We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979

This thesis uses the Micmac News to explore the rise of status and non-status Mi’kmaw women’s activism in Nova Scotia chronologically, from 1971 to 1979. It traces change in opinion, practice and community needs over time, in the context of the national battle to remove Section 12(1)(b) from the Ind...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peters, Mercedes
Other Authors: Department of History, Master of Arts, n/a, Colin Mitchell, Shirley Tillotson, Martha Walls, Jerry Bannister, Not Applicable
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/74070
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/74070 2023-05-15T17:12:58+02:00 We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979 Peters, Mercedes Department of History Master of Arts n/a Colin Mitchell Shirley Tillotson Martha Walls Jerry Bannister Not Applicable 2018-07-26T11:02:27Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/74070 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/74070 Indian Act Canada Reconciliation Indigenous Activism Indigenous Media Mi'kmaq History Mi'kmaq Women Assimilation Policy Nova Scotia Mi'kma'ki Indigenous Women Micmac News 2018 ftdalhouse 2022-03-06T00:10:30Z This thesis uses the Micmac News to explore the rise of status and non-status Mi’kmaw women’s activism in Nova Scotia chronologically, from 1971 to 1979. It traces change in opinion, practice and community needs over time, in the context of the national battle to remove Section 12(1)(b) from the Indian Act. The News was created and maintained by Mi’kmaw people, giving us a Mi’kmaw perspective on aspects of Indigenous women’s experiences during the period; this regional approach is often missing from literature on this subject. By focusing on Mi’kmaw women’s writing in the News, this thesis challenges conceptions of Indigenous activism perpetuated by historical works focused primarily on the experiences of national, predominantly male, status Indigenous lobby groups. Reconciliation requires historical understanding; as such, this thesis demonstrates how paternal assimilation policy marginalized Indigenous women, and how these policies were internalized by Indigenous groups. If we understand, we can heal. Other/Unknown Material Mi’kmaw Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Canada Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Indian Act
Canada
Reconciliation
Indigenous Activism
Indigenous Media
Mi'kmaq History
Mi'kmaq Women
Assimilation Policy
Nova Scotia
Mi'kma'ki
Indigenous Women
Micmac News
spellingShingle Indian Act
Canada
Reconciliation
Indigenous Activism
Indigenous Media
Mi'kmaq History
Mi'kmaq Women
Assimilation Policy
Nova Scotia
Mi'kma'ki
Indigenous Women
Micmac News
Peters, Mercedes
We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
topic_facet Indian Act
Canada
Reconciliation
Indigenous Activism
Indigenous Media
Mi'kmaq History
Mi'kmaq Women
Assimilation Policy
Nova Scotia
Mi'kma'ki
Indigenous Women
Micmac News
description This thesis uses the Micmac News to explore the rise of status and non-status Mi’kmaw women’s activism in Nova Scotia chronologically, from 1971 to 1979. It traces change in opinion, practice and community needs over time, in the context of the national battle to remove Section 12(1)(b) from the Indian Act. The News was created and maintained by Mi’kmaw people, giving us a Mi’kmaw perspective on aspects of Indigenous women’s experiences during the period; this regional approach is often missing from literature on this subject. By focusing on Mi’kmaw women’s writing in the News, this thesis challenges conceptions of Indigenous activism perpetuated by historical works focused primarily on the experiences of national, predominantly male, status Indigenous lobby groups. Reconciliation requires historical understanding; as such, this thesis demonstrates how paternal assimilation policy marginalized Indigenous women, and how these policies were internalized by Indigenous groups. If we understand, we can heal.
author2 Department of History
Master of Arts
n/a
Colin Mitchell
Shirley Tillotson
Martha Walls
Jerry Bannister
Not Applicable
author Peters, Mercedes
author_facet Peters, Mercedes
author_sort Peters, Mercedes
title We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
title_short We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
title_full We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
title_fullStr We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
title_full_unstemmed We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
title_sort we've always been here: tracing shifts in the portrayal of status, agency and mi'kmaw women's activism in the micmac news, 1971-1979
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/74070
geographic Canada
Indian
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
genre Mi’kmaw
genre_facet Mi’kmaw
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/74070
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