Sarah Carter reveals the pioneering efforts of the government, legal, and religious authorities to impose the “one man, one woman”model of marriage upon Mormons and Aboriginal people in Western Canada. This lucidly written, richly researched book revises what we know about marriage and the gendered politics of late 19th century reform, shifts our understanding of Aboriginal history during that time, and brings together the fields of Indigenous and migrant history in new and important ways
In the Australian context, Mary Bennett argued that demands for the abolition of polygamy were antit...
Using Marriage to Assert and Contest White Settler Sovereignty In this ambitious work, Ann McGrath e...
The identities of mixed Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal descendents in British Columbia is as varied a...
Sarah Carter\u27s The Importance of Being Monogamous is a timely study of Canada\u27s efforts at the...
This paper examines the legal treatment of Mormon polygamy in Canadian society through the lens of J...
Polygamy was a vexed question for missionaries in the Northern Territory ofAustralia. In the mid twe...
The issue of polygamy has become a political problem in the last twenty years in Canada, and in Brit...
A study of the policies and practices of marriage and family on the Seventh-day Adventist Aboriginal...
This essay examines the practice of Indigenous-settler intermarriage during the colonial period of N...
When Joseph Smith quietly introduced polygamy to a few chosen followers in Nauvoo, Illinois in April...
Common portrayals of Canada\u27s only openly polygamous community cast it as a space frozen in time,...
On November 22, 2010, after years of growing concern and controversy, the Supreme Court of British C...
In the nineteenth century, the power of religious belief transformed the legal landscape. This Artic...
The Canadian Criminal Code criminalizes the act of polygamy pursuant to s.290, and bigamy (another a...
In 1901, the year of Australian federation, the newly constituted State of Queensland restricted ma...
In the Australian context, Mary Bennett argued that demands for the abolition of polygamy were antit...
Using Marriage to Assert and Contest White Settler Sovereignty In this ambitious work, Ann McGrath e...
The identities of mixed Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal descendents in British Columbia is as varied a...
Sarah Carter\u27s The Importance of Being Monogamous is a timely study of Canada\u27s efforts at the...
This paper examines the legal treatment of Mormon polygamy in Canadian society through the lens of J...
Polygamy was a vexed question for missionaries in the Northern Territory ofAustralia. In the mid twe...
The issue of polygamy has become a political problem in the last twenty years in Canada, and in Brit...
A study of the policies and practices of marriage and family on the Seventh-day Adventist Aboriginal...
This essay examines the practice of Indigenous-settler intermarriage during the colonial period of N...
When Joseph Smith quietly introduced polygamy to a few chosen followers in Nauvoo, Illinois in April...
Common portrayals of Canada\u27s only openly polygamous community cast it as a space frozen in time,...
On November 22, 2010, after years of growing concern and controversy, the Supreme Court of British C...
In the nineteenth century, the power of religious belief transformed the legal landscape. This Artic...
The Canadian Criminal Code criminalizes the act of polygamy pursuant to s.290, and bigamy (another a...
In 1901, the year of Australian federation, the newly constituted State of Queensland restricted ma...
In the Australian context, Mary Bennett argued that demands for the abolition of polygamy were antit...
Using Marriage to Assert and Contest White Settler Sovereignty In this ambitious work, Ann McGrath e...
The identities of mixed Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal descendents in British Columbia is as varied a...