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The Western Interior of Canada by John Warkentin
The Western Interior of Canada by John Warkentin












The Western Interior of Canada by John Warkentin

Stoney, Piegan-Blackfoot) despised them and called them “Snakes.” Their identity is uncertain, in part because they were in all likelihood comprised of individuals and families drawn from Tsétsêhéstâhese (a.k.a. In the heart of the Prairies, not far from where the Saskatchewan River puddles into Cumberland Lake, the Cree-probably the Assin’skowitiniwak or Rocky Cree-came to blows with a people known variously as the Atsina, Gros Ventre, or A’aninin. Histories of Indigenous Peoples and Canada Glossary: Speaking the Names of Indigenous Nations Preface: The Indigenous Americas since Time ImmemorialĬhapter 1: Better Together - The Great ConfederaciesĬhapter 2: Two Models of Commercial and Diplomatic Encounters-Wabanaki and BeothukĬhapter 3: The Plains Peoples-Allies, Conflict, AdaptationĬhapter 6: Resistance I - 1750s to 1870sĬhapter 7: Settler Colonialism & Treaty PeoplesĬhapter 8: Resistance II - Red River and SaskatchewanĬhapter 9: Cultural Genocide-Belief Systems, Residential Schools, Potlatch Laws, “Sixties Scoop”Ĭhapter 10: Experiences of Indigenous Women under Settler ColonialismĬhapter 11: Renewal, Resurgence, Recognition-From White Paper to Armed Protest














The Western Interior of Canada by John Warkentin