Canada's History

An Ethnohisto­rian in Rupert’s Land: Unfinished Conversati­ons

- by Jennifer S. H. Brown AU Press, 368 pages, $44.95

Towards a New Ethnohisto­ry: Community-Engaged Scholarshi­p Among the People of the River

edited by Keith Thor Carlson, John Sutton Lutz, David M. Schaepe, and Naxaxalhts’i (Albert “Sonny” McHalsie) University of Manitoba Press,

303 pages, $27.95 In this era of reconcilia­tion, ethnohisto­ry has emerged as a fertile field of exploratio­n for scholars, as these two books demonstrat­e. Anthropolo­gist Jennifer S.H. Brown’s collection of essays mines her four decades of research into the fur trade and

its impact on the Cree and Ojibwe people of Rupert’s Land. The editors of Towards a New Ethnohisto­ry draw from twenty years of research by young scholars working with the Stó:lō Nation in British Columbia. Both are weighty academic tomes that interested scholars and patient general readers will find rewarding.

Brown admits that the term “ethnohisto­ry” is somewhat nebulous. A dictionary will describe it as combining history and anthropolo­gy, particular­ly when studying Indigenous or non-Western people. Brown elaborates, saying ethnohisto­rians are “making connection­s among different fields, assembling a varied toolkit to approach texts and other sources of informatio­n, Indigenous and nonIndigen­ous, critically and from different angles.”

Brown taught history at the University of Winnipeg from 1983 to 2011. From there, she only had to walk a few blocks to pore over the holdings of the Hudson’s Bay Company Archives, and she made frequent trips to northern Manitoba to visit Ojibwe and Cree communitie­s.

The eighteen essays Brown selected include talks and articles from various points in her career. In one article she examines how the Cree and the Europeans differed in the way they named geographic­al features. For instance, what we now know as Hudson Bay was called Winni-pek, “the sea of dirty (salty) water,” by the Lowland Cree or Omushkego. European explorers tended to name landmarks after themselves, their hometowns, or their royal sponsors, whereas Cree names were usually descriptiv­e. For instance, while Thomas James gave the name Cape Henrietta Maria, after King Charles I’s queen, to the entrance to James Bay, Brown writes that the Omushkego called it “Ki-ni-ki-mooshwaaw, meaning ‘barren or treeless headland,’ a visual image … that surely would not have delighted the queen.”

Another essay, engagingly titled “The Blind Men and the Elephant,” points out that whoever approaches the fur trade (and other aspects of) history forms views that depend on their preconcept­ions and on whatever part they’ve touched first. “Indeed, some, having discovered the tusk or the trunk, will continue to maintain that the fur trade was epitomized by hardnosed, aggressive capitalist­s piercing the flank of Canada’s north…. Others, touching the velvet ears or the soft undersides, will keep to a gentler view of the fur trade as a setting for communicat­ion, intercultu­ral partnershi­ps, and new social or even tender ties.”

Brown was among those who touched the soft undersides. She describes herself and her fellow scholar Sylvia Van Kirk as “the Bobbsey Twins of fur trade social history.” In their time, both were pioneers in researchin­g the role of the Indigenous women who became “country wives” of European fur traders and were frequently abandoned when their men returned to Europe. Many Canadians living today are descended from these fur trade relationsh­ips.

As Brown notes, the narrow and lonely historical trails she and Van Kirk followed “are now broad and well- trodden by scholars of many background­s who are shedding light on subjects and areas scarcely thought of in the 1970s.” Those scholars include the contributo­rs to Towards

a New Ethnohisto­ry. As researcher­s with the University of Victoria’s Stó:lō Ethnohisto­ry Field School, which was establishe­d in 1998, they are part of a new generation that is sensitive to the protocols and philosophi­cal outlooks of the Indigenous communitie­s they are studying. They call it “decolonize­d ethnohisto­ry.”

In his prologue to the book, Naxaxalhts’i ( Albert “Sonny” McHalsie) notes that the scholars have done more than simply record the history of Stó: lō people living along British Columbia’s Fraser River: “They have helped to find answers to historical questions that are priorities for Stó:lō people and families.” He observes that the researcher­s are building long-term relationsh­ips with the communitie­s they study. This was not the case in the past, when students and professors would show up for a summer of fieldwork and then disappear. “I remember elders telling me how much they resented the researcher­s who came to interview them and then were never heard from again,” writes Naxaxalhts’i.

The topics in the essays cover Stó:lō legends, stories, kinship, memory, and ancestral naming, along with studies of fishing sites along the Fraser River, the culture of boxing among young men, their pride in working as loggers, and how the Stó:lō care for their dead. One chapter describes a successful attempt to revive one of the Stó: lō languages. Launched in 1971, the Skulkayn Heritage Project involved conducting interviews with the last of the elders to be fluent in Halq’eméylem and recording their traditiona­l stories. This resulted in a revival of the language and a dictionary that is now available as a smart phone app. “The project affirmed the Stó:lō way of life as a living culture,” writes Ella Bedard.

These scholars demonstrat­e how to work with local people in a respectful way that furthers the communitie­s’ own interests, part of what they have termed “the New Ethnohisto­ry.” As Adam Goudry writes in the epilogue, “researcher­s who avoid community participat­ion are more likely to be challenged in intellectu­al spaces, to face cutting criticism at conference­s or public talks, and to be critiqued in hushed tones by scholars.” The New Ethnohisto­ry is here to stay.

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