Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 234
The "Jarvis Proof": Management of Bison, Management of Bison Hunters, and the Development of a Literary Tradition
(Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, 1990)
Wood Bison and the Early Fur Trade
(Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, 1993)
History of the Canadian Metis : study guide
(Athabasca University, 1996)
The political, economic, and social history of present-day Canada was, for the first three huhdred years after European contact, a product of the fisheries and the fur trade. Posts along the ocean shores and along the ...
A selected Western Canada Historical Resources Bibliography to 1985
(Prairie Forum, 1990)
The bibliography was compiled from careful library and institutional searches. Accumulated titles were sent to various federal, provincial and municipal jurisdictions, academic institutions and foundations with a request ...
Conceptualizing Religion from Below: a neo-marxist approach to the religion of the poor
(Social Compass: The International Journal of the Sociology of Religion, 1988)
Debating Metis Rights
(Literary Review of Canada, 1992-04)
Thomas Flanagan usually manages to place himself at the centre of controversy whenever he writes about the Metis. While his work may often appear to be motivated by ideology rather than the persuasiveness of historical ...
Local-Sized Democracy
(The Parkland Institute, 2002)
Political struggle at the local level is out of fashion. In today’s increasingly “globalized” world, appeals to the local can often appear parochial and tradition-bound. Determining whether effective political responses ...
Consuming sustainability : critical social analyses of ecological change / edited by Debra J. Davidson, Kierstin C. Hatt, and the Northern Critical Scholars Collective.
(Organic Roots Collective. Fernwood Press, 2005)
Learning the Subject of Desire
(Routledge, 1997)
Psychoanalysis and Pedagogy: Or Teaching/Research/Writing as a Living Practice
(New York: Peter Lang, 1997)
The veil of representation actually conceals nothing; there is nothing behind
representation. Yet the fact that representation seems to hide, to put an arbored screen of
signifiers in front of something hidden beneath, ...