Dwelling on the Margins of Empire
Colonized and Indigenous Peoples' Imaginaries of Home
Herausgeber: Crooks, Katherine; Saha, Jonathan; Dussart, Fae; Manktelow, Emily J; Binkley, Lisa; Haskins, Victoria
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Dwelling on the Margins of Empire
Colonized and Indigenous Peoples' Imaginaries of Home
Herausgeber: Crooks, Katherine; Saha, Jonathan; Dussart, Fae; Manktelow, Emily J; Binkley, Lisa; Haskins, Victoria
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781350386044
- ISBN-10: 1350386049
- Artikelnr.: 70701141
Lisa Binkley is Assistant Professor in material culture and Indigenous and settler women's histories at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada. Her research considers quilts and other textiles as points of intimate intercultural contact between settler and Indigenous women in nineteenth-century Canada. Katherine Crooks is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Mount Saint Vincent University, Canada. Her work considers the intersection of settler and Indigenous women's histories in northern Canadian contexts. Her research explores how settler and Indigenous women's involvement in American exploratory expeditions to the Arctic between 1890 and 1940 shaped and were shaped by their understandings of home.
Introduction: Finding Home at the Margins of Colonial Encounter
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part I: Travel and Movement in Histories of Home 1. Fur Trade Forts and Military Camps: The Askin Daughters Creating Home in the British Empire
Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto
Canada) 2. Meeting at "the Outermost Limit of the World": Arctic Exploration as Encounter Between Inuit and non-Inuit Geographies of Home
Katherine Crooks ( Dalhousie University
Canada) 3. Along the Outaouais: The Métis 'Home'land beyond the Red River
Lisa Binkley (Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part II: Politicizing the Domestic Sphere 4. In the Name of the Home: The Reconstruction of Nineteenth-Century America
Nicole Martin (American National Park Service) 5. As Good as Any Place at Home: Eating American in Colonial Manila
1898-1913
Alana Toulin (Dalhousie University
Canada) Part III: Bringing Colonial Violence Home 6. The Concept of Home: Looking through the Lens of Aboriginal Exemption in Australia
Judi Wickes and Katherine Ellinghaus (La Trobe University
Australia) 7. This is Where We Sprouted: Centralization and the Mi'kmaw Sense of Home
Trina Roache ( University of King's College
Canada) 8. The Intimate Reach of Settler Colonialism in Post-War Inuit Nunangat: Housing Provision
Settler Concepts of Home
Motherhood
and the Moral Family
Christina Goldhar and Julia Christensen (Memorial University
Canada) 9. Recording Our Truth: Documenting Changing Understandings of Home to Understand the Existing Housing Emergency in Nishnawbe Aski Nation Territory
Jeffrey Herskovits
Shelagh McCartney
Courtney Kaupp
Michael McKay and Ashley Atatise (X University and Nishnawbe Aski Nation Housing Strategy
Canada) Conclusion: Marginal Perspectives
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada)
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part I: Travel and Movement in Histories of Home 1. Fur Trade Forts and Military Camps: The Askin Daughters Creating Home in the British Empire
Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto
Canada) 2. Meeting at "the Outermost Limit of the World": Arctic Exploration as Encounter Between Inuit and non-Inuit Geographies of Home
Katherine Crooks ( Dalhousie University
Canada) 3. Along the Outaouais: The Métis 'Home'land beyond the Red River
Lisa Binkley (Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part II: Politicizing the Domestic Sphere 4. In the Name of the Home: The Reconstruction of Nineteenth-Century America
Nicole Martin (American National Park Service) 5. As Good as Any Place at Home: Eating American in Colonial Manila
1898-1913
Alana Toulin (Dalhousie University
Canada) Part III: Bringing Colonial Violence Home 6. The Concept of Home: Looking through the Lens of Aboriginal Exemption in Australia
Judi Wickes and Katherine Ellinghaus (La Trobe University
Australia) 7. This is Where We Sprouted: Centralization and the Mi'kmaw Sense of Home
Trina Roache ( University of King's College
Canada) 8. The Intimate Reach of Settler Colonialism in Post-War Inuit Nunangat: Housing Provision
Settler Concepts of Home
Motherhood
and the Moral Family
Christina Goldhar and Julia Christensen (Memorial University
Canada) 9. Recording Our Truth: Documenting Changing Understandings of Home to Understand the Existing Housing Emergency in Nishnawbe Aski Nation Territory
Jeffrey Herskovits
Shelagh McCartney
Courtney Kaupp
Michael McKay and Ashley Atatise (X University and Nishnawbe Aski Nation Housing Strategy
Canada) Conclusion: Marginal Perspectives
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada)
Introduction: Finding Home at the Margins of Colonial Encounter
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part I: Travel and Movement in Histories of Home 1. Fur Trade Forts and Military Camps: The Askin Daughters Creating Home in the British Empire
Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto
Canada) 2. Meeting at "the Outermost Limit of the World": Arctic Exploration as Encounter Between Inuit and non-Inuit Geographies of Home
Katherine Crooks ( Dalhousie University
Canada) 3. Along the Outaouais: The Métis 'Home'land beyond the Red River
Lisa Binkley (Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part II: Politicizing the Domestic Sphere 4. In the Name of the Home: The Reconstruction of Nineteenth-Century America
Nicole Martin (American National Park Service) 5. As Good as Any Place at Home: Eating American in Colonial Manila
1898-1913
Alana Toulin (Dalhousie University
Canada) Part III: Bringing Colonial Violence Home 6. The Concept of Home: Looking through the Lens of Aboriginal Exemption in Australia
Judi Wickes and Katherine Ellinghaus (La Trobe University
Australia) 7. This is Where We Sprouted: Centralization and the Mi'kmaw Sense of Home
Trina Roache ( University of King's College
Canada) 8. The Intimate Reach of Settler Colonialism in Post-War Inuit Nunangat: Housing Provision
Settler Concepts of Home
Motherhood
and the Moral Family
Christina Goldhar and Julia Christensen (Memorial University
Canada) 9. Recording Our Truth: Documenting Changing Understandings of Home to Understand the Existing Housing Emergency in Nishnawbe Aski Nation Territory
Jeffrey Herskovits
Shelagh McCartney
Courtney Kaupp
Michael McKay and Ashley Atatise (X University and Nishnawbe Aski Nation Housing Strategy
Canada) Conclusion: Marginal Perspectives
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada)
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part I: Travel and Movement in Histories of Home 1. Fur Trade Forts and Military Camps: The Askin Daughters Creating Home in the British Empire
Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto
Canada) 2. Meeting at "the Outermost Limit of the World": Arctic Exploration as Encounter Between Inuit and non-Inuit Geographies of Home
Katherine Crooks ( Dalhousie University
Canada) 3. Along the Outaouais: The Métis 'Home'land beyond the Red River
Lisa Binkley (Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada) Part II: Politicizing the Domestic Sphere 4. In the Name of the Home: The Reconstruction of Nineteenth-Century America
Nicole Martin (American National Park Service) 5. As Good as Any Place at Home: Eating American in Colonial Manila
1898-1913
Alana Toulin (Dalhousie University
Canada) Part III: Bringing Colonial Violence Home 6. The Concept of Home: Looking through the Lens of Aboriginal Exemption in Australia
Judi Wickes and Katherine Ellinghaus (La Trobe University
Australia) 7. This is Where We Sprouted: Centralization and the Mi'kmaw Sense of Home
Trina Roache ( University of King's College
Canada) 8. The Intimate Reach of Settler Colonialism in Post-War Inuit Nunangat: Housing Provision
Settler Concepts of Home
Motherhood
and the Moral Family
Christina Goldhar and Julia Christensen (Memorial University
Canada) 9. Recording Our Truth: Documenting Changing Understandings of Home to Understand the Existing Housing Emergency in Nishnawbe Aski Nation Territory
Jeffrey Herskovits
Shelagh McCartney
Courtney Kaupp
Michael McKay and Ashley Atatise (X University and Nishnawbe Aski Nation Housing Strategy
Canada) Conclusion: Marginal Perspectives
Lisa Binkley and Katherine Crooks (Dalhousie University and Mount Saint Vincent University
Canada)