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History Native American

The Metis in the Canadian West: Volume II

by (author) Marcel Giraud

translated by George Woodcock

Publisher
The University of Alberta Press, University of Nebraska Press
Initial publish date
Jan 1986
Category
Native American
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781772121377
    Publish Date
    Jan 1986

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Description

Marcel Giraud's study of the social history of the Métis of western Canada portrays the birth of the Métis as a distinct group, defines the roles they played in the history of the fur trade era in the North West, and examines the decline of the Métis in the late 1800s. Giraud uses his own personal observations of the economic and social position of the Métis in the 1930s to conclude his study. With the arrival of the missionaries in the early 1800s and the ending of hostilities in the colony of Assiniboia, the Métis group embarked on a new phase of their history which continued until the incorporation of the West into the Canadian confederation. In volume II, Giraud examines this period of maturity in which the dominant feature was the establishment of a way of life that clearly separated the Métis from the white. These were also years of differentiation between the Métis of the West, who dwelt outside the nucleus of civilization established on the Red River, and the Métis of Red River, who gradually appeared as a more privileged group. The later half of the nineteenth century saw the disintegration of Métis society largely as a result of the extermination of the bison herds. The Métis had to abandon the nomadic life and adapt to farming. The insurrections of 1869-70 and 1885 led to the decline of the Métis to a marginal group in a predominantly white society. In the final chapter, Giraud looks at the Métis place in that society in the twentieth century.

About the authors

Marcel Giraud, professor emeritus at the Collège de France, is the author of several books, including A History of French Louisiana, in five volumes, and the two-volume work The Métis in the Canadian West.

Marcel Giraud's profile page

George Woodcock (1912-1995) is one of Canada's best-known and most prolific authors. He was born in Winnipeg and educated in England, where he socialized with some of the century's most prominent writers and intellectuals including Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, Herbert Read and T.S. Eliot. He returned to Canada in 1949 and taught at the University of British Columbia for many years. In 1959, he founded the journal Canadian Literature. His contribtution to Canadian culture is immeasurable; he either wrote or edited over one-hundred books including The Crystal Spirit, his Governor-Genral's award-winning biography of Orwell; Gabriel Dumont, another bestselling biography; and Anarchism a guide to the political philosophy which continues to be read around the world. His wide range of writing includes literary criticism, poetry, travel writing, plays, social history, biography, politics and essays.

George Woodcock's profile page

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