A Legacy of Exploitation
$37.95
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
An exhaustive uncovering of the history of exploitation in Canada’s Red River Colony. As a settler-colonialist project par excellence, the Red River Colony was the Hudson’s Bay Company’s first planned settlement. A Legacy of Exploitation unveils the history of this development, whose design was to vilify Indigenous peoples’ “troublesome” autonomy and better control the labor of Indigenous producers. Susan Dianne Brophy upends standard historical portrayals by foregrounding Indigenous peoples’ independence as a driving force of change.
A Legacy of Exploitation offers a critical, comprehensive account of legal, economic, and geopolitical relations to show how autonomy can become distorted as complicity in processes of dispossession. Ultimately, this book challenges enduring, yet misleading, national fantasies about Canada as a nation of bold adventurers. Susan Dianne Brophy is associate professor and chair of the Department of Sociology and Legal Studies at St. Jerome’s University.Introduction: Exploitation and Autonomy
1 Reciprocity and Dispossession: Processes of Transformation
2 Monopoly and Competition: Contests over Indigenous Peoples’ Labour and Land
3 Honour and Duplicity: Debts of Rivals, Dreams of an Aristocrat
4 Servitude and Independence: The Settler Colonial “Experiment” Begins
5 Menace and Ally: Proclamation as Provocation
6 Consciousness and Ignorance: New Nation, Old Grievances
Conclusion: Continuity and Change
Notes; Bibliography; Index
1 Reciprocity and Dispossession: Processes of Transformation
2 Monopoly and Competition: Contests over Indigenous Peoples’ Labour and Land
3 Honour and Duplicity: Debts of Rivals, Dreams of an Aristocrat
4 Servitude and Independence: The Settler Colonial “Experiment” Begins
5 Menace and Ally: Proclamation as Provocation
6 Consciousness and Ignorance: New Nation, Old Grievances
Conclusion: Continuity and Change
Notes; Bibliography; Index
“A Legacy of Exploitation is highly significant, even crucial. This excellent intervention into fur trade studies, British colonial history, and the history of the establishment of the Red River Colony will change how I write and teach.”
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |
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