An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity

The Oka crisis is the departure point for a study of prolonged and sustained contact between cultures. Based upon a central tenet which recognizes the bidirectional nature of contact, the textual body of this thesis is arranged into the following four broad themes: l) nations and nationalism 2) the...

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Main Author: Correia, Maria de la Salette
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3688
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/3688 2023-05-15T16:17:12+02:00 An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity Correia, Maria de la Salette 2009-12-03T21:17:05Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3688 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3688 The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner. 2009 ftcanadathes 2014-03-30T00:50:28Z The Oka crisis is the departure point for a study of prolonged and sustained contact between cultures. Based upon a central tenet which recognizes the bidirectional nature of contact, the textual body of this thesis is arranged into the following four broad themes: l) nations and nationalism 2) the Indian; 3) the Mohawk; and 4) Oka as a post-modern crisis. The contact that occurred between civilizations in the Western Hemisphere (indeed the contact that occurred between cultures around the world) created a mixed reality of multiple codes, overlapping histories and shared experience and ideology. Nationalism is a product of modern Western ideology. The First Nations became nations in the Western sense through a process of nationalism developed through contact between traditional aboriginal societies and modern European ones. Conversely, the transplanted European culture and society developed into the North American sociocultural complex through contact with the indigenous societies and cultures. By the middle of the twentieth century, well over three quarters of the earth's surface had been colonized. Consequently, Western Civilization attained a privileged position against which all other global nations, societies, institutions or structures were measured. Western epistemology has only recently been challenged by social critics who question the precepts of Western authority. Within the discipline of anthropology, alternate avenues of authority help create a more inclusive portrait of humanity. The postmodern, variously described as an aesthetic trend, a body of theory, or the culture of late capitalism, is ultimately characterized by its absence of master-narratives. The processes of global decolonization and textual deconstruction have created a new economic, political and social reality. Western Civilization has tumbled from its Archimedean position. The critique of colonialism has questioned Western authority and presentation in almost all Western disciplines, including anthropology. In the post-modern age, anthropology now acknowledges the differences within cultures and the similarities between cultures. The formerly colonized continue to criticize and challenge Western authority, representation, and knowledge. The breakdown of Western authority positions Oka as a post-modern crisis and reveals Mohawk society to be complex and heterogenous, struggling against the Canadian nation state and those who still accept the Canadian master-narratives. Other/Unknown Material First Nations Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Departure Point ENVELOPE(-98.836,-98.836,79.669,79.669) Indian
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collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
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language English
description The Oka crisis is the departure point for a study of prolonged and sustained contact between cultures. Based upon a central tenet which recognizes the bidirectional nature of contact, the textual body of this thesis is arranged into the following four broad themes: l) nations and nationalism 2) the Indian; 3) the Mohawk; and 4) Oka as a post-modern crisis. The contact that occurred between civilizations in the Western Hemisphere (indeed the contact that occurred between cultures around the world) created a mixed reality of multiple codes, overlapping histories and shared experience and ideology. Nationalism is a product of modern Western ideology. The First Nations became nations in the Western sense through a process of nationalism developed through contact between traditional aboriginal societies and modern European ones. Conversely, the transplanted European culture and society developed into the North American sociocultural complex through contact with the indigenous societies and cultures. By the middle of the twentieth century, well over three quarters of the earth's surface had been colonized. Consequently, Western Civilization attained a privileged position against which all other global nations, societies, institutions or structures were measured. Western epistemology has only recently been challenged by social critics who question the precepts of Western authority. Within the discipline of anthropology, alternate avenues of authority help create a more inclusive portrait of humanity. The postmodern, variously described as an aesthetic trend, a body of theory, or the culture of late capitalism, is ultimately characterized by its absence of master-narratives. The processes of global decolonization and textual deconstruction have created a new economic, political and social reality. Western Civilization has tumbled from its Archimedean position. The critique of colonialism has questioned Western authority and presentation in almost all Western disciplines, including anthropology. In the post-modern age, anthropology now acknowledges the differences within cultures and the similarities between cultures. The formerly colonized continue to criticize and challenge Western authority, representation, and knowledge. The breakdown of Western authority positions Oka as a post-modern crisis and reveals Mohawk society to be complex and heterogenous, struggling against the Canadian nation state and those who still accept the Canadian master-narratives.
author Correia, Maria de la Salette
spellingShingle Correia, Maria de la Salette
An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
author_facet Correia, Maria de la Salette
author_sort Correia, Maria de la Salette
title An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
title_short An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
title_full An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
title_fullStr An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
title_full_unstemmed An anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at Oka 1990 : from Western authority to post-modernity
title_sort anthropological reinterpretation of contact, conflict, and crisis at oka 1990 : from western authority to post-modernity
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3688
long_lat ENVELOPE(-98.836,-98.836,79.669,79.669)
geographic Departure Point
Indian
geographic_facet Departure Point
Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3688
op_rights The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
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