As the settler state of Canada expanded into Indigenous lands,
settlers dispossessed Indigenous people and undermined their
sovereignty as nations. One site of invasion was Kahnawà:ke, a
Kanien’kehá:ka community and part of the Rotinonhsiónni
confederacy. The Laws and the Land delineates the establishment of a
settler colonial relationship from early contact ways of sharing land;
land practices under Kahnawà:ke law; the establishment of modern
Kahnawà:ke in the context of French imperial claims; intensifying
colonial invasions under British rule; and ultimately the Canadian
invasion in the guise of the Indian Act, private property, and
coercive pressure to assimilate. Daniel Rück reveals increasingly
powerful and aggressive colonial governments interfering with the
affairs of one of the most populous and influential Indigenous
communities in nineteenth-century Canada. What he describes is an
invasion spearheaded by bureaucrats, Indian agents, politicians,
surveyors, and entrepreneurs. Although these invasions were often
chaotic and poorly planned, Rück shows that despite their apparent
weaknesses they tended to benefit settlers while becoming sources of
oppression for Indigenous peoples who attempted to navigate colonial
realities while defending and building their own nations. This
original, meticulously researched book is deeply connected to larger
issues of human relations with environments, communal and individual
ways of relating to land, legal pluralism, historical racism and
inequality, and Indigenous resurgence. It is one story of the “slow
violence” of Canada’s legal and environmental conquest of
Indigenous peoples and lands, and the persistence of one Indigenous
nation in the face of the onslaught.
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The Settler Colonial Invasion of Kahnawà:ke in Nineteenth-Century Canada
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774867467
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
University of British Columbia Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter