Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67

Why has the historic Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) been considered 'a non-colonial company' by Canadian historians? Surely those inescapably colonial dyads ofinsiders/outsiders, rulers/subjects, and Europeans/Natives, suggest otherwise; and, as such, we should try comparing it to other c...

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Main Author: Cavanagh, Edward
Other Authors: Swinburne University of Technology
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Association for Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/154083
http://www.acsanz.org.au/journal.html
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spelling ftswinburne:tle:3566fb21-87e2-454a-badf-d3f597008960:28f49f06-0da8-44be-9edc-ad1dd0a9c582:1 2023-05-15T16:35:28+02:00 Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67 Cavanagh, Edward Swinburne University of Technology 2010 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/154083 http://www.acsanz.org.au/journal.html unknown Association for Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/154083 http://www.acsanz.org.au/journal.html Copyright © 2009. Australasian Canadian Studies, Vol. 27, no. 1 (2010), pp. 85-94 Journal article 2010 ftswinburne 2019-09-07T23:36:03Z Why has the historic Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) been considered 'a non-colonial company' by Canadian historians? Surely those inescapably colonial dyads ofinsiders/outsiders, rulers/subjects, and Europeans/Natives, suggest otherwise; and, as such, we should try comparing it to other colonial forms to better understand its historical presence. This paper introduces the concept of fur trade colonialism as something that is separate to settler colonialism. As is well known in the Canadian historiographical canon, guns, germs and geopolitical upheavals characterised the Indian interior in this early period (1713-1763); but what about the 'settlements' that hugged the Bay itself? These 'settlements', I argue, were not only the sites of contact, but the sites of a perpetual colonia! encounter - a shared space, in which natives and sojourning HBC men came to live under the slight rule of Bayside governors, who tempered their own moral judgement with the policies laid out by the Company's London Committee. This paper brings these settlements under the microscope to analyse the means by which - if at all - the 'home guard' natives (mostly Cree Nation) of the settlements were colonised by the Hudson's Bay Company. Article in Journal/Newspaper Hudson Bay Swinburne University of Technology: Swinburne Research Bank Bayside ENVELOPE(-56.882,-56.882,49.567,49.567) Hudson Hudson Bay Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Swinburne University of Technology: Swinburne Research Bank
op_collection_id ftswinburne
language unknown
description Why has the historic Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) been considered 'a non-colonial company' by Canadian historians? Surely those inescapably colonial dyads ofinsiders/outsiders, rulers/subjects, and Europeans/Natives, suggest otherwise; and, as such, we should try comparing it to other colonial forms to better understand its historical presence. This paper introduces the concept of fur trade colonialism as something that is separate to settler colonialism. As is well known in the Canadian historiographical canon, guns, germs and geopolitical upheavals characterised the Indian interior in this early period (1713-1763); but what about the 'settlements' that hugged the Bay itself? These 'settlements', I argue, were not only the sites of contact, but the sites of a perpetual colonia! encounter - a shared space, in which natives and sojourning HBC men came to live under the slight rule of Bayside governors, who tempered their own moral judgement with the policies laid out by the Company's London Committee. This paper brings these settlements under the microscope to analyse the means by which - if at all - the 'home guard' natives (mostly Cree Nation) of the settlements were colonised by the Hudson's Bay Company.
author2 Swinburne University of Technology
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cavanagh, Edward
spellingShingle Cavanagh, Edward
Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
author_facet Cavanagh, Edward
author_sort Cavanagh, Edward
title Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
title_short Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
title_full Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
title_fullStr Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
title_full_unstemmed Fur trade colonialism: traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
title_sort fur trade colonialism: traders and cree at hudson bay, 1713-67
publisher Association for Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/154083
http://www.acsanz.org.au/journal.html
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.882,-56.882,49.567,49.567)
geographic Bayside
Hudson
Hudson Bay
Indian
geographic_facet Bayside
Hudson
Hudson Bay
Indian
genre Hudson Bay
genre_facet Hudson Bay
op_source Australasian Canadian Studies, Vol. 27, no. 1 (2010), pp. 85-94
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/154083
http://www.acsanz.org.au/journal.html
op_rights Copyright © 2009.
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