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list price: $34.95
edition:Hardcover
also available: Paperback eBook
category: History
published: May 1999
ISBN:9780774807104
publisher: UBC Press

The Burden of History

Colonialism and the Frontier Myth in a Rural Canadian Community

by Elizabeth Furniss

tagged: native american studies, post-confederation (1867-), discrimination & race relations, native american, british columbia (bc)
Description

This book is an ethnography of the cultural politics of Native/non-Native relations in a small interior BC city – Williams Lake – at the height of land claims conflicts and tensions. Furniss analyses contemporary colonial relations in settler societies, arguing that “ordinary” rural Euro-Canadians exercise power in maintaining the subordination of aboriginal people through “common sense” assumptions and assertions about history, society, and identity, and that these cultural activities are forces in an ongoing, contemporary system of colonial domination. She traces the main features of the regional Euro-Canadian culture and shows how this cultural complex is thematically integrated through the idea of the frontier. Key facets of this frontier complex are expressed in diverse settings: casual conversations among Euro-Canadians; popular histories; museum displays; political discourse; public debates about aboriginal land claims; and ritual celebrations of the city's heritage.

About the Author
Elizabeth Furniss was until recently an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Calgary.
Contributor Notes

Elizabeth Furniss is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Calgary.

Editorial Reviews

Provides a deep examination of Aboriginal and Euro-Canadian relations in the city of Williams Lake, British Columbia. I recommend this book to those concerned with British Columbia, the culture of the frontier in North America, or the relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples.

— Environment and Planning A 2000, Volume 32

This book, a study of cultural politics in Williams Lake, British Columbia, is an admirable exponent of this reinvention of ethnography ... the book is a refreshing portrait of diversity both within and between the aboriginal and nonaboriginal communities, and the variety of views represented shows the complexity of the issues within their proper historical and cultural contexts.

— CBRA 4210

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