White settler reserve : New Iceland and the colonization of the Canadian West / Ryan Eyford.
2016
Non-Fiction
Available at Popular Reading
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Details
Author
Title
White settler reserve : New Iceland and the colonization of the Canadian West / Ryan Eyford.
Imprint
Vancouver : UBC Press, [2016]
Copyright
©2016
Description
xii, 259 pages : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 24 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Northern Dreamlands : Canadian Expansionism and Icelandic Migration
Broken Townships : Colonization Reserves and the Dominion Lands System
The First New Icelanders : Family Migration and the Formation of a Reserve Community
Quarantined within a New Order : Smallpox and the Spatial Practices of Colonization
"Principal Projector of the Colony" : The Turbulent Career of John Taylor, Icelandic Agent
Becoming British Subjects : Municipal Government and Citizenship
"Freemen Serving No Overlord" : Debt, Self-Reliance, and Liberty.
Broken Townships : Colonization Reserves and the Dominion Lands System
The First New Icelanders : Family Migration and the Formation of a Reserve Community
Quarantined within a New Order : Smallpox and the Spatial Practices of Colonization
"Principal Projector of the Colony" : The Turbulent Career of John Taylor, Icelandic Agent
Becoming British Subjects : Municipal Government and Citizenship
"Freemen Serving No Overlord" : Debt, Self-Reliance, and Liberty.
Summary
"In 1875, the Canadian government created a reserve for Icelandic immigrants on the southwest shore of Lake Winnipeg. Hoping for a better life in Canada, many of the New Iceland colonists found only hardship, disappointment, or death. Those who survived scurvy and smallpox faced crop failure, internal dissension, and severe flooding that nearly ended the project only six years after it had begun. This innovative book looks beyond the experiences of these Icelandic immigrants to understand the context into which their reserve fits within the history of settler colonialism. Ryan Eyford reveals that the timing and location of the Icelandic settlement was not accidental. New Iceland was one of several land reserves created for Europeans by the Canadian government in the late nineteenth century. Canadian leaders hoped that group settlements of immigrants on Indigenous lands would help realize their ambitious plans for western expansion. By juxtaposing the Icelanders' experiences with those of the Cree, Ojibwe, and Metis people they displaced, Eyford makes clear the connections between immigrant resettlement and Indigenous displacement. By analyzing themes such as race, land, health, and governance, he draws out the tensions that punctuated the process of colonization in western Canada and situates the region within the global history of colonialism"--Publisher description.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-247) and index.
Call Number
Non-Fiction
Language
English
ISBN
9780774831581 (hardback ; acid-free paper)
0774831588 (hardback ; acid-free paper)
9780774831604 (pdf)
9780774831611 (epub)
9780774831628 (mobi)
0774831596
9780774831598
0774831588 (hardback ; acid-free paper)
9780774831604 (pdf)
9780774831611 (epub)
9780774831628 (mobi)
0774831596
9780774831598
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