Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism

Using Community-Engaged research and an intersectional approach, this dissertation examines and interprets the ways two different Indigenous communities – The Tla’amin of British Columbia and the Mi’kmaq of Pictou, Nova Scotia –responded to the challenges and opportunities associated with settler co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Osmond, Colin Murray
Other Authors: Carlson, Keith T, Korinek, Valerie, Clifford , Jim, Nickel, Sarah
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/13270
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/13270 2023-05-15T17:12:56+02:00 Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism Osmond, Colin Murray Carlson, Keith T Korinek, Valerie Clifford , Jim Nickel, Sarah 2021-02-23T20:00:17Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/13270 unknown University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/13270 TC-SSU-13270 Settler Colonialism Indigenous History Mi'kmaq Coast Salish Tla'amin Work Environment Gender British Columbia Nova Scotia Ethnohistory Community-Engaged History Thesis text 2021 ftusaskatchewan 2023-02-25T23:10:10Z Using Community-Engaged research and an intersectional approach, this dissertation examines and interprets the ways two different Indigenous communities – The Tla’amin of British Columbia and the Mi’kmaq of Pictou, Nova Scotia –responded to the challenges and opportunities associated with settler colonialism, the creation of Indian Reserves, and the establishment of a capitalist wage labour economy in Indigenous territories. It primarily situates this discussion within the context of colonial efforts to geographically anchor Indigenous families in specific places while they struggled to retain meaningful connections with their broader territories. This dissertation provides critical analysis of the utility of using ‘settler colonialism’ as a catch-all to explain the various types of colonialism that impacted Indigenous people in Canada. Various types of colonialism contributed to a process where Atlantic Mi’kmaw and Pacific Coast Salish people with complex understandings of their territories and resources based on seasonal procurement and kinship systems, became geographically anchored on reserves as part of Indian Bands in the late nineteenth century. Within this confusing and often contradictory colonial world, the Tla’amin and the Mi’kmaq built adaptive and flexible economies that emphasized multiple occupations and relied on labour inputs from women and men to function. I argue that these new markets for Indigenous labour and commodities played an as of yet underappreciated role in the historical understanding of Indigenous motivations for securing specific reserve lands during the colonial survey of Indigenous lands in Canada. This dissertation adds to a growing body of literature that celebrates and historicizes Indigenous contributions to the labour history of Canada, and does so in ways that express how Indigenous people developed dynamic and responsive economies within emerging settler colonial economies in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Thesis Mi’kmaq Mi’kmaw University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada Indian Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language unknown
topic Settler Colonialism
Indigenous History
Mi'kmaq
Coast Salish
Tla'amin
Work
Environment
Gender
British Columbia
Nova Scotia
Ethnohistory
Community-Engaged History
spellingShingle Settler Colonialism
Indigenous History
Mi'kmaq
Coast Salish
Tla'amin
Work
Environment
Gender
British Columbia
Nova Scotia
Ethnohistory
Community-Engaged History
Osmond, Colin Murray
Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
topic_facet Settler Colonialism
Indigenous History
Mi'kmaq
Coast Salish
Tla'amin
Work
Environment
Gender
British Columbia
Nova Scotia
Ethnohistory
Community-Engaged History
description Using Community-Engaged research and an intersectional approach, this dissertation examines and interprets the ways two different Indigenous communities – The Tla’amin of British Columbia and the Mi’kmaq of Pictou, Nova Scotia –responded to the challenges and opportunities associated with settler colonialism, the creation of Indian Reserves, and the establishment of a capitalist wage labour economy in Indigenous territories. It primarily situates this discussion within the context of colonial efforts to geographically anchor Indigenous families in specific places while they struggled to retain meaningful connections with their broader territories. This dissertation provides critical analysis of the utility of using ‘settler colonialism’ as a catch-all to explain the various types of colonialism that impacted Indigenous people in Canada. Various types of colonialism contributed to a process where Atlantic Mi’kmaw and Pacific Coast Salish people with complex understandings of their territories and resources based on seasonal procurement and kinship systems, became geographically anchored on reserves as part of Indian Bands in the late nineteenth century. Within this confusing and often contradictory colonial world, the Tla’amin and the Mi’kmaq built adaptive and flexible economies that emphasized multiple occupations and relied on labour inputs from women and men to function. I argue that these new markets for Indigenous labour and commodities played an as of yet underappreciated role in the historical understanding of Indigenous motivations for securing specific reserve lands during the colonial survey of Indigenous lands in Canada. This dissertation adds to a growing body of literature that celebrates and historicizes Indigenous contributions to the labour history of Canada, and does so in ways that express how Indigenous people developed dynamic and responsive economies within emerging settler colonial economies in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
author2 Carlson, Keith T
Korinek, Valerie
Clifford , Jim
Nickel, Sarah
format Thesis
author Osmond, Colin Murray
author_facet Osmond, Colin Murray
author_sort Osmond, Colin Murray
title Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
title_short Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
title_full Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
title_fullStr Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
title_full_unstemmed Paycheques & Paper Promises: Coast Salish and Mi’kmaw Work And Family Life under Canadian Settler Colonialism
title_sort paycheques & paper promises: coast salish and mi’kmaw work and family life under canadian settler colonialism
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/13270
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
geographic British Columbia
Canada
Indian
Pacific
geographic_facet British Columbia
Canada
Indian
Pacific
genre Mi’kmaq
Mi’kmaw
genre_facet Mi’kmaq
Mi’kmaw
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/13270
TC-SSU-13270
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