Description

Book Synopsis
Offers a fresh cultural history of sport and imperialism. focusing on nineteenth-century British big-game hunting and exploration narratives from the western interior of Rupert’s Land.

Trade Review
This short work has much to commend it. For a start, it has an extremely clever title. […] Second, it is relatively concise, fluently written, and interestingly illustrated. And third, it has a thorough and valuable foreword (more substantial than many of the genre) by Graeme Wynn, the general editor of the Nature/ History/ Society series in which it appears ... This book would be of interest to all who work, on an international basis, on the relationship of Europeans to land, peoples, wildlife, and landscape. Where-as North American history is too often treated in isolation, here we have a serious attempt to set it into wider global phenomena. -- John M. MacKenzie, University of Edinburgh * International History Review, 30, 4 *

Table of Contents

Contents

Figures

Foreword: Documenting the Exotic / Graeme Wynn

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1 An Imperial Interior Imagined

2 The Prefatory Paradox: Positivism and Authority in HuntingNarratives

3 Cry Havoc? British Imperial Hunting Culture

4 The Science of the Hunt: Mapmaking, Natural History, andAcclimatization

5 Hunting for Landscape: Social Class and the Appropriation ofthe Wilderness

6 From Colonial to Corporate Landscapes

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Hunting for Empire Narratives of Sport in Ruperts

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by Greg Gillespie

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    View other formats and editions of Hunting for Empire Narratives of Sport in Ruperts by Greg Gillespie

    Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
    Publication Date: 01/07/2008
    ISBN13: 9780774813556, 978-0774813556
    ISBN10: 0774813555

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Offers a fresh cultural history of sport and imperialism. focusing on nineteenth-century British big-game hunting and exploration narratives from the western interior of Rupert’s Land.

    Trade Review
    This short work has much to commend it. For a start, it has an extremely clever title. […] Second, it is relatively concise, fluently written, and interestingly illustrated. And third, it has a thorough and valuable foreword (more substantial than many of the genre) by Graeme Wynn, the general editor of the Nature/ History/ Society series in which it appears ... This book would be of interest to all who work, on an international basis, on the relationship of Europeans to land, peoples, wildlife, and landscape. Where-as North American history is too often treated in isolation, here we have a serious attempt to set it into wider global phenomena. -- John M. MacKenzie, University of Edinburgh * International History Review, 30, 4 *

    Table of Contents

    Contents

    Figures

    Foreword: Documenting the Exotic / Graeme Wynn

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    1 An Imperial Interior Imagined

    2 The Prefatory Paradox: Positivism and Authority in HuntingNarratives

    3 Cry Havoc? British Imperial Hunting Culture

    4 The Science of the Hunt: Mapmaking, Natural History, andAcclimatization

    5 Hunting for Landscape: Social Class and the Appropriation ofthe Wilderness

    6 From Colonial to Corporate Landscapes

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

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