The struggle for survival Indian cultures and the Protestant ethic in British Columbia
A study of the cultural adjustment of the coastal Indian of B.C. to white society and the development of leadership among the Indians.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Toronto, Buffalo]
University of Toronto Press
[1973]
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- PART 1: BRITISH COLUMBIA, AN AREA OF NEW SETTLEMENT: 1. The Northwest Coast.
- 2. Peaceful penetration.
- 3. Wardship. PART 2: NATIVE CONDUCT: 'THE THRALDOM OF HEATHENISM AND SIN': 1. Missionaries.
- 2. Indian agents and the potlatch. PART 3: THE POTLATCH LAW: WARDSHIP AND ENFORCEMENT: 1. Introduction.
- 2. Morality and the confusion of change.
- 3. Enforcement and the emergence of the Potlatch Law as a public issue.
- 4. Enforcement and native rights.
- 5. Peaceful penetration and enforced acculturation. PART 4: THE LAND TITLE QUESTION: 1. The reversal of imperial policy.
- 2. The Indian protest before 1875.
- 3. The Indian protest: 1874-1917.
- 4. The Indian protest: 1917-1926.
- 5. A defeated campaign -1927. PART 5: THE STRUGGLE FOR IDENTITY: 1946-1951: 1. The native brotherhood and its native voice.
- 2. The Canadianized Indian. PART 6: AGAIN THE NORTHWEST COAST.