Anishinaabe Treaty-Making in the 18th-and-19th-Century Northern Great Lakes: From Shared Meanings to Epistemological Chasms
History Thesis (PhD) - York University, 2019.
History Thesis (PhD) - York University, 2019.
Education thesis (M.Ed) -- Saint Mary's University, 1996.
Compares Registered Indians to Canada's general population in three components: life expectancy, education and income.
Examines the role of archeology as both a the study of the past but also as a means to find a solutions for the future.
Discusses pre-contact structures and the techniques used in their construction.
Looks at characteristics of the population that would have found the mixed language useful and how it developed through marriages between traders and Indigenous women.
Chapter from: Language Contact in the Arctic: Northern Pidgins and Contact Languages edited by Ernst Håkon Jahr and Ingvild Broch
Historical note:
Ruth Cuthand was born in Prince Albert, SK in 1954 and grew up near the Blood Reserve in Alberta. Her heritage is Plains Cree and Scots/Irish. Her Aboriginal culture and memories of her childhood experiences are often the inspiration for her art-making practice.Primary reading level storybook.
For use with the storybook Askî and Turtle Island.