This edited volume argues that a race/culture binary lies at the heart of Canada\u27s ongoing relationship with the descendants of the country\u27s First Peoples. In looking at the service professions, editors Carol Schick and James McNinch trouble taken-for-granted assumptions based upon racial, cultural, and ethnic difference, arguing that representations of Indigenous peoples as culturally inferior, a trope that has replaced the idea of biological inferiority, is highly instrumental in the social positioning and unequal power relations that exists today in Canadian society. In turn, the editors tie this discussion back to Canada\u27s colonial history and the social, material, and ideological conditions produced in previous eras
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
A volume of the policy and concept of multiculturalism is particularly welcome at a moment when the ...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
This edited volume argues that a race/culture binary lies at the heart of Canada\u27s ongoing relati...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
As is the case with most western, liberal-democratic nations, Canada’s metanarratives are far from s...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
This collection of essays on the state of Aboriginal peoples in Canada is a reflection of the work o...
Encompassing an approach to the study of Canadian -literature that resulted in a conference held in ...
The recent history of museums and Indigenous peoples has developed along diverging lines in Canada a...
The Media Gaze effectively shatters the assumption that Canada, in all its political correctness, is...
Review of Dominion of Race: Rethinking Canada’s International History by Laura Madokoro, Francine ...
Drawing upon the writings of post-structuralists, cultural geographers, and feminist post-colonial s...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
A volume of the policy and concept of multiculturalism is particularly welcome at a moment when the ...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
This edited volume argues that a race/culture binary lies at the heart of Canada\u27s ongoing relati...
In this intensely provocative book, University of Regina professors Anderson and Robertson contend t...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
As is the case with most western, liberal-democratic nations, Canada’s metanarratives are far from s...
In some respects, this comprehensive anthology represents the cutting edge in a growing field of stu...
This collection of essays on the state of Aboriginal peoples in Canada is a reflection of the work o...
Encompassing an approach to the study of Canadian -literature that resulted in a conference held in ...
The recent history of museums and Indigenous peoples has developed along diverging lines in Canada a...
The Media Gaze effectively shatters the assumption that Canada, in all its political correctness, is...
Review of Dominion of Race: Rethinking Canada’s International History by Laura Madokoro, Francine ...
Drawing upon the writings of post-structuralists, cultural geographers, and feminist post-colonial s...
In Before the Country, Stephanie McKenzie examines Canadian literature of the 1960s and 1970s to id...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
A volume of the policy and concept of multiculturalism is particularly welcome at a moment when the ...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...