A Fatherly Eye Indian Agents Government Power and Aboriginal Resistance in Ontario 1918 1939 1st Edition by Robin Brownlie – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0195417844, 9780195417845
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0195417844
ISBN 13: 9780195417845
Author: Robin Brownlie
For more than a century, government policy towards Aboriginal peoples in Canada was shaped by paternalistic attitudes and an ultimate goal of assimilation. Indeed, remnants of that thinking still linger today, more than thirty years after protests against the White Paper of 1969 led to reconsideration Canada’s ‘Indian’ policy. In A Fatherly Eye, historian Robin Brownlie examines how paternalism and assimilation during the interwar period were made manifest in the ‘field’, far from the bureaucrats in Ottawa, but never free of their oppressive supervision. At the same time, she reveals how the Aboriginal ‘subjects’ of official policy dealt with the control and coercion that lay at the heart of the Indian Act.
This groundbreaking study sheds new light on a time and a place we know little about. Brownlie focuses on two Indian agencies in southern Ontario – Parry Sound and Manitowaning (on Manitoulin Island) – and the contrasting management styles of two agents, John daly and Robert Lewis, especially during the Great Depression. In administering the lives of the Anishinabek people, the government paid inadequate attention to the protection of treaty rights and was excessively concerned with maintaining control, in part through the paternalistic provision of assistance that helped to silence critics of the system and prevent political organizing. As Brownlie concludes, the Indian Affairs system still does not work well, and ‘has come to represent all that is most oppressive about the history of colonization in this country’.
Previously published by Oxford University Press
Table of contents:
Chapter 1: Homeland: The Area and the People
Chapter 2: ‘A Particularly Authoritarian Organization’: The Administrative Context
Chapter 3: ‘It Did Not Matter Who Was Chief’: Band Councils
Chapter 4: ‘Easy to Trick People by Putting Words on Paper’: Treaties and Aboriginal Rights
Chapter 5: ‘Economy Must Be Observed’: Assistance and Mediation
Chapter 6: ‘Always and Only an Indian’: Assimilation in Practice
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Tags: Robin Brownlie, Fatherly Eye, Indian Agents, Government Power, Aboriginal Resistance, Ontario, 1918 1939


