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Focuses on the Métis in Canada but also includes some articles and annotated references on the Métis in the United States.
This is a collection of stories from the oral tradition of the Metis. Written in the dialect of the original storytellers, the stories are accompanied by paintings by Sherry Farrell Racette.
"This bibliography contains over 2,000 listings of work related to the Métis people of North America [primarily Canada]. The collection attempts to gather a comprehensive listing of resources written for, by and about the Métis people. ... Video and audio portrayals of Métis stories and music are listed at the end of the bibliography. ... Web pages are also listed. The book includes a historiographical essay intended to give ... a critical overview of some of the classic scholarly writings on the Métis along with a review of topics that have been identified as contemporary issues and concerns."--Back cover.
The story takes readers back to Canada's fur trade era by focusing on a Mé́tis family's preparations for a lobstick celebration and feast in the boreal forest.
In conventional histories of the Canadian prairies, Native people disappear from view after the Riel Rebellions. In this groundbreaking study, Frank Tough examines the role of Native peoples, both Indian and Metis, in the economy of northern Manitoba from Treaty 1 to the Depression. He argues that they did not become economically obsolete but rather played an important role in the transitional era between the mercantile fur trade and the emerging industrial economy of the mid-twentieth century.
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