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Mary Jane Logan McCallum. Geography of Blood, A. They Called Me Number One.

Finding a Way to the Heart: Feminist Writings on Aboriginal and Women's - Google Книги

The Colonization of Mi'kmaw Memory and History, Science, Colonialism, and Indigenous Peoples. The Nurture of Nature. Elder Brother and the Law of the People. Contours of a People.

Finding a Way to the Heart: Feminist Writings on Aboriginal and Women's History in Canada

The Third Space of Sovereignty. Colonial Genocide in Indigenous North America.

Aboriginal People and the Australian Nation. The West and Beyond. Residential Schools and Reconciliation.

Great Plains Quarterly

Travels in the Shining Island. National Identity and the Conflict at Oka. Within and Without the Nation.

People of the Saltwater. Edible Histories, Cultural Politics. How to write a great review. The review must be at least 50 characters long. The title should be at least 4 characters long. Your display name should be at least 2 characters long. At Kobo, we try to ensure that published reviews do not contain rude or profane language, spoilers, or any of our reviewer's personal information. You submitted the following rating and review. We'll publish them on our site once we've reviewed them.

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Please review your cart. You can remove the unavailable item s now or we'll automatically remove it at Checkout. Continue shopping Checkout Continue shopping. Chi ama i libri sceglie Kobo e inMondadori. Available in Russia Shop from Russia to buy this item. Or, get it for Kobo Super Points! It will come as no surprise to many that her insistence that Aboriginal women were significant historical actors was met with resistance by a historic field dominated by men.

Furthermore, this resistance extended to a male dominated academy undergoing a rapid transformation that included women as colleagues and historical subjects. As a result, this book is revealing on multiple levels. The book is structured as an edited volume. It is at once both a love letter honouring this influential female scholar, and the story of a group of scholars who first asked new historical questions to uncover the multifaceted roles of women. Brown, colleague Franca Iacovetta, and former student Valerie Korinek. Elizabeth Jameson highlights the significance of her historical analysis on Native American histories spanning several centuries in the western United States, and its influence on colonial and post-colonial studies.

Through the lens of her own work on an ethnically diverse, transnational Douglas- Connolly family, Adele Perry explores the influence of Many Tender Ties and its continuing resonance. The remainder of the second part of the book contains articles linked by a common focus on women, intimate relationships, and kinship ties, as they relate to broader stories of trade, colonial and post-colonial trading networks, and the intricacies of Aboriginal communities.

Angela Wanhalla explores interracial conjugal relations between the Maori people and traders in colonial New Zealand. Robert Innes picks up on the theme of family and kinship to explore the cultural complexities of Aboriginal prairie groups, demonstrating the importance of kinship in the formation of bands. Patricia McCormack explores the fur trade in similar ways to Van Kirk and highlights its regional variations, conclusively pointing out how the northern fur trade far outlasted the southern. Mirroring the concerns of Van Kirk to include Aboriginal perspectives within her work, Jarvis Brownlie explores the colonial discourse on race, including both British colonizers and Aboriginal voices.