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Putting Down Roots - (Paskwāwi Masinahikewina/Prairie Writing) by Cheryl Troupe (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Mapping Métis history and cultural heritage through women's work Centring kinship and the strength of women, Putting Down Roots reframes Métis road allowance communities as sites of profound resistance and resilience, restoring Métis life in places, times, and scholarship where it has been obscured by settler narratives.
- Author(s): Cheryl Troupe
- 408 Pages
- History, Native American
- Series Name: Paskwāwi Masinahikewina/Prairie Writing
Description
About the Book
Looking through the lens of women's work, Putting Down Roots reframes Métis road allowance communities as sites of profound resistance and resilience, restoring Métis life in places, times, and scholarship where it has been obscured by settler narratives.
Book Synopsis
Mapping Métis history and cultural heritage through women's work
Centring kinship and the strength of women, Putting Down Roots reframes Métis road allowance communities as sites of profound resistance and resilience, restoring Métis life in places, times, and scholarship where it has been obscured by settler narratives. These communities were not peripheral spaces where Métis lived as squatters, but places where families culturally thrived by visiting each other, telling stories, sharing food, and providing mutual aid. With stories of Métis li vyeu (Elders) as its foundation, this innovative study reveals the agency embedded in the everyday actions of women's work, which sustained Métis identity, family systems, and relationships to land.
Cheryl Troupe charts a century of Métis presence and persistence in the Qu'Appelle Valley, from the end of the buffalo hunt in the 1850s, through displacement following the northwest resistances, resettlement on fringe Crown lands, ongoing political activism and opposition to Canadian land-use practices, and finally the dissolution of the road allowance community along Katepwa Lake in the 1950s. Focusing on female kinship relationships and food production, Putting Down Roots illuminates the ways women created the stability necessary to adapt to the rapidly changing economic, social, and political conditions that defined this period of Canadian history.
Troupe's sophisticated use of oral histories, archival sources, genealogies, photographs, and deep mapping links people and their stories to the spaces that are important to them. Adding a new dimension to the study of Métis history, Putting Down Roots brings to life the tremendous cultural strength that characterized Métis road allowance communities.
Review Quotes
"A community-informed research project that allows us, the readers, to begin to understand the complex and to date largely misunderstood history of the "road allowance people"... Putting Down Roots is an important contribution to the field of Canadian and Métis history, and essential reading for anyone interested in learning more about the processes by which the state usurped control over the land from Métis people, and the many strategies those marginalized communities used to resist."
--Peter Fortna "H-Environment"