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list price: $34.95
edition:eBook
category: Social Science
published: Nov 2011
ISBN:9780774842136
publisher: UBC Press

Making Native Space

Colonialism, Resistance, and Reserves in British Columbia

by Cole Harris

tagged: native american studies, post-confederation (1867-), native american, pre-confederation (to 1867), human geography
Description

This elegantly written and insightful book provides a geographical history of the Indian reserve in British Columbia. Cole Harris analyzes the impact of reserves on Native lives and livelihoods and considers how, in light of this, the Native land question might begin to be resolved. The account begins in the early nineteenth-century British Empire and then follows Native land policy – and Native resistance to it – in British Columbia from the Douglas treaties in the early 1850s to the formal transfer of reserves to the Dominion in 1938.

About the Author

Cole Harris

Contributor Notes

Cole Harris recently retired as a member of the Department of Geography at the University of British Columbia and is the author or editor of many books about British Columbia and Canada, including The Historical Atlas of Canada, Volume 1, for which he was the editor, and The Resettlement of British Columbia: Essays on Colonialism and Geographical Change.

Awards
  • Winner, Clio Award (British Columbia), Canadian Historical Association
  • Winner, Massey Medal, Royal Canadian Geographical Society
  • Winner, Sir John A. Macdonald Prize, Canadian Historical Association
  • Short-listed, Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Book Prize, British Columbia Book Awards
  • Winner, Sir John A. Macdonald Prize, Canadian Historical Association
  • Winner, Clio Award (British Columbia), Canadian Historical Association
Editorial Reviews

This is an important book for historians, geographers, lawyers, government officials, and scholars of Aboriginal studies. But it deserves to reach a wider audience because it speaks to fundamental issues of Canada’s founding, namely, the dispossession of the original peoples living here ... Harris has given us a remarkable book, a genealogy, in the Foucauldian sense, of reserve policy and the land question in BC today.

— University of Toronto Quarterly, Winter 2004/05

Along with its encyclopaedic account of the white geographies and mentalities that dominated British Columbia through the 1800s and 1900s, Making Native Space is also a compelling saga of Aboriginal management and resistance.

— Canadian Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 18, No. 1

Outstanding ... invites us to rethink, and remap, literally and figuratively, the boundaries and paths that can guide us to a brighter future.

— American Indian Quarterly, Summer & Fall 2005, Vol. 29, Nos. 3 and 4

Cole Harris’s latest book is a well crafted, handsomely produced historical geography ... It is rich in terms of its colonial discourse analysis, its comparative insight and its engagement with the politics of postcolonialism.

— Area, Vol. 35, Issue 3, September 2003

This is a wonderful, timely, thoughtful, and gracefully written book. It makes a highly significant contribution, both to scholarship and to public policy.

— Hamar Foster, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, author of English Law, British Columbia: Establishing Legal Institutions West of the Rockies and The White Man’s Law in the Far West: Establishing Legal Institutions in British Columbia

Cole Harris has written the definitive history of the Aboriginal struggle for recognition and justice in British Columbia. Future generations of British Columbians, Aboriginal and otherwise, will thank him for this remarkable story.

— Neil J. Sterritt, Gitksan Nation, co-author of Tribal Boundaries in the Nass Watershed

As the first comprehensive account of the reserve system in British Columbia, the book is an important contribution to regional history, the history of aboriginal-white relations, and colonialism. Perhaps most unexpectedly, because it puts aboriginal-white relations in the context of the federal-provincial wrangling that has shaped the Canadian political landscape since 1867, it also manages to breathe new life into an old historical chestnut.

— American Historical Review, April 2003

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