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Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Part One: Introduction; Introduction; Part Two: The Crown, Colonial Spaces, and Aboriginality; The Simcoes and the Indians; Lord Bury and the First Nations: A Year in the Canadas; "Chief Teller of Tales": John Buchan's Ideas on Indigenous Peoples, the Commonwealth, and an Emerging Idea of Canada, 1935-1940; At the Crossroads of Militarism and Modernization: Inuit-Military Relations in the Cold War Arctic.
  • Alaska Highway Nurses and DEW Line Doctors: Medical Encounters in Northern Canadian Indigenous Communities Part Three: Interraciality and Education; Negotiating Aboriginal Interraciality in Three Early British Columbian Indian Residential Schools; Language, Place, and Kinship Ties: Past and Present Necessities for Métis Education; Part Four: Law, Legislation, and History; They Have Suffered the Most: First Nations and the Aftermath of the 1885 North-West Rebellion.
  • "Powerless to Protect": Ontario Game Protection Legislation, Unreported and Indetermined Case Law, and the Criminalization of Indian Hunting in the Robinson Treaty Territories, 1892-1931
  • One Good Thing: Law and Elevator Etiquette in the Indian Territories; Reclaiming History through the Courts: Aboriginal Rights, the Marshall Decision, and Maritime History; Part Five: Anthropologists, Historians, and the Indigenous Historiography; "We Could Not Help Noticing the Fact That Many of Them Were Cross-Eyed": Historical Evidence and Coast Salish Leadership.
  • An Appealing Anthropology, Frozen in Time: Diamond Jenness's The Indians of Canada
  • Part Six: Conclusion; Aboriginal Research in Troubled Times; Contributors; Index.