Indians and Missionaries

This chapter studies British–First Nations relations, looking at Indians and missionaries. The missionaries in question, though, are not just the British who worked in Canada, but First Nations men who toured Britain as preachers and spokespeople. The chapter extends the category to include George C...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Flint, Kate
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Princeton University Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008
id crprincetonpr:10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008
record_format openpolar
spelling crprincetonpr:10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008 2024-06-02T08:06:42+00:00 Indians and Missionaries Flint, Kate 2020 http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008 unknown Princeton University Press The Transatlantic Indian, 1776-1930 page 192-225 ISBN 9780691203188 9780691210254 book-chapter 2020 crprincetonpr https://doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008 2024-05-07T14:14:58Z This chapter studies British–First Nations relations, looking at Indians and missionaries. The missionaries in question, though, are not just the British who worked in Canada, but First Nations men who toured Britain as preachers and spokespeople. The chapter extends the category to include George Copway, whose account of his 1850 visit to Britain, en route to the third World Peace Conference, provides an extended example of native engagement with, and enthusiasm for, modernity. Many of the white missionaries believed they were importing spiritual and material benefits that would allow their native flocks to engage more effectively with an increasingly technological, less localized, and less subsistence-based world. Native commentators who left accounts likewise often position themselves, however awkwardly, as mediators between old and new lifestyles and discourses. Although they often situate themselves quite confidently as supporters of progress, setting the supposedly ahistorical and primitive against the teleological imperatives that informed late-nineteenth-century social systems, this confidence often breaks down when it comes to the question of belief. Not only do they—both native and white—often seek to establish a common ground between native and Christian spirituality, but they have, perhaps inevitably, a blind spot when it comes to asking whether the substitution, or overlaying, of one belief system with another does, in fact, constitute a form of modernity. Book Part First Nations Princeton University Press Canada 192 225
institution Open Polar
collection Princeton University Press
op_collection_id crprincetonpr
language unknown
description This chapter studies British–First Nations relations, looking at Indians and missionaries. The missionaries in question, though, are not just the British who worked in Canada, but First Nations men who toured Britain as preachers and spokespeople. The chapter extends the category to include George Copway, whose account of his 1850 visit to Britain, en route to the third World Peace Conference, provides an extended example of native engagement with, and enthusiasm for, modernity. Many of the white missionaries believed they were importing spiritual and material benefits that would allow their native flocks to engage more effectively with an increasingly technological, less localized, and less subsistence-based world. Native commentators who left accounts likewise often position themselves, however awkwardly, as mediators between old and new lifestyles and discourses. Although they often situate themselves quite confidently as supporters of progress, setting the supposedly ahistorical and primitive against the teleological imperatives that informed late-nineteenth-century social systems, this confidence often breaks down when it comes to the question of belief. Not only do they—both native and white—often seek to establish a common ground between native and Christian spirituality, but they have, perhaps inevitably, a blind spot when it comes to asking whether the substitution, or overlaying, of one belief system with another does, in fact, constitute a form of modernity.
format Book Part
author Flint, Kate
spellingShingle Flint, Kate
Indians and Missionaries
author_facet Flint, Kate
author_sort Flint, Kate
title Indians and Missionaries
title_short Indians and Missionaries
title_full Indians and Missionaries
title_fullStr Indians and Missionaries
title_full_unstemmed Indians and Missionaries
title_sort indians and missionaries
publisher Princeton University Press
publishDate 2020
url http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source The Transatlantic Indian, 1776-1930
page 192-225
ISBN 9780691203188 9780691210254
op_doi https://doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691203188.003.0008
container_start_page 192
op_container_end_page 225
_version_ 1800751658034003968