Historical geography and early Canada: a life and an interpretation |
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Authors: | COLE HARRIS |
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Affiliation: | Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver BC V6T 1Z2, Canada |
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Abstract: | The first section of this two‐part paper describes my historical geographical career, particularly the topics and issues I have pursued and the changing intellectual environment in which they have been situated. The second section offers a summary interpretation of the emerging human geography of early‐modern Canada followed by some reflections on its contemporary implications. This interpretation stresses the extent to which boundaries and discontinuities marked early Canada, and contrasts a pinched Canadian experience with the land with a far more expansive American one. It shows how deeply difference was constructed and ingrained in the Canadian past, and suggests some challenges and opportunities that follow from this inheritance. |
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Keywords: | historical geography pre‐confederation Canada settler colonialism Innis boundaries migration patterns cognitive spaces citizenship |
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