An Indian Is Almost As Free As Any Other Person PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download An Indian Is Almost As Free As Any Other Person PDF full book. Access full book title An Indian Is Almost As Free As Any Other Person.

"An Indian is Almost as Free as Any Other Person"

Author: Keith Douglas Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages: 532
Release: 2008
Genre: Indians of North America
ISBN: 9780494380444

Download "An Indian is Almost as Free as Any Other Person" Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Canada is regularly presented as a country where liberalism has ensured freedom and equality for all. Yet as Canada expanded westward and colonized First Nations territories, liberalism did not operate to advance freedom or equality for Indigenous people or to protect their property, but rather had a markedly debilitating effect on virtually every aspect of their lives. This study explores the operation of exclusionary liberalism between 1877 and 1927 in southern Alberta and the southern interior of British Columbia. The exploration of the extension of liberal colonial rule in these two regions provides the opportunity to illustrate the flexibility, adaptability, plurality and multifaceted nature of Canada's liberal colonial project which incorporated an array of strategies and justifications to meet local conditions and opposition. To facilitate, fashion, and justify liberal colonial expansion Canada relied extensively on surveillance which operated to exclude and reform Indigenous people. In this period surveillance was far more intensive and dramatic in southern Alberta than in the British Columbia interior but in both areas, in addition to inculcating Anglo-Canadian liberal capitalist values, structures, and interests as normal, natural, and beyond reproach it worked to exclude or restructure the economic, political, social, and spiritual tenets of Indigenous cultures. Further, surveillance identified which previously reserved lands, established on fragments of First Nations territory, could be further reduced by a variety of dubious means. While in both regions there was the appearance of consultation, this was limited and designed to be of little consequence. To protect the chimera of what liberalism had to offer First Nations, the general nature of Canada's colonial project, as well as its local specifics and the textual record of its operation, were hidden from Indigenous people wherever and whenever possible. While none of this proceeded unchallenged, surveillance served as well to mitigate against, even if it could never completely neutralize, opposition. Considering Canada's efforts a controlling both information and Indigenous political, economic, and social structures, the degree and variety of the challenge to the imposition of Anglo-Canadian liberal rule is remarkable.


Roots of American Racism

Roots of American Racism
Author: Alden T. Vaughan
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 369
Release: 1995
Genre: Racism
ISBN: 0195086872

Download Roots of American Racism Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

This important new collection brings together ten of Alden Vaughan's essays about race relations in the British colonies. Focusing on the variable role of cultural and racial perceptions on colonial policies for Indians and African Americans, the essays include explorations of the origins of slavery and racism in Virginia, the causes of the Puritans' war against the Pequots, and the contest between natives and colonists to win the other's allegiance by persuasion or captivity. Less controversial but equally important to understanding the racial dynamics of early America are essays on early English paradigmatic views of Native Americans, the changing Anglo-American perceptions of Indian color and character, and frontier violence in pre-Revolutionary Pennsylvania. Published here for the first time are an extensive expos'e of slaveholder ideology in seventeenth-century Barbados, the second half of an essay on Puritan judicial policies for Indians, a general introduction, and headnotes to each essay. All previously published pieces have been revised to reflect recent scholarship or to address recent debates. Challenging standard interpretations while probing previously-ignored aspects of early American race relations, this convenient and provocative collection by one our most incisive commentators will be required reading for all scholars and students of early American history.


Laws of Rise and Demise

Laws of Rise and Demise
Author: Aleem Akhtar
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 390
Release: 2013-07-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1481778218

Download Laws of Rise and Demise Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Rise and demise of nations are man-made and can be humanly controlled. These are neither naturally determined nor divinely fated. This book captures the root-process presiding over the problems, challenges, and the opportunities nations of the world face today. America has a three-dimensional problem. Its “process controls” have equated its “purpose controls.” Internally, it has developed “integration energy traps.” Externally, it has created a dangerously “interest-based” world order. America must move to the “next level” of human collectivity; or an Armageddon might hit us all within the next few decades. The Muslims’ “idea of State” is too “invalid”, “antiquated” and perilously “anti-liberty” to allow large political systems to evolve in the Islamic world. It has been incessantly sinking back into anarchy. The “Arab Spring” is continuation of medieval, chaotic and “identity-based” shift of power, devoid of “value” and “political mass”. With the given trends, the world must be ready for more Talibans, Bin Ladens, and Al-Qaedas, possibly equipped with weapons of mass destruction. India and China have big “N-factor”. But at controls level, unsustainability afflicts China and an age-old “identity clamp” is failing India. Both nations will see reversals in near future. China must realize that “economic future” is a component of “political future”; not the other way round. India must understand that democracy divorced from political creativity leads back to tyranny and anarchy. The basis of the entire debate is “Integration Energy Theory” which explains the reality of human togetherness in a timeless and non-spatial manner.


Separate Peoples, One Land

Separate Peoples, One Land
Author: Cynthia Cumfer
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2012-09-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1469606593

Download Separate Peoples, One Land Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Exploring the mental worlds of the major groups interacting in a borderland setting, Cynthia Cumfer offers a broad, multiracial intellectual and cultural history of the Tennessee frontier in the Revolutionary and early national periods, leading up to the era of rapid westward expansion and Cherokee removal. Attentive to the complexities of race, gender, class, and spirituality, Cumfer offers a rare glimpse into the cultural logic of Native American, African American, and Euro-American men and women as contact with one another powerfully transformed their ideas about themselves and the territory they came to share. The Tennessee frontier shaped both Cherokee and white assumptions about diplomacy and nationhood. After contact, both groups moved away from local and personal notions about polity to embrace nationhood. Excluded from the nationalization process, slaves revived and modified African and American premises about patronage and community, while free blacks fashioned an African American doctrine of freedom that was both communal and individual. Paying particular attention to the influence of older European concepts of civilization, Cumfer shows how Tennesseans, along with other Americans and Europeans, modified European assumptions to contribute to a discourse about civilization, one both dynamic and destructive, which has profoundly shaped world history.


The Pall Mall Budget

The Pall Mall Budget
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 944
Release: 1874
Genre:
ISBN:

Download The Pall Mall Budget Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


The Encyclopædia Britannica

The Encyclopædia Britannica
Author: Thomas Spencer Baynes
Publisher:
Total Pages: 968
Release: 1891
Genre: Encyclopedias and dictionaries
ISBN:

Download The Encyclopædia Britannica Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


The American Cyclopædia

The American Cyclopædia
Author: George Ripley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 874
Release: 1879
Genre: Encyclopedias
ISBN:

Download The American Cyclopædia Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle