Meshkwajisewin: Paradigm Shift
Abstract
:1. Relational Obligations
2. The Berens Family Collection
3. The Gaagige-Binesi Photograph
4. The Relational Obligations of Collections
5. A Paradigm Shift
6. Pipes Are Diplomats
7. Pipes Are Teachers
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Alfred Gell argues that “[s]ince the outset of the discipline, anthropology has been signally preoccupied with a series of problems to do with ostensibly peculiar relations between persons and ‘things’ which somehow, ‘appear as’ or do duty as, persons” (Gell 1998, p. 9). |
2 | There are many treaties with First Nations in Canada, but the Numbered Treaties start after Canadian Confederation and are related to traditional territories of First Nations peoples from west of Lake Superior to the Rocky Mountains. Treaty No. 1 was made in 1871, and Treaty No. 11 and various adhesions were still being ratified in 1921 (Craft 2013; Foster 1979; Price 1979; Taylor 1979). |
3 | William and Nancy’s third son Percy Jones Berens was named after Rev. Jones who was the United Church Minster in Berens River at the time. |
4 | William Johnston, in Michigan Pioneer Collections, 37:186. See also William W. Warren, “History of the Ojibways, Based Upon Traditions and Oral Statements”, in Minnesota Historic al Collections, 5:268 St. Paul 1885 cited in (White 1982, p. 65) (Cf. Podruchny 1995). |
5 | As quoted in (White 1982, pp. 63–64) from the letters of William Johnston, 1833. |
6 | Nancy (Everett) Berens’ Méis grandmother was a Cree woman from Norway House married to Joseph Boucher, a French voyageur from Quebec. Nancy’s embroidery style is typical of Cree and Cree Métis women from Norway House, and although Nancy eventually became the wife of one of the most famous Anishinaabe chiefs on Lake Winnipeg and lived in Berens River most of her life, the embroidery and beading styles she passed on to her daughters were Norway House Cree/Cree Métis. |
7 | This is a bronze version of the silver medal belonging to Chief Jacob Berens. These bronze medals were sent to Chiefs who were unable to meet with the Prince of Wales in person. In all, over 200 medals were distributed to Western Canadian Chiefs. Ted Mann’s father gave him the medal as a wedding present 30 years earlier. Ted told us that his father also had the treaty medal at the time but later sold it to buy golf clubs. After the photograph was located, Ted and Rachel kept it at their house for several months before they decided it needed to be at the museum. In working out the provenance of the photo, I was directed by a friend to an old CTV, W5 investigative story from the 1960s about terrible housing on Sagkeeng First Nation. The reporter was interviewing people with inadequate housing, and one of them was Ted’s father, Sam, who told the audience that he did not understand why he, his wife, and seven children had to live in such a small house when his grandfather had signed Treaty No. 1. As the reporter looks on, he climbs on a bed and brings down this photo and continues the interview while stroking grandpa’s photo. W5, Air Date: 07/01/1968. Item: Native Poverty and Indian Affairs Panel Discussion—Item No. 124451634. |
8 | The proportion of Indigenous children in Winnipeg schools has been rising over time as First Nations families move to the city. Statistics Canada 2016 census data for Manitoba show that 28% of Manitobans under 20 self-identify as Indigenous and those under 5 years of age constitute 30% of Manitoba’s population. Please see: https://www.gov.mb.ca/healthychild/publications/hcm_2017report.pdf (accessed on 6 October 2021), p. 39. The City of Winnipeg Infrastructure Planning Office extracted census data for Winnipeg and found that 28% of Winnipeg residents under the age of 14 are Indigenous and that the proportion of Indigenous Manitobans living in the City of Winnipeg has increased from 34% to 38% over the last 20 years. “The self-identified population of Indigenous people in the City of Winnipeg’, they write, “has grown by more than 10,000 people over the past 5 years”. There is no reason to think that this has not continued. Please see: https://winnipeg.ca/cao/pdfs/IndigenousPeople-WinnipegStatistics.pdf (accessed on 6 October 2021), pp. 6–7. Coming to the museum is a favourite trip for First Nations schools so this estimate may be conservative. |
9 | Ste. Madeleine exhibit is called “Ni Kish Kishin, I Remember, St. Madeleine”. The exhibit text is in three languages: Michif first, English, and French. The case includes ecological information as the site of the village is now an example of the rare survival of critically endangered native prairie birds, insects, and plants and an ecological diversity hot spot—an example of museum story telling which includes natural and human histories. See also: (Paul 2019). |
10 | |
11 | This space is also designed to store objects that are within the museum’s collections to ensure their needs are met, they are under the proper care of an Elder, and access is restricted. |
12 | Tommy Prince, a member of the Brokenhead First Nation in Manitoba, was the most decorated Indigenous soldier in World War 2, and his medals were lost for a time. When they were rediscovered and purchased at auction, the owners asked the museum to keep them in our vaults. They are visited and go on outings from time to time at the request of or with the permission of the owners but otherwise remain in the museum. They have recently been put on permanent display because several copy sets have been purchased by the medal owners for use in schools and public events, but they still go out at least once a year for commemorative events. |
13 | Dr. Katherine Pettipas, former Curator of Ethnology at the Manitoba Museum, was one of the major contributors to the Task Force on First Nations and Museums (1993) and remains a respected advocate for repatriation and collaborative exhibit development. Dr. Leigh Syms, the former Curator of Archaeology, developed a pioneering project community archaeology project to salvage Cree gravesites inundated by floodwater on South Indian Lake. |
14 | Stocking explains that Boas, over a period of 30 years, developed a critique of cultural Darwinism that “involved the rejection of simplistic models of biological or racial determinism; it involved the rejection of ethno-centric standards of cultural evaluation; it involved a new appreciation of the role of unconscious social processes in the determination of human behavior; it implied a conception of man not as a rational so much as a rationalizing being (Cf. Stocking 1966. Taken as a whole, it might be said that this change involved-to appropriate the language of Thomas Kuhn-the emergence of what may be called the modern social scientific paradigm for the study of Boas and the Culture Concept”. |
15 | The Man in each of these panels was removed 15 years before when the museum changed its name from the Museum of Man and Nature to the Manitoba Museum. |
16 | Image credit: Peter Newark American Pictures/Bridgeman Image PNP246124. |
17 | Building community relationships is a hidden part of museum work. What the public experiences is the galleries. It is expensive and complicated to change “permanent exhibits” in galleries. In 2016, with the help of Indigenous Curatorial Assistant Amanda McLeod, we documented 92 instances of unfortunate language in the existing exhibits, including “Half Breed wives” and more than 20 “Indians”. This is not language we use, nor have we used it in a long time, but it lives on in old, outdated exhibits. The three panels mentioned here introduced the visitors’ experience for more than forty years, framing the interpretation of Indigenous stories within the museum, including photos of an “Eskimo” hunter and an artefact labelled “Indian knife”. |
18 | For more on the negative consequences of this idea that First Nations and Métis peoples are unable to adapt to modernity, see Mary Jane Logan McCallum (2014), on Indigenous women and work, and Evelyn Peters et al. 2018, about forced removal of Métis families to make way for a Winnipeg shopping mall. |
19 | The Elders were chosen for their knowledge, their history of advocacy, and the respect that others have for their wisdom. This cohesive group represents the Dakota, Ininíwak, Anishininíwak, Anishinaabeg, and Denesułine people of the province First set up in 2005, they had been meeting, commissioning research, conducting extensive community oral history interviews, and publishing books about treaties for ten years when discussions about this exhibit began. The Elders Council were ideal partners for this project because their educational mandate neatly parallels that of the museum. Some of the other famous Canadian Indigenous exhibit collaborations, such as the creation of the Blackfoot Gallery at the Glenbow (Cf. Conaty 2003; Conaty and Janes 1997). were, in large part, facilitated by the existence of a First Nations institution with the mandate and community support to confidently answer questions of culture, message, and representation. In the case of the Glenbow, it was the Mookaakin Culture and Heritage Foundation (Cf. Peers and Brown 2015; Nicks 2003). The Elders Council played this role for the Manitoba Museum with respect to treaties, and without their encouragement and firm direction, the museum would not have developed the treaty exhibits in the way that it did. |
20 | Roger Roulette Pers.Comm. (July 2021). James Chalmers wrote an excellent student paper in 2020 on the Anishinaabe words for treaty as part of the Manitoba Museum’s Indigenous Scholars in Residence program. We thank him for gathering most of these terms together and examining their history. In his paper, he lists several other words for treaty used in other parts of Canada and the US (Chalmers 2020). |
21 | Anishinaabemowin speakers are well known for the distinction they make between animate and inanimate things. The meaning of this grammatical propensity is hotly debated, but there is no doubt that speakers do attribute social agency to entities such as pipes, treating these objects as responsive and sentient beings. Sometimes these attributions become grammaticalized; particular classes of entities receive special grammatical treatment and are cast as grammatical animates. This is true, for example, of many items associated with traditional religious practice and ceremony, such as “opwaagan”, “pipe”, “asemaa”, “tobacco”, and dewe’igan, “drum”. However, even in the case of the drum, there is a grammatical form which is inanimate, and using inanimates to disguise the importance of an object fits an Anishinaabemowin convention that Mary Black Rogers calls “discrete speech, waawiimaajimowin”. See (Black 1977; Matthews 2016, p. 72). |
22 | In the photo of a Treaty No. 3 event at the Northwest Angle (the western most tip of Ontario), you really cannot tell the Treaty Commissioners from the Chiefs. They were all wearing suits. For the most part, they knew one another well. Many of them had been involved in the fur trade together, and by the 1870s, there existed a 200 year-long history of relationships built on non-Native dependence on Indigenous skills and technologies. The canoes in the photograph are an example. The negotiator for Treaty No. 1, Weymouth Simpson, was the son of Sir George Simpson, Governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company and resident in the west for many years and Governor of the HBC from 1820 until he died in 1860. I would like to thank Anne Lindsay for pointing me to the identity of the people in this photograph. |
23 | He then lists a keg, blankets, and other presents he gives to Peguis and his family in exchange. In Miles Macdonell Diary, Friday, 20th May 1814, Selkirk Papers, f. 16900, Reel C-16, https://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c16/414?r=0&s=2 (accessed on 6 October 2021) Library and Archives Canada. I would like to thank Anne Lindsay for directing me to this section of Macdonell’s diaries. |
24 | In the case of the people of Peguis First Nation and the Lord Selkirk, this relationship is still honoured. For the 200th Anniversary, the 11th Lord Selkirk, James Douglas Hamilton, came to Manitoba to personally renew the relationship with the current Chief at Peguis, Glenn Hudson. Gifts were exchanged, and whenever Peguis and Brokenhead FN Chiefs are in London, they are invited to dine with Lord Selkirk at the House of Lords (Bill Shead and former Chief Jim Bear Pers. Comm. 2017). |
25 | As Sarah Carter writes, “Speaking to an assembly led by Saulteaux chiefs Peguis and Yellow Legs in June, 1815, HBC surveyor Peter Fidler referred to the King as the ‘Great Father of us all’, encouraging them to believe that the British monarch had a special interest in their welfare. Fidler told them that the Governor of the HBC had gone overseas, and had taken the Cree and Saulteaux’s pipe stems with him ‘…in order that he may talk to our Great Father, that he may be charitable to you and your Friends--and we expect that when you see your Pipe stems again, you will be proud from having been the Friend to his Children in his Absence…’” (Carter 2004), http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/48/greatmother.shtml (accessed on 6 October 2021). Thanks to Anne Lindsay for her assistance with these historical records. The text of the document can be found here: https://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c17/909?r=0&s=4 (accessed on 6 October 2021). 1815, June 24th entry, f 18498–18499, in Library and Archives Canada, Selkirk Papers, Journal at Red River Settlement with the account of the Population of the Free Canadians and the three Tribes of Indians in this Quarter with a Meterological Journal and Astronomical Observations made at different places by Peter Fidler, to which is added the Astronomical Observations of Thomas and Charles Fidler 1815. |
26 | Letter, R.P. [Robert Parker] Pelley, June 7th, 1824, Library and Archives Canada, Selkirk Papers, f. 8302, https://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c8/520?r=0&s=4 (accessed on 6 October 2021). |
27 | Quoted in (Podruchny 1995). Medals played a similar role in Crown/First Nations diplomacy. The medal given to Peguis by Lord Selkirk was replaced three years later by Selkirk’s estate because Peguis had used the first one to quell a disturbance. “Last spring War parties assembled to bar the road… through the Sioux country. I gave my flag and two medals to stop them and succeeded. I have now no mark of a Chief and request my father [Selkirk] to replace them. Father, I have told you the truth & I have done and remain thy dutiful son. Signed, Peguis, Colony Chief”. This letter was written 12 June 1821 to Andrew Colvile, one of the executors of the Selkirk estate on behalf of Peguis. In the topmost corner of the letter, there is a note that “Pegouise, Indian, A new flag and medal will be sent to him”. ff 7309–7310, Library and Archives Canada, Selkirk Papers, https://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c7/699?r=0&s=3, accessed on 20 February 2021. |
28 | Alfred Gell argues that, “Since the outset of the discipline, anthropology has been signally preoccupied with a series of problems to do with ostensibly peculiar relations between persons and ‘things’ which somehow, ‘appear as’ or do duty as, persons” (Gell 1998, p. 9). |
29 | Wawezhi’owag means proud in a good sense, like an Elder who is sure of his gifts. See (Matthews 2016, pp. 1212–213). Roger and Doreen Roulette, May 2021. |
30 | It could be argued that this is a stretch, but when you consider that Vaidman describes the many worlds interpretation of quantum physics as implying that “There are many worlds existing in parallel in the Universe” and goes on to say that “in every world sentient beings feel as “real” as in any other world” and that “ In this world, all objects which the sentient being perceives have definite states, but objects that are not under observation might be in a superposition of different (classical) states”, he does seem to be describing the Anishinaabe idea of multiple worlds in a “unified spatiotemporal world” as Hallowell puts it (Hallowell 2010, p. 468; Vaidman [2002] 2021, chp. 2.1, 3.6). Vaidman laments the fact that language is insufficient to express these ideas, but for an Anishinaabemowin speaker, multiple worlds are a given and speakers are comfortable in an open-ended state of being that Mary Black Rogers describes as “percept ambiguity” (Black 1977) and at ease with a world in which possibilities are open. |
31 | One of the museum’s medals, a Treaty No. 6 medal, was recently repatriated to Red Pheasant First Nation in Saskatchewan. During the speeches which accompanied the repatriation, the current (2021) Treaty Relations Commissioner of Manitoba, Loretta Ross talked about the Treaty No. 6 medal in this way, telling the people that before the medal returned to them, it had been a teacher, educating the visitors to the Manitoba Museum about how we are all treaty people. July 2019. |
32 | The exhibit includes a medal for the Dakota who have no treaty with Canada but made treaty with the Anishinaabeg in the area. When they returned in the 1860s to reclaim former traditional territory, they presented medals to English officials that they had been given by British Army officers in the War of 1812. |
References
- Appadurai, Arjun, ed. 1986. The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Berens, William. 2009. Memories, Myths and Dreams of an Ojibwe Leader: William Berens, as Told to, A. Irving Hallowell. Edited by Jennifer S. H. Brown and Susan Elaine Gray. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bird-David, Nurit. 1990. The Giving Environment: Another Perspective on the Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. Current Anthropology 31: 189–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bird-David, Nurit. 1999. “Animism” Revisited: Personhood, Environment, and Relational Epistemology [Comments]. Current Anthropology 40: S67–S91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Black, Mary B. 1977. Ojibwa Taxonomy and Percept Ambiguity. Ethos 5: 90–118. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Boas, Franz. 1896. The limitations of the comparative method of anthropology. Science 4: 901–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Brown, Jennifer S. H. 1998. Jacob Berens. In Naawigiizhigweyaash. Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Toronto: University of Toronto, vol. 14, pp. 63–64. [Google Scholar]
- Carter, Sarah. 2004. Your Great Mother across the Salt Sea: Prairie First Nations, the British Monarchy and the Vice Regal Connection to 1900. Manitoba History. No. 48, Autumn/Winter 2004–2005. Available online: http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/48/greatmother.shtml (accessed on 6 October 2021).
- Chalmers, James. 2020. The Anishinaabe Language in Treaty. Paper Presented at the Indigenous Scholars in Residence Seminar. Winnipeg: Manitoba Museum, June. [Google Scholar]
- Clifford, James. 1983. On Ethnographic Authority. In Representations. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 118–46. Available online: http://www.jstor.com/stable/2928386 (accessed on 6 October 2021).
- Clifford, James. 1997. Museums as contact zones. In Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Conaty, Gerald T., and Robert R. Janes. 1997. Issues of Repatriation: A Canadian View. Native American Studies 11: 31–37. [Google Scholar]
- Conaty, Gerald T. 2003. Glenbow’s Blackfoot Gallery: Working toward co-existence. In Museums and Source Communities. Edited by Laura Peers and Alison K. Brown. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Craft, Aimée. 2013. Breathing Life into the Stone Fort Treaty: An Anishnabe Understanding of Treaty One. Vancouver: UBC Press. [Google Scholar]
- Cruikshank, Julie. 1979. Athapaskan Women: Lives and Legends. National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper No. 57; Ottawa: National Museum of Canada. [Google Scholar]
- Dening, Greg. 1996. A Poetic for Histories. In Performances. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar]
- Everett, Hugh. 1957. Relative State Formulation of Quantum Mechanics. Reviews of Modern Physics 29: 454–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Farrell Racette, Sherry. 2004. Sewing Ourselves Together: Clothing, Decorative arts and the Expression of Métis and Half-Breed Identity. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada. [Google Scholar]
- Farrell Racette, Sherry. 2008. My Grandmothers Loved to Trade: Indigenization of European Trade Goods in Historic and Contemporary Canada. Journal of Museum Ethnography 20: 69–81. [Google Scholar]
- Foster, John E. 1979. Indian White Relations in the Prairie West during the Fur Trade—A Compact? In The Spirit of the Alberta Indian Treaties. Edited by Richard Price. Montreal: Taylor, Daniel and Foster. [Google Scholar]
- Gell, Alfred. 1998. Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press. [Google Scholar]
- Gibson, Shane. 2019. ‘We Lost Our Homes’: Museum Exhibit Tells Story of Métis Village’s Displacement. CBC News Online. May 24. Available online: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/manitoba-museum-metis-ste-madeleine-1.5149812 (accessed on 7 May 2021).
- Greene, Candace S. 2016. Material Connections: “The Smithsonian Effect” in Anthropological Cataloguing, published. Museum Anthropology 39: 147–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Greenhouse, Carol J. 2010. Introduction: Cultural Subjects and Objects: The Legacy of Franz Boas and Its Futures in Anthropology, Academe, and Human Rights. In Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, vol. 154, pp. 1–7. Available online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/2072152 (accessed on 6 October 2021).
- Hallowell, A. Irving. 1988. Culture and Experience. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press (Reprinted by Waveland Press). [Google Scholar]
- Hallowell, A. Irving. 2010. Contributions to Ojibwe Studies: Essays, 1934–1972. Edited by Jennifer S. H. Brown and Susan Elaine Gray. Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology Series ed. Regna Darnell and Stephen O. Murray; Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. [Google Scholar]
- Holbraad, Martin, and Morten Axel Pederson, eds. 2017. The Ontological Turn: An Anthropological Exposition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Ingold, Tim. 2000. The Perception of the Environment. Routledge: London. [Google Scholar]
- Krmpotich, Cara. 2014. The Force of Family: Repatriation, Kinship, and Memory on Haida Gwaii. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. [Google Scholar]
- Latour, Bruno. 2005. Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor Network Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Matthews, Maureen. 1995a. ‘Binesiiwag’ on Anishinaabe Wingwan. Thunder Bay: CBQ Radio. [Google Scholar]
- Matthews, Maureen. 1995b. ‘Thunderbirds’ on IDEAS. Toronto: CBC National Network/Radio One. [Google Scholar]
- Matthews, Maureen. 2016. Naamiwan’s Drum: The Story of a Contested Anishinaabe Repatriation. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. [Google Scholar]
- McCallum, Mary Jane Logan. 2014. Indigenous Women, Work and History 1940–1980. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. [Google Scholar]
- Morris, Alexander. 1890. Treaties of Canada with the Indians of Manitoba. Toronto: Belfords, Clark and Co. [Google Scholar]
- Nicks, Trudy. 2003. Museums and contact work. In Museums and Source Communities. Edited by Alison K. Brown and Laura Peers. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Paul, Alexandra. 2019. Remembering a Destroyed Village. Winnipeg: Winnipeg Free Press, May 25, p. A3. [Google Scholar]
- Peers, Laura. 1999. ‘Many tender ties’: The shifting contexts and meanings of the S BLACK bag. World Archaeology 31: 288–302. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Peers, Laura, and Alison K. Brown. 2015. Visiting the Ancestors: Blackfoot Shirts in Museum Spaces. Edmonton: Athabasca University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Peers, Laura, and Alison K. Brown, eds. 2003. Museums and Source Communities. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Podruchny, Carolyn. 1995. “I Have Embraced the White Man’s Religion”: The Relations between the Peguis Band and the Church Missionary Society, 1820–1838. In Papers of the Twenty-Sixth Algonquian Conference. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba, vol. 26, pp. 350–78. Available online: https://ojs.library.carleton.ca/index.php/ALGQP/article/view/596 (accessed on 25 February 2021).
- Pratt, Mary Louise. 1992. Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Price, Richard, ed. 1979. The Spirit of the Alberta Indian Treaties. Montreal: Taylor. [Google Scholar]
- Sapir, Edward. 1921. Language: An Introduction to the Study of Speech. New York: Harcourt Brace and Company. [Google Scholar]
- Stocking, George W., Jr. 1965. “Cultural Darwinism” and “philosophical idealism” in EB Tylor: A Special Plea for Historicism in the History of Anthropology. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 21: 130–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stocking, George W., Jr. 1966. Franz Boas and the Culture Concept in Historical Perspective. American Anthropologist 68: 867–82. [Google Scholar]
- Strathern, Marilyn. 1995. The nice thing about culture is that everyone has it. In Shifting Contexts: Transformations in Anthropological Knowledge. Edited by Marilyn Strathern. London: Routledge, pp. 153–76. [Google Scholar]
- Strathern, Marilyn. 2004a. Partial Connections, Updated ed. Walnut Creek: AltaMira Press. [Google Scholar]
- Strathern, Marilyn. 2004b. The Whole Person and Its Artifacts. Annual Review of Anthropology 33: 1–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Task Force. 1992. Task Force Report on Museums and First Peoples—Turning the Page: Forging New Partnerships between Museums and First Peoples. Ottawa: Assembly of First Nations and The Canadian Museum Association. [Google Scholar]
- Taylor, John Leonard. 1979. Canada’s Northwest Indian Policy in the 1870s: Traditional Premises and Necessary Innovations. In The Spirit of the Alberta Indian Treaties. Edited by Richard Price. Montreal: Taylor, Daniel, and Foster. [Google Scholar]
- Vaidman, Lev. 2021. Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics. In The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Edited by Edward N. Zalta. Stanford: Stanford University. First published 2002. Available online: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-manyworlds/#WhatWorl (accessed on 6 October 2021).
- Vivieros de Castro, Eduardo. 1996. Images of Nature and Society in Amazonian Ethnology. Annual Review of Anthropology 25: 179–200. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- White, Bruce M. 1982. “Give us a Little Milk”: The Social and Cultural Meanings of Gift Giving in the Lake Superior Fur Trade. Minnesota History 48: 60–71. [Google Scholar]
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Matthews, M.A.; Roulette, R.; Wilson, J.B. Meshkwajisewin: Paradigm Shift. Religions 2021, 12, 894. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100894
Matthews MA, Roulette R, Wilson JB. Meshkwajisewin: Paradigm Shift. Religions. 2021; 12(10):894. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100894
Chicago/Turabian StyleMatthews, Maureen Anne, Roger Roulette, and James Brook Wilson. 2021. "Meshkwajisewin: Paradigm Shift" Religions 12, no. 10: 894. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100894
APA StyleMatthews, M. A., Roulette, R., & Wilson, J. B. (2021). Meshkwajisewin: Paradigm Shift. Religions, 12(10), 894. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100894