Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town

This thesis, based on three months of fieldwork in 1998, is a study of inter-cultural friendships between Native and non-Native residents of Chisasibi, Quebec in which I examine the factors that hinder and/or enable friendships to form between individuals of different cultural backgrounds. I describ...

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Main Author: Leclerc, Nancy
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/1/MQ68389.pdf
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:QMG.1603 2023-05-15T15:54:16+02:00 Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town Leclerc, Nancy 2001 application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/1/MQ68389.pdf unknown http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/ http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/1/MQ68389.pdf Leclerc, Nancy <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Leclerc=3ANancy=3A=3A.html> (2001) Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town. Masters thesis, Concordia University. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2001 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T23:11:28Z This thesis, based on three months of fieldwork in 1998, is a study of inter-cultural friendships between Native and non-Native residents of Chisasibi, Quebec in which I examine the factors that hinder and/or enable friendships to form between individuals of different cultural backgrounds. I describe how, despite historical and political tensions that are a part of the larger context of Native/non-Native relations in Canada, individuals are able to establish friendships based on shared social networks and experiences, age and common interests; in particular, popular youth culture (beer, soccer, rock music and so forth). I employ the concepts of cultural and social systems, as delineated by Gary Witherspoon (1975) and the notion of habitus as explained by Pierre Bourdieu (1990). The field methods used in gathering data followed Jean-Guy Goulet's (1998) experiential approach where personal interaction is considered as the primary means for obtaining knowledge. Data was derived both from discussions with Native and non-Native residents of Chisasibi and from my own experiences in relating to people in different social situations in the community. The primary goal of the thesis is to help open channels of communication between Native and non-Native Canadians. The ethnographic portion of this work is therefore written in narrative form to explore a form of ethnography that is reflexive and humanistic and that promotes the ideals of autonomy and sharing that are valued by members of my host community. Thesis Chisasibi James Bay Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Canada Chisasibi ENVELOPE(-78.333,-78.333,53.667,53.667)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
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language unknown
description This thesis, based on three months of fieldwork in 1998, is a study of inter-cultural friendships between Native and non-Native residents of Chisasibi, Quebec in which I examine the factors that hinder and/or enable friendships to form between individuals of different cultural backgrounds. I describe how, despite historical and political tensions that are a part of the larger context of Native/non-Native relations in Canada, individuals are able to establish friendships based on shared social networks and experiences, age and common interests; in particular, popular youth culture (beer, soccer, rock music and so forth). I employ the concepts of cultural and social systems, as delineated by Gary Witherspoon (1975) and the notion of habitus as explained by Pierre Bourdieu (1990). The field methods used in gathering data followed Jean-Guy Goulet's (1998) experiential approach where personal interaction is considered as the primary means for obtaining knowledge. Data was derived both from discussions with Native and non-Native residents of Chisasibi and from my own experiences in relating to people in different social situations in the community. The primary goal of the thesis is to help open channels of communication between Native and non-Native Canadians. The ethnographic portion of this work is therefore written in narrative form to explore a form of ethnography that is reflexive and humanistic and that promotes the ideals of autonomy and sharing that are valued by members of my host community.
format Thesis
author Leclerc, Nancy
spellingShingle Leclerc, Nancy
Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
author_facet Leclerc, Nancy
author_sort Leclerc, Nancy
title Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
title_short Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
title_full Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
title_fullStr Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
title_full_unstemmed Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town
title_sort friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a james bay town
publishDate 2001
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/1/MQ68389.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-78.333,-78.333,53.667,53.667)
geographic Canada
Chisasibi
geographic_facet Canada
Chisasibi
genre Chisasibi
James Bay
genre_facet Chisasibi
James Bay
op_relation http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/
http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1603/1/MQ68389.pdf
Leclerc, Nancy <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Leclerc=3ANancy=3A=3A.html> (2001) Friends and strangers : experience and commonality in a James Bay town. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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