Description

Book Synopsis
This book describes how a long generation of founding French Canadians shaped the Pacific Northwest.

Trade Review
Barman’s feast of historical and genealogical data on French Canadians in British Columbia forces the reader to ponder their absence in previous BC histories, and reinforces the position of French Canadians as one of the founding peoples of that province. -- Maurice Guibord, Société historique francophone de la Colombie-Britannique
The history of French Canadian fur trappers in the northwest, often mentioned in local state histories, here crosses national and cultural borders to include their interactions with indigenous peoples and stories of travels from eastern Canada to Oregon and British Columbia. This book is an essential forensic history for all people who trace their ancestry to the fur trade era of the Pacific Northwest. -- David G. Lewis, PhD, Tribal Historian, Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon
In Barman’s adroit hands, the lives and experiences, hopes and dreams of the French Indian families who had a significant yet generally unremarked impact on the Pacific Northwest come to life. Rather than peripheral figures in the larger course of historical events, they were often at the center of the action - in exploring and fur-trapping expeditions, during periods of relatively peaceful negotiation and exchange, and at times of armed conflict. -- Melinda Marie Jetté * Oregon Historical Quarterly, Summer 2015 *
Barman concludes this extensive, well-researched, and analytical work by stressing the need to view the history of the Pacific Northwest more inclusively. -- Jacky Moore, Herne Bay * British Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 29 No. 1, Spring 2016 *
This is a massive undertaking by a historian at the height of her powers. Barman has availed herself of an eclectic assemblage of sources: biographies, fur trade journals and exploration narratives, church records, and recent Canadian and American historiography on the fur trade, among others. She has seamlessly integrated this material to tell the stories of individuals and families, while at the same time providing a contextual framework for understanding the social, economic, and political trajectories of these people … French Canadian, Furs, and Indigenous Women in the Making of the Pacific Northwest is yet another fine contribution to BC history by one of its leading practitioners. -- Heather Devine, University of Calgary * BC Studies *

Table of Contents

Introduction

Part 1: French Canadians and the Fur Economy

1 To Be French Canadian

2 Facilitating the Overland Crossings

3 Driving the Fur Economy

4 Deciding Whether to Go or to Stay

Part 2: French Canadians, Indigenous Women, and Family Life in the Fur Economy

5 Taking Indigenous Women Seriously

6 Innovating Family Life

7 Initiating Permanent Settlement

8 Saving British Columbia for Canada

Part 3: Beyond the Fur Economy

9 Negotiating Changing Times

10 Enabling Sons and Daughters

11 To Be French Canadian and Indigenous

12 Reclaiming the Past

Appendix

Notes

Works Cited

Index

French Canadians Furs and Indigenous Women in the

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A Paperback / softback by Jean Barman

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    View other formats and editions of French Canadians Furs and Indigenous Women in the by Jean Barman

    Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
    Publication Date: 01/02/2015
    ISBN13: 9780774828055, 978-0774828055
    ISBN10: 0774828056

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This book describes how a long generation of founding French Canadians shaped the Pacific Northwest.

    Trade Review
    Barman’s feast of historical and genealogical data on French Canadians in British Columbia forces the reader to ponder their absence in previous BC histories, and reinforces the position of French Canadians as one of the founding peoples of that province. -- Maurice Guibord, Société historique francophone de la Colombie-Britannique
    The history of French Canadian fur trappers in the northwest, often mentioned in local state histories, here crosses national and cultural borders to include their interactions with indigenous peoples and stories of travels from eastern Canada to Oregon and British Columbia. This book is an essential forensic history for all people who trace their ancestry to the fur trade era of the Pacific Northwest. -- David G. Lewis, PhD, Tribal Historian, Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon
    In Barman’s adroit hands, the lives and experiences, hopes and dreams of the French Indian families who had a significant yet generally unremarked impact on the Pacific Northwest come to life. Rather than peripheral figures in the larger course of historical events, they were often at the center of the action - in exploring and fur-trapping expeditions, during periods of relatively peaceful negotiation and exchange, and at times of armed conflict. -- Melinda Marie Jetté * Oregon Historical Quarterly, Summer 2015 *
    Barman concludes this extensive, well-researched, and analytical work by stressing the need to view the history of the Pacific Northwest more inclusively. -- Jacky Moore, Herne Bay * British Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 29 No. 1, Spring 2016 *
    This is a massive undertaking by a historian at the height of her powers. Barman has availed herself of an eclectic assemblage of sources: biographies, fur trade journals and exploration narratives, church records, and recent Canadian and American historiography on the fur trade, among others. She has seamlessly integrated this material to tell the stories of individuals and families, while at the same time providing a contextual framework for understanding the social, economic, and political trajectories of these people … French Canadian, Furs, and Indigenous Women in the Making of the Pacific Northwest is yet another fine contribution to BC history by one of its leading practitioners. -- Heather Devine, University of Calgary * BC Studies *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction

    Part 1: French Canadians and the Fur Economy

    1 To Be French Canadian

    2 Facilitating the Overland Crossings

    3 Driving the Fur Economy

    4 Deciding Whether to Go or to Stay

    Part 2: French Canadians, Indigenous Women, and Family Life in the Fur Economy

    5 Taking Indigenous Women Seriously

    6 Innovating Family Life

    7 Initiating Permanent Settlement

    8 Saving British Columbia for Canada

    Part 3: Beyond the Fur Economy

    9 Negotiating Changing Times

    10 Enabling Sons and Daughters

    11 To Be French Canadian and Indigenous

    12 Reclaiming the Past

    Appendix

    Notes

    Works Cited

    Index

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