Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond

East of Lake Winnipeg is what conservationists call the ‘east shore wilderness’ / ‘heart of the boreal.’ The largest contiguous tract of unindustrialized boreal forest on Earth, this area has been the focus of 15 years of discussion and planning in Manitoba. The area is also designated Waabanong Nak...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Weinberg, Alon David
Other Authors: Kulchyski, Peter (Native Studies), Eigenbrod, Renate (Native Studies) McLachlan, Stephane (Environment and Geography)
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23243
id ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/23243
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/23243 2023-05-15T13:28:29+02:00 Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond Weinberg, Alon David Kulchyski, Peter (Native Studies) Eigenbrod, Renate (Native Studies) McLachlan, Stephane (Environment and Geography) 2014-01-15T18:10:44Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23243 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23243 Anishinaabe boreal forest cultural continuity all-weather Roads Memory ecology bioregionalism decolonization Bloodvein Beerens River Poplar River Hollow Water trapping Heart of the boreal Pimachiowin Aki sustainable development development 2014 ftcanadathes 2014-06-28T23:46:34Z East of Lake Winnipeg is what conservationists call the ‘east shore wilderness’ / ‘heart of the boreal.’ The largest contiguous tract of unindustrialized boreal forest on Earth, this area has been the focus of 15 years of discussion and planning in Manitoba. The area is also designated Waabanong Nakaygum, a homeland to the Anishinaabek of this bush-meets-lake region. Waabanong has seen limited access during the industrial period of personal mechanized mobility due to a lack of constructed all-weather roads. However, an older pattern of travel and mobility does exist across the land, for centuries constituting traditional Anishinaabek patterns of land use and trade. As all-weather roads are being constructed along Lake Winnipeg, oral interviews will examine the question: will the older trails remain in the collective culture of the people or shall the north-south cultural and economic flows replace the east-west bush history traced by the rivers that wind through? Other/Unknown Material anishina* Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language unknown
topic Anishinaabe
boreal forest
cultural continuity
all-weather
Roads
Memory
ecology
bioregionalism
decolonization
Bloodvein
Beerens River
Poplar River
Hollow Water
trapping
Heart of the boreal
Pimachiowin Aki
sustainable development
development
spellingShingle Anishinaabe
boreal forest
cultural continuity
all-weather
Roads
Memory
ecology
bioregionalism
decolonization
Bloodvein
Beerens River
Poplar River
Hollow Water
trapping
Heart of the boreal
Pimachiowin Aki
sustainable development
development
Weinberg, Alon David
Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
topic_facet Anishinaabe
boreal forest
cultural continuity
all-weather
Roads
Memory
ecology
bioregionalism
decolonization
Bloodvein
Beerens River
Poplar River
Hollow Water
trapping
Heart of the boreal
Pimachiowin Aki
sustainable development
development
description East of Lake Winnipeg is what conservationists call the ‘east shore wilderness’ / ‘heart of the boreal.’ The largest contiguous tract of unindustrialized boreal forest on Earth, this area has been the focus of 15 years of discussion and planning in Manitoba. The area is also designated Waabanong Nakaygum, a homeland to the Anishinaabek of this bush-meets-lake region. Waabanong has seen limited access during the industrial period of personal mechanized mobility due to a lack of constructed all-weather roads. However, an older pattern of travel and mobility does exist across the land, for centuries constituting traditional Anishinaabek patterns of land use and trade. As all-weather roads are being constructed along Lake Winnipeg, oral interviews will examine the question: will the older trails remain in the collective culture of the people or shall the north-south cultural and economic flows replace the east-west bush history traced by the rivers that wind through?
author2 Kulchyski, Peter (Native Studies)
Eigenbrod, Renate (Native Studies) McLachlan, Stephane (Environment and Geography)
author Weinberg, Alon David
author_facet Weinberg, Alon David
author_sort Weinberg, Alon David
title Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
title_short Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
title_full Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
title_fullStr Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
title_full_unstemmed Dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: Anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through Waabanong Nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of Lake Winnipeg and beyond
title_sort dialogue, displacement and return - contexts of a journey on a two-way road: anishinaabek responses to all-weather roads through waabanong nakaygum: memory and continuity on the eastern shores of lake winnipeg and beyond
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23243
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23243
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