Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Rethinking the Fur Trade
  • Language: en

Rethinking the Fur Trade

Lucrative, far-reaching, and complex, the fur trade bound together Europeans and Native peoples of North America in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Rethinking the Fur Trade offers a nuanced look at the broad range of contracts that characterized the fur trade, a phenomenon that has often been oversimplified and misrepresented. These essays show how the role of Native Americans was far more instrumental in the conduct and outcome of the fur trade than previously suggested. Rethinking the Fur Trade exposes what has been called the “invisible hand of indigenous commerce,” revealing how it changed European interaction with Indians, influenced what was produced to serve the interest...

American Indian Services Files
  • Language: en

American Indian Services Files

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1957
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Minnesota, and Chicago, Illinois; and Lutheran Church and Indian People (LUCHIP) conferences and activities. Correspondents include Eugene Crawford, the Division's Secretary of American Indian Services and Director of the NILB; Reuben A. Lundeen, Division Executive Secretary; John R. Houck, Division Assistant Secretary for American Missions; Donald H. Larsen, Division Secretary for Church and Community Planning; other LCUSA officials and staff; LCUSA participating church bodies' mission officials; Native American activist Donald F. Bibeau; U.S. government officials; Lutheran social service agencies; and Lutheran pastors and lay persons.

Assault on a Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 224

Assault on a Culture

Anishinaabe ancestors first arrived in North America approximately 12,000 years ago when a thick sheet of ice covered much of the northern portion of the continent. The provenance in Asia of those peoples implies that the pathway taken to get to their Great Lakes home was long and arduous, severely testing the strength and resolve of those first Americans. For much of their tenure on the continent, the Anishinaabeg occupied a distinct, delicately balanced, socio-cultural niche that evolved primarily as responses to changes of the natural environment. Following first contact with European explorers about 500 years ago, European-Indian social and economic interactions including intermarriage, ...

Native Women's History in Eastern North America Before 1900
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 506

Native Women's History in Eastern North America Before 1900

How can we learn more about Native women?s lives in North America in earlier centuries? This question is answered by this landmark anthology, an essential guide to the significance, experiences, and histories of Native women. Sixteen classic essays?plus new commentary?many by the original authors?describe a broad range of research methods and sources offering insight into the lives of Native American women. The authors explain the use of letters and diaries, memoirs and autobiographies, newspaper accounts and ethnographies, census data and legal documents. This collection offers guidelines for extracting valuable information from such diverse sources and assessing the significance of such variables as religious affiliation, changes in women?s power after colonization, connections between economics and gender, and representations (and misrepresentations) of Native women. ø Indispensable to anyone interested in exploring the role of gender in Native American history or in emphasizing Native women?s experiences within the context of women?s history, this anthology helps restore the historical reality of Native women and is essential to an understanding of North American history.

The Prairie West: Historical Readings
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 776

The Prairie West: Historical Readings

This collection of 35 readings on Canadian prairie history includes overview interpretation and current research on topics such as the fur trade, native peoples, ethnic groups, status of women, urban and rural society, the Great Depression and literature and art.

The North Star State
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 518

The North Star State

Culled from the best of Minnesota History magazine, these essays on 200 years of Minnesota history encompass a wide range of its past, from frontier life to the age of technological innovation, from Dakota and Ojibwe history to the story of a Chinese family in St. Paul, from lumber workers' and truckers' strikes to the women's suffrage movement.

Finding a Way to the Heart
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 281

Finding a Way to the Heart

"In offering this volume of essays in honour of Sylvia Van Kirk's scholarship ..."--Page 4.

Fort Chipewyan and the Shaping of Canadian History, 1788-1920s
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 411

Fort Chipewyan and the Shaping of Canadian History, 1788-1920s

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2011-01-01
  • -
  • Publisher: UBC Press

The story of the expansion of civilization into the wilderness continues to shape perceptions of how Aboriginal people became part of nations such as Canada. Patricia McCormack subverts this narrative of modernity by examining nation building from the perspective of a northern community and its residents. Fort Chipewyan, she argues, was never an isolated Aboriginal community but a plural society at the crossroads of global, national, and local forces. By tracing the events that led its Aboriginal residents to sign Treaty No. 8 and their struggle to maintain autonomy thereafter, this groundbreaking study shows that Aboriginal peoples and others can and have become modern without relinquishing cherished beliefs and practices.

What You Sow Is a Bare Seed
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 255

What You Sow Is a Bare Seed

What You Sow Is a Bare Seed is a group biography that tells the stories of ordinary but extraordinary people who were engaged in movements for renewal in the church and justice in broader society. People such as Dora Koundakjian Johnson, an Armenian-Lebanese linguistics scholar and activist, and Doug Huron, an attorney who won a landmark US Supreme Court civil rights case. They were among those who came together as the ecumenical Community of Christ in Washington, DC. Planted in the inner city in 1965—when many churches were leaving—the Community “distinguished itself from the more organized church without rejecting it,” as one former member says. They believed that helping each other identify their gifts was a compelling way to shape their collective ministry beyond themselves. The Community initially intended not to own property but later bought a building and opened it up as a community center. As a final act of ministry, the Community gave its building away to a nonprofit partner when it closed in 2016, leaving a legacy that continues today.

Canadian Exploration Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 605

Canadian Exploration Literature

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2007-01-01
  • -
  • Publisher: Dundurn

First published by Oxford University Press in 1993, Exploration Literature is a groundbreaking collection of early writing inspired by the opening of a continent.With maps, notes, and thumbnail biographies of these early writers, Exploration Literature is an entry point for both the casual reader and the student of Canadian literature into the beginnings of a literate response to the awe and wonder inspired by an unfolding geography and the literary fundamentals of new nationhood.