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6 Iroquoian Archaeology, the Public, and Native Communities in Victorian Ontario

  • Michelle A. Hamilton
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Historicizing Canadian Anthropology
This chapter is in the book Historicizing Canadian Anthropology
© UBC Press

© UBC Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Historicizing Traditions in Canadian Anthropology 3
  4. Situating Ourselves Historically and Theoretically
  5. Disciplinary Tribes and Territories: Alliances and Skirmishes between Anthropology and History 19
  6. Toward a Historiography of Canadian Anthropology 30
  7. The Pre-professional History of Canadian Anthropology
  8. The Erasure of Horatio Hale’s Contributions to Boasian Anthropology 44
  9. Marius Barbeau and the Methodology of Salvage Ethnography in Canada, 1911-51 52
  10. Iroquoian Archaeology, the Public, and Native Communities in Victorian Ontario 65
  11. Locating Our Subjects
  12. Canadian Anthropology and the Ethnography of “Indian Administration” 78
  13. Canadian Anthropology and Ideas of Aboriginal Emendation 93
  14. A Comparative History of “Cultural Rights” in South Africa and Canada 107
  15. Canadian Anthropologists in China Studies 122
  16. Documenting Institutional Relations
  17. Departmental Networks in Canadian Anthropology 137
  18. Canadian Anthropology as a Situated Conversation 147
  19. Anthropology and Sociology at the University of British Columbia from 1947 to the 1980s 157
  20. Anthropology at Université Laval: The Early Years, 1958-70 173
  21. Expatriates in the Ivory Tower: Anthropologists in Non-Anthropology University Departments 183
  22. Comparisons and Connections
  23. Constituting Canadian Anthropology 200
  24. The Historical Praxis of Museum Anthropology: A Canada/US Comparison 212
  25. Commodifying North American Aboriginal Culture: A Canada/US Comparison 226
  26. Canadian Anthropology and the Cold War 242
  27. Texts and Contexts in Canadian Anthropology 253
  28. Just a Little Off-Centre or Not Peripheral Enough? Paradoxes for the Reproduction of Canadian Anthropology 266
  29. Postscript 275
  30. Notes Notes and Acknowledgments 278
  31. References 288
  32. Contributors 321
  33. Index 324
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