to Hinterland situates the local experience in a broader process of economic change. Authors of previous works, he claims, were political historians writing about the rise of a \u27new nation\u27 without adequately explaining the social and economic origins, or fur trade historians who seldom examine the Red River Metis past the mid-nineteenth century....
The whig interpretation, which can be most simply defined as the idea that past events led in direct...
The Canadian Plains Research Center has provj.ded a new and amended version of the Plains Cree, a cl...
Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that...
Studies of the Red River Settlement, the Metis people, and their buffalo hunt are so numerous that h...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
Professor Flanagan\u27s latest revisionist publication heralds the centenary of the 1885 Saskatchewa...
In The Canadian Prairies, Gerald Friesen has taken on a monumental task. Over the past generation pr...
John Milloy\u27s examination of the Plains Cree fits in with the growing concern for presenting hist...
This innovative work is an ethno-historical study of the Ojibwa migration from the Great Lakes regio...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
The recent publication of Long Journey and Western Metis is indicative of the burgeoning interest in...
Until recently, sources for Mets studies have been few both for classroom use as well as academic re...
With the emergence of native issues such as land claims and self-government in the Canadian constitu...
A striking aspect of the historiography of Metis studies in Canada and the northern United States re...
Apart from being from Western Canada, what do Louis Riel and Peter Lougheed have in common? Accordin...
The whig interpretation, which can be most simply defined as the idea that past events led in direct...
The Canadian Plains Research Center has provj.ded a new and amended version of the Plains Cree, a cl...
Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that...
Studies of the Red River Settlement, the Metis people, and their buffalo hunt are so numerous that h...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
Professor Flanagan\u27s latest revisionist publication heralds the centenary of the 1885 Saskatchewa...
In The Canadian Prairies, Gerald Friesen has taken on a monumental task. Over the past generation pr...
John Milloy\u27s examination of the Plains Cree fits in with the growing concern for presenting hist...
This innovative work is an ethno-historical study of the Ojibwa migration from the Great Lakes regio...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
The recent publication of Long Journey and Western Metis is indicative of the burgeoning interest in...
Until recently, sources for Mets studies have been few both for classroom use as well as academic re...
With the emergence of native issues such as land claims and self-government in the Canadian constitu...
A striking aspect of the historiography of Metis studies in Canada and the northern United States re...
Apart from being from Western Canada, what do Louis Riel and Peter Lougheed have in common? Accordin...
The whig interpretation, which can be most simply defined as the idea that past events led in direct...
The Canadian Plains Research Center has provj.ded a new and amended version of the Plains Cree, a cl...
Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that...