By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the province of Manitoba, Canada, and where the Hudson's Bay Company established fur trading posts. Through an analysis of documents concerning two unconnected lawsuits involving Countryborn women, it is possible to glean some understanding of how British women became agents of colonialism. Company authorities envisaged that White women would establish households predicated on Victorian patriarchal ideology that defined separate spheres for men and women. This article maps how White women stereotyped non-White women as 'Other,' manipulated their symbolic role as mothers of the English nation, and used rumour to maintain a segregated settlement. It al...
Much research in historical geography has ignored women’s experiences. Using archival sources and se...
PhDThis thesis traces the evolution of the role played by Indian, mixed-blood and white women in th...
This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women\u27s property rights in t...
By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the prov...
Scholarship on Canada's Métis women has been informed largely by their central economic and reproduc...
In 1850 and 1863, the British Hudson\u27s Bay Company\u27s Red River colony (current day Winnipeg) w...
Six Nations women transformed and maintained power in the Grand River community in the early twentie...
Settler Feminism and Race Making in Canada engages in a discursive analysis of three ‘texts’-the nar...
The subject of this paper is the subjugation of. native (Indian and Half-breed) women in northern an...
Centering the principles of otipemisiwak and wahkohtowin, this thesis examines the role of Métis wom...
This thesis argues that European women exercised agency in mid nineteenth century Ballarat. It devel...
The Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada (RCSW), embedded in liberal hegemonic feminist...
Sherpa Romeo yellow journalExamines how 19th century white settler women set the standards for femin...
Note:Images of Indian women shared by explorers and traders of the Northwest significantly infl uenc...
This essay reconstructs the unexplored history of a group of women who claimed a place for themselv...
Much research in historical geography has ignored women’s experiences. Using archival sources and se...
PhDThis thesis traces the evolution of the role played by Indian, mixed-blood and white women in th...
This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women\u27s property rights in t...
By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the prov...
Scholarship on Canada's Métis women has been informed largely by their central economic and reproduc...
In 1850 and 1863, the British Hudson\u27s Bay Company\u27s Red River colony (current day Winnipeg) w...
Six Nations women transformed and maintained power in the Grand River community in the early twentie...
Settler Feminism and Race Making in Canada engages in a discursive analysis of three ‘texts’-the nar...
The subject of this paper is the subjugation of. native (Indian and Half-breed) women in northern an...
Centering the principles of otipemisiwak and wahkohtowin, this thesis examines the role of Métis wom...
This thesis argues that European women exercised agency in mid nineteenth century Ballarat. It devel...
The Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada (RCSW), embedded in liberal hegemonic feminist...
Sherpa Romeo yellow journalExamines how 19th century white settler women set the standards for femin...
Note:Images of Indian women shared by explorers and traders of the Northwest significantly infl uenc...
This essay reconstructs the unexplored history of a group of women who claimed a place for themselv...
Much research in historical geography has ignored women’s experiences. Using archival sources and se...
PhDThis thesis traces the evolution of the role played by Indian, mixed-blood and white women in th...
This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women\u27s property rights in t...