Defining Métis

Defining Métis
Author: Timothy P. Foran
Publisher: Univ. of Manitoba Press
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2017-05-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 088755511X


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Defining Métis examines categories used in the latter half of the nineteenth century by Catholic missionaries to describe Indigenous people in what is now northwestern Saskatchewan. It argues that the construction and evolution of these categories reflected missionaries’changing interests and agendas. Defining Métis sheds light on the earliest phases of Catholic missionary work among Indigenous peoples in western and northern Canada. It examines various interrelated aspects of this work, including the beginnings of residential schooling, transportation and communications, and relations between the Church, the Hudson’s Bay Company, and the federal government. While focusing on the Oblates of Mary Immaculate and their central mission at Île-à-la-Crosse, this study illuminates broad processes that informed Catholic missionary perceptions and impelled their evolution over a fifty-three-year period. In particular, this study illuminates processes that shaped Oblate conceptions of sauvage and métis. It does this through a qualitative analysis of documents that were produced within the Oblates’ institutional apparatus—official correspondence, mission journals, registers, and published reports. Foran challenges the orthodox notion that Oblate commentators simply discovered and described a singular, empirically existing, and readily identifiable Métis population. Rather, he contends that Oblates played an important role in the conceptual production of les métis.


Defining Métis
Language: en
Pages: 349
Authors: Timothy P. Foran
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-05-10 - Publisher: Univ. of Manitoba Press

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Defining Métis examines categories used in the latter half of the nineteenth century by Catholic missionaries to describe Indigenous people in what is now nort
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Ask any Canadian what "Métis" means, and they will likely say "mixed race." Canadians consider Métis mixed in ways that other Indigenous people are not, and t
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Authors: Michel Hogue
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2015-04-06 - Publisher: UNC Press Books

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Born of encounters between Indigenous women and Euro-American men in the first decades of the nineteenth century, the Plains Metis people occupied contentious g
We Know Who We Are
Language: en
Pages: 319
Authors: Martha Harroun Foster
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2016-01-18 - Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press

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They know who they are. Of predominantly Chippewa, Cree, French, and Scottish descent, the Métis people have flourished as a distinct ethnic group in Canada an
Defining Metis
Language: en
Pages: 236
Authors: Timothy P. Foran
Categories: Electronic books
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017 - Publisher:

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