Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application

A significant change has occurred over the last forty years in the way archaeological and historical studies have perceived the way Aboriginal groups participated in the Western fur trade, from outdated portrayal of subordinate to a more accurate role as equal partner. A diachronic examination of Fo...

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Main Author: Bobbie, Lisa Corinne
Other Authors: Monks, Gregory (Anthropology), Fowler, Kent (Anthropology) Brownlie, Robin Jarvis (History)
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8873
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/8873 2023-05-15T15:55:03+02:00 Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application Bobbie, Lisa Corinne Monks, Gregory (Anthropology) Fowler, Kent (Anthropology) Brownlie, Robin Jarvis (History) 2012-09-18T19:02:46Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8873 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8873 Fur Trade Archaeology History Manitoba 2012 ftcanadathes 2014-03-30T00:52:09Z A significant change has occurred over the last forty years in the way archaeological and historical studies have perceived the way Aboriginal groups participated in the Western fur trade, from outdated portrayal of subordinate to a more accurate role as equal partner. A diachronic examination of Fort Churchill Trade Shop (IeKn-61) in northern Manitoba will provide a case study through which the Dene contributed to the market economy of the fur trade while maintaining their traditional modes of subsistence based around the migratory caribou herds of the subarctic. Employing world-systems theory, which attempts to relive the old patterns of thinking, would indicate that the Dene would abandon their central socio-economic on the caribou in favour of the new market economy focused on fur-bearers and European trade goods. However, aspects of this theory show the interconnectedness of the system from which follows that a partnership and control could be held by peripheral groups. A comprehensive analysis using historical, ethnographical and archaeological data sets are employed to determine the presence and degree of participation of the Dene at Fort Churchill through the 19th century. This examination using multiple lines of evidence provides an opportunity for a deeper understanding of Dene decision-making processes. Other/Unknown Material Churchill Subarctic Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Fort Churchill ENVELOPE(-94.079,-94.079,58.756,58.756)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language unknown
topic Fur Trade
Archaeology
History
Manitoba
spellingShingle Fur Trade
Archaeology
History
Manitoba
Bobbie, Lisa Corinne
Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
topic_facet Fur Trade
Archaeology
History
Manitoba
description A significant change has occurred over the last forty years in the way archaeological and historical studies have perceived the way Aboriginal groups participated in the Western fur trade, from outdated portrayal of subordinate to a more accurate role as equal partner. A diachronic examination of Fort Churchill Trade Shop (IeKn-61) in northern Manitoba will provide a case study through which the Dene contributed to the market economy of the fur trade while maintaining their traditional modes of subsistence based around the migratory caribou herds of the subarctic. Employing world-systems theory, which attempts to relive the old patterns of thinking, would indicate that the Dene would abandon their central socio-economic on the caribou in favour of the new market economy focused on fur-bearers and European trade goods. However, aspects of this theory show the interconnectedness of the system from which follows that a partnership and control could be held by peripheral groups. A comprehensive analysis using historical, ethnographical and archaeological data sets are employed to determine the presence and degree of participation of the Dene at Fort Churchill through the 19th century. This examination using multiple lines of evidence provides an opportunity for a deeper understanding of Dene decision-making processes.
author2 Monks, Gregory (Anthropology)
Fowler, Kent (Anthropology) Brownlie, Robin Jarvis (History)
author Bobbie, Lisa Corinne
author_facet Bobbie, Lisa Corinne
author_sort Bobbie, Lisa Corinne
title Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
title_short Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
title_full Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
title_fullStr Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
title_full_unstemmed Dene involvement in the Fort Churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
title_sort dene involvement in the fort churchill fur trade market economy - a world systems theory application
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8873
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.079,-94.079,58.756,58.756)
geographic Fort Churchill
geographic_facet Fort Churchill
genre Churchill
Subarctic
genre_facet Churchill
Subarctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8873
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