Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860

Taking mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island as its case studies, this thesis attempts to uncover the mechanisms by which the Mi'kmaq were dispossessed of their lands in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Dispossession is here problematized as a process connected to, but distinct fr...

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Main Author: Coady, Jesse Watkins
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/1/Coady_MA_S2020.pdf
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spelling ftconcordiauniv:oai:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca:986480 2023-05-15T15:46:48+02:00 Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860 Coady, Jesse Watkins 2019-11-13 text https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/ https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/1/Coady_MA_S2020.pdf en eng https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/1/Coady_MA_S2020.pdf Coady, Jesse Watkins (2019) Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860. Masters thesis, Concordia University. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftconcordiauniv 2022-05-28T19:03:57Z Taking mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island as its case studies, this thesis attempts to uncover the mechanisms by which the Mi'kmaq were dispossessed of their lands in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Dispossession is here problematized as a process connected to, but distinct from, the imposition of British jurisdiction in Mi'kma'ki following the conclusion of the Seven Years' War. In key respects, dispossession was an inherently local, unpredictable process involving a myriad of actors with disparate motives and interests; at the same time, it was given structural coherence by imperial and colonial land policies, which subjected settlers qua subjects of the Crown to common economic compulsions and constraints. This thesis argues that it was the promotion of capitalist social property relations in particular that provided the greatest impetus for the dispossession of both Mi'kmaq and settlers in this period, giving rise to complex intra- and inter-class dynamics. Although imperial and colonial policies varied widely in their efficacy and application across wide swathes of mostly unpoliceable territory, the promotion of capitalist economic imperatives played a decisive role in facilitating dispossession in even the remotest and most marginal areas. Crucially, it gave rise to widespread squatting, frustrating the authorities' plans for the orderly and profitable settlement of the colony and necessitating a policy of compromise with implicated settlers. By the mid-nineteenth century, authorities largely abandoned their policy of protecting indigenous reserves, opting to sell squatters their improvements in what amounted to a fire-sale of encroached-upon Crown lands. Thesis Breton Island Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository (Montreal) Breton Island ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800)
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language English
description Taking mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island as its case studies, this thesis attempts to uncover the mechanisms by which the Mi'kmaq were dispossessed of their lands in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Dispossession is here problematized as a process connected to, but distinct from, the imposition of British jurisdiction in Mi'kma'ki following the conclusion of the Seven Years' War. In key respects, dispossession was an inherently local, unpredictable process involving a myriad of actors with disparate motives and interests; at the same time, it was given structural coherence by imperial and colonial land policies, which subjected settlers qua subjects of the Crown to common economic compulsions and constraints. This thesis argues that it was the promotion of capitalist social property relations in particular that provided the greatest impetus for the dispossession of both Mi'kmaq and settlers in this period, giving rise to complex intra- and inter-class dynamics. Although imperial and colonial policies varied widely in their efficacy and application across wide swathes of mostly unpoliceable territory, the promotion of capitalist economic imperatives played a decisive role in facilitating dispossession in even the remotest and most marginal areas. Crucially, it gave rise to widespread squatting, frustrating the authorities' plans for the orderly and profitable settlement of the colony and necessitating a policy of compromise with implicated settlers. By the mid-nineteenth century, authorities largely abandoned their policy of protecting indigenous reserves, opting to sell squatters their improvements in what amounted to a fire-sale of encroached-upon Crown lands.
format Thesis
author Coady, Jesse Watkins
spellingShingle Coady, Jesse Watkins
Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
author_facet Coady, Jesse Watkins
author_sort Coady, Jesse Watkins
title Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
title_short Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
title_full Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
title_fullStr Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
title_full_unstemmed Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
title_sort capitalism and dispossession: the commodification of the countryside and the "improvement" of mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860
publishDate 2019
url https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/1/Coady_MA_S2020.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.383,141.383,-66.800,-66.800)
geographic Breton Island
geographic_facet Breton Island
genre Breton Island
genre_facet Breton Island
op_relation https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/986480/1/Coady_MA_S2020.pdf
Coady, Jesse Watkins (2019) Capitalism and Dispossession: The Commodification of the Countryside and the "Improvement" of Mi'kma'ki, 1760-1860. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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