Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities

Graduate Stories of home do more than contribute to a culture that creates multiple ways of seeing a place: they also claim that the represented people and their shared values belong in place; that is, they claim land. Narrators of post-war B.C. resource communities create narratives that support re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Keane, Stephanie
Other Authors: Dean, Misao
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7729
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:7729 2023-05-15T16:16:02+02:00 Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities Keane, Stephanie Dean, Misao 2017-01-04 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7729 en eng 7729 http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7729 other UVic’s Research and Learning Repository hist scipo Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2017 fttriple 2023-01-22T16:44:59Z Graduate Stories of home do more than contribute to a culture that creates multiple ways of seeing a place: they also claim that the represented people and their shared values belong in place; that is, they claim land. Narrators of post-war B.C. resource communities create narratives that support residents’ presence although their employment, which impoverishes First Nations people and destroys ecosystems, runs counter to contemporary national constructions of Canada as a tolerant and environmentalist community. As the first two chapters show, neither narratives of nomadic early workers nor those of contemporary town residents represent values that support contemporary settler communities’ claims to be at home, as such stories associate resource work with opportunism, environmental damage, race- and gender-based oppression, and social chaos. Settler residents and the (essentially liberal) values that make them the best people for the land are represented instead through three groups of alternate stories, explored in Chapters 3-5: narratives of homesteading families extending the structure of a “good” colonial project through land development and trade; narratives of contemporary farmers who reject the legacy of the colonial project by participating in a sustainable local economy in harmony with local First Nations and the land; and narratives of direct supernatural connection to place, where the land uses the settler (often an artist or writer) as a medium to guide people to meet its (the land’s) needs. All three narratives reproduce the core idea that the best “work” makes the most secure claim to home, leading resource communities to define themselves in defiance of heir industries. Authors studied include Jack Hodgins, Anne Cameron, Susan Dobbie, Patrick Lane, Gail Anderson-Dargatz,D.W. Wilson, Harold Rhenisch, M.Wylie Blanchet, Susan Juby, and Howard White. Thesis First Nations Unknown Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
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language English
topic hist
scipo
spellingShingle hist
scipo
Keane, Stephanie
Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
topic_facet hist
scipo
description Graduate Stories of home do more than contribute to a culture that creates multiple ways of seeing a place: they also claim that the represented people and their shared values belong in place; that is, they claim land. Narrators of post-war B.C. resource communities create narratives that support residents’ presence although their employment, which impoverishes First Nations people and destroys ecosystems, runs counter to contemporary national constructions of Canada as a tolerant and environmentalist community. As the first two chapters show, neither narratives of nomadic early workers nor those of contemporary town residents represent values that support contemporary settler communities’ claims to be at home, as such stories associate resource work with opportunism, environmental damage, race- and gender-based oppression, and social chaos. Settler residents and the (essentially liberal) values that make them the best people for the land are represented instead through three groups of alternate stories, explored in Chapters 3-5: narratives of homesteading families extending the structure of a “good” colonial project through land development and trade; narratives of contemporary farmers who reject the legacy of the colonial project by participating in a sustainable local economy in harmony with local First Nations and the land; and narratives of direct supernatural connection to place, where the land uses the settler (often an artist or writer) as a medium to guide people to meet its (the land’s) needs. All three narratives reproduce the core idea that the best “work” makes the most secure claim to home, leading resource communities to define themselves in defiance of heir industries. Authors studied include Jack Hodgins, Anne Cameron, Susan Dobbie, Patrick Lane, Gail Anderson-Dargatz,D.W. Wilson, Harold Rhenisch, M.Wylie Blanchet, Susan Juby, and Howard White.
author2 Dean, Misao
format Thesis
author Keane, Stephanie
author_facet Keane, Stephanie
author_sort Keane, Stephanie
title Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
title_short Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
title_full Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
title_fullStr Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
title_full_unstemmed Getting home from work: narrating settler home In British Columbia's small resource communities
title_sort getting home from work: narrating settler home in british columbia's small resource communities
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7729
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source UVic’s Research and Learning Repository
op_relation 7729
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op_rights other
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