A comprehensive study of Canadian First Nations\u27 experiences during the Great War is long overdue, making Timothy C. Winegard\u27s For King and Kanata a welcome addition to the historiography. In a style both engaging and accessible, Winegard tells the individual and collective stories of those Indian men who enlisted to fight for the Crown. His book also focuses on how government policy shaped First Nations\u27 participation in the war effort. Race, for instance, played a determining role. At first, the government banned Indian men from serving. As casualties mounted and pressure from Britain grew, however, Canadian officials began active recruitment on reserves
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
Review of The Secret History of Soldiers: How Canadians Survived the Great War by Tim Cook
Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of ni...
A comprehensive study of Canadian First Nations\u27 experiences during the Great War is long overdue...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
Dr. Winegard has recently published two books: Indigenous Peoples of the Dominions and the First Wor...
Anthropologist Susan Applegate Krouse employs the records of Joseph Kossuth Dixon to shed light on t...
Timothy C. Winegard, 2012, For King and Kanata. Canadian Indians and the First World War, Winnipeg :...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
In Loyal till Death, Blair Stonechild and Bill Waiser retell the North-West Rebellion from the India...
Review of Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War: The Politics, Experiences and Legacies of War...
Review of: American Indians in World War I: At Home and at War. Britten, Thomas A
Although the publisher claims on its jacket cover that Kenneth William Townsend\u27s World War II an...
Peer reviewedThe history of relations between the Indigenous populations of Canada and its colonial ...
Review of Fighting with the Empire: Canada, Britain and Global Conflict, 1867-1947 edited by Steve M...
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
Review of The Secret History of Soldiers: How Canadians Survived the Great War by Tim Cook
Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of ni...
A comprehensive study of Canadian First Nations\u27 experiences during the Great War is long overdue...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
Dr. Winegard has recently published two books: Indigenous Peoples of the Dominions and the First Wor...
Anthropologist Susan Applegate Krouse employs the records of Joseph Kossuth Dixon to shed light on t...
Timothy C. Winegard, 2012, For King and Kanata. Canadian Indians and the First World War, Winnipeg :...
R. Scott Sheffield\u27s study of the images used by bureaucrats and journalists provides an in-depth...
In Loyal till Death, Blair Stonechild and Bill Waiser retell the North-West Rebellion from the India...
Review of Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War: The Politics, Experiences and Legacies of War...
Review of: American Indians in World War I: At Home and at War. Britten, Thomas A
Although the publisher claims on its jacket cover that Kenneth William Townsend\u27s World War II an...
Peer reviewedThe history of relations between the Indigenous populations of Canada and its colonial ...
Review of Fighting with the Empire: Canada, Britain and Global Conflict, 1867-1947 edited by Steve M...
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
Review of The Secret History of Soldiers: How Canadians Survived the Great War by Tim Cook
Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of ni...