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The Queen's people: a study of hegemony, coercion, and accommodation among the Okanagan of Canada
Peter Carstens
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Frontmatter
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List of Illustrative Material (page ix)
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Okanagan Nation Declaration (page xi)
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Foreword by Chief Murray Alexis (page xiii)
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Preface (page xv)
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Acknowledgments (page xxiii)
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Part One THE CREATION OF A RESERVE
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1 Traditional Okanagan Society and Institutions (page 3)
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2 The Beginnings of White Hegemony (page 29)
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3 Reserving Other People's Land (page 54)
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4 The O'Keefe Syndrome (page 67)
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5 Rule by Notables (page 87)
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6 The Process of Economic Incorporation (page 103)
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7 The Political Incorporation of Chiefs and the People, 1865-1931 (page 114)
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Part Two THE CONTEMPORARY COMMUNITY
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8 The Okanagan Reserve as Canadian Community (page 139)
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9 Okanagan Factions (page 157)
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10 Making Ends Meet in the 1950s (page 166)
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11 Household Economy and the Wider Society in the 1980s (page 181)
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12 The Assimilation of Chiefs 1932-1987 (page 204)
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13 Band Government, Administration, and Politics (page 222)
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14 Band Council Affairs (page 239)
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15 Why Education? (page 257)
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16 Reserve Catholocism (page 263)
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Part Three THE WIDER FRAMEWORK
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17 The Queen's People: An Anthropologist's View (page 271)
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Appendices (page 291)
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Bibliography (page 305)
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Index (page 323)
Citable Link
Published: c1991
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
- 9780802068279 (paper)
- 9780802058935 (hardcover)
- 9781442664661 (ebook)