In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend that newspapers have played a central role in the Canadian colonial project through. their representation of Aboriginal peoples over the past 140 years. Despite having become less overtly racist in tone and terminology since the late nineteenth century, Canadian newspapers have nevertheless persisted in framing Aboriginal peoples within three essentialist tropes: depravity, innate inferiority, and a stubborn resistance to progress. These tropes have fed into the mainstream ideology underpinning colonial practices-the treaty system, residential schools, and ongoing assimilationist efforts-while simultaneously providing a foil against which main...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
Anderson, Mark Cronlund and Carmen L. Robertson. 2011. Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian ...
The first book to examine the role of Canada’s newspapers in perpetuating the myth of Native inferio...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
This edited volume argues that a race/culture binary lies at the heart of Canada\u27s ongoing relati...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
Aboriginal peoples have received unprecedented attention in Canada in the last five years. Violent c...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
Review of: Matas, Carol. Footsteps in the Snow: The Red River Diary of Isobel Scott, Rupert’s Land, ...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Doreen Barrie should have subtitled this book Advocating a Different Identity because this is its ...
The articles grouped in Contact Zones examine the racial, class, and gender power relations that dev...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
Anderson, Mark Cronlund and Carmen L. Robertson. 2011. Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian ...
The first book to examine the role of Canada’s newspapers in perpetuating the myth of Native inferio...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
This edited volume argues that a race/culture binary lies at the heart of Canada\u27s ongoing relati...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
Aboriginal peoples have received unprecedented attention in Canada in the last five years. Violent c...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
Review of: Matas, Carol. Footsteps in the Snow: The Red River Diary of Isobel Scott, Rupert’s Land, ...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Doreen Barrie should have subtitled this book Advocating a Different Identity because this is its ...
The articles grouped in Contact Zones examine the racial, class, and gender power relations that dev...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...