A Hybrid Identity in a Pluralistic Nineteenth-Century Colonial Context

被引:0
作者
Matthew A. Beaudoin
机构
[1] University of Western Ontario,Department of Anthropology
来源
Historical Archaeology | 2013年 / 47卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The colonial process often occurs within a pluralistic context in which all the actors continuously renegotiate their identities. Traditionally, this context has been framed within a colonizer/colonized dichotomy, but recent scholarship has embraced a more-complex interpretation, such that colonizers and colonized are not homogenizing categories, and variations in experience are accepted. The deconstruction of colonial categories further complicates pluralistic contexts and allows for a more nuanced reading of the past; however, the colonial discourse continues to have difficulty exploring and discussing identities that do not fit neatly into either a colonizer or colonized identity. This paper explores how the Labrador Métis, a self-defined hybrid identity, do not cleanly fit within the current discourse and highlights the need to begin reconceptualizing the actors within the colonial process.
引用
收藏
页码:45 / 63
页数:18
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
Anderson D(1984)The Development of Settlement in Southern Coastal Labrador with Particular Reference to Sandwich Bay Bulletin of Canadian Studies 8 23-49
[2]  
Beaudoin M A(2010)Attributing Cultural Affiliation to Sod Structures in Labrador: ALabrador Métis Example from North River Canadian Journal of Archaeology 34 148-173
[3]  
Josephs R L(1985)Who Are the Métis? Studies in Political Economy 18 107-147
[4]  
Rankin L K(2011)Middle-Class Ideologies and American Respectability: Archaeology and the Irish Immigrant Experience International Journal of Historical Archaeology 15 30-50
[5]  
Boisvert D a(1989)Lithic Technology and the Hivernant Metis: A Question of Context Canadian Journal of Archaeology 13 151-163
[6]  
Turnbull K(2000)Creolization and Late Nineteenth Century Métis Vernacular LogArchitecture on the South Saskatchewan River Historical Archaeology 34 49-56
[7]  
Brighton S A(2000)“A Set of Very Fair Cups and Saucers”: Stamped Ceramics as an Example of Inuit Incorporation International Journal of Historical Archaeology 4 1-34
[8]  
Burley D V(2000)Creolization and the Borderlands Historical Archaeology 34 46-55
[9]  
Burley D V(2000)Preface Creolization 34 1-4
[10]  
Cabak M A a(2000)The Material and Cognitive Dimensions of Creolization in Nineteenth-Century Jamaica Historical Archaeology 34 56-72