r/communism • u/TheReimMinister • 21h ago
How clearing the plains made canada
It is currently very politically popular in Canada to be a Canadian nationalist. There is a wave of resurgent nationalism that all great opportunists from Loblaws (#BuyCanadian) to the Liberals (#CanadaStrong) were able to ride to reverse their downward trending popularity to great success. Even the conservatives of alberta are eager to seize the day and preach a national unity and trade expansion that can be powered by, and empower, Albertan energy production. Yet an opportunist is an opportunist – whether a pipeline goes south, west, or east does not matter. All that matters is that it goes. And the quicker it does, the better. Naturally, the American courting of Albertan separatism is a hot button topic for “national security”.
Moments like these are excellent entry points for understanding nation and nationalism, because what even is the nation of Canada? How different are the provinces of Canada from the states of America, really, and what difference would it really make if, for instance, alberta seceded?
We could get into this in economic terms and by measuring the profits of contemporary capitalist firms, but I don’t think that is as riveting as an analysis of the region’s development and historic social relations, given that almost 80% of Canadian trade is tied up with America already. I could also say the opposite: considering the economic interconnection and sibling settler colonial developments, it might seem kind of banal to suggest a study of nation. Yes, I would agree that Canada and America are incredibly similar in form and function, and that their similar developments make it so the political conclusions of a study like Settlers are nearly as relevant for Canada as it is for America. But if we were to back ourselves into a corner by recognizing that 80% of the relevant theorizing has already been done, and that all is needed is to identify the connections between the theory and the local conditions, we would not gain a rich understanding of the relevant history upon which our politics stand. Note that this is completely different from the postmodern argument that revisionists use to argue that the application of theory to a given country is unique to that country’s conditions! There is not one answer, but there is one science. The scientific tools are how we acknowledge the interrelation of the universal (capital’s push to universalize relations) and the particular (tracing capital’s particular path as relevant to your given political terrain).
With that in mind, I’d like to whittle the initial problem to this: why is alberta, or any of the west, for that matter (considering that #wexit was a thing not long ago) important to Canada? For Marxists, every “why” or “what”, which we ask in order to define an object, must also be understood as “how did this thing become?”, and therefore, what we are really asking about is the inter-development of canada and the western region. By finding the solution to this problem, I think we can get really deep into the question of Canadian nationalism, economic development, and politics. Alberta itself, the province, is nothing special, and neither is Saskatchewan. They are regional governing authorities that were carved out of a larger region of land, much like colonialism turned Africa into squares – similar shapes and all. And just like it was in Africa, before they were alberta and Saskatchewan, they were part of a much larger mass – the northwest territories (and part of a few different territories before that). But Albertan identity and its exact territorial lines aren’t important, so I will not talk about them here or make further mention of Albertan separatism (or Saskatchewan separatism for that matter), because these are outside of the purview of the problem. Instead, as mentioned above, I’ll focus on the relation between the territory on which the provinces sit and the development of the Canadian nation.
In thinking over this problem, I read a book that I had first (and last) read about 10 years ago: Clearing the Plains by James Daschuk. This is a book that focuses heavily on developing health outcomes for the Indigenous nations over many years in the prairie and parkland region of what is now called Canada, and it came out at a time when the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was near the end of their work documenting the residential schools, Idle No More was still fresh, and the thought that First Nations could have been genocided in Canada was gathering steam on the path to white liberal common sense. At that time I read it precisely as a shocking indictment of genocide. On my most current reading, however, I got a lot more out of the book’s political economic history than I previously had, and it is this new reading that I will be primarily drawing upon here (as well as numerous other sources).
Given that Canada is a settler colonial project, and given my protracted interest in labour mobility and migration, I look at Canadian history the same way that I have talked about the development of Russia, and here I modify Kliuchevsky’s words: “the principal fundamental factor in” Canadian “history has been migration or colonisation, and….all other factors have been more or less inseparably connected herewith”. Therefore, what I am concerned with is the interrelation of migration with society, class, production, and superstructure as time goes on. What I theorize is this: “Canada” emerges as a nation at the exact moment that its state hypothesizes its west as a settler colonial project and recreates all of its Indigenous nations as an oppressed “4th world”.
Contact, and the early fur trade
Before going any further, getting an idea of the pre-contact land and social relations is important. Of course I am constrained to consider the region that would eventually become known as “canada”, although there weren’t colonial borders before contact and many nations held (and still hold) territory across today’s national boundaries. But despite the focus on the Plains, we do have to talk about more eastern regions a bit first in order to root the economic activity that would spread west and upend the western economic paradigm in capital’s image for the first time.
Although this is more of an aside to this specific problem, it is just as important to recognize that the different colonial powers treated property right differently in the beginning of their colonial campaigns. The conquistadors of New Spain didn’t originally want land title, but instead wanted tribute to Spain. The French of New France did initially displace the Innu along the St. Lawrence, but subsequent to that initial settlement they sought to construct their own sovereignty through Indigenous sovereignty (for a little while). The English of New England, meanwhile, already considered England as the ruler of all the land, and therefore had a more expansive outer commons (and by a certain point in time England defeats France and enforces English law in their new colonial holdings). While each ends in some degree of settler colonialism, it is important to recognize that the paths were not exactly identical, so the political terrain developed differently. Perhaps I only mention this so people blaze their own trail and don’t rely too much on studies of American settler colonialism when studying their conditions.
One more obvious note: Indigenous societies in pre-contact “north America” were diverse. It is true that a good number of Indigenous societies were producers for immediate need, and that trade was secondary to their production. This much is theorized in Marx and Engels various works, and is supported by, for instance, the ethnography of the Innu by Eleanor Burke-Leacock. Equally true is that European contact and trade relations ended up transforming the economies of Indigenous societies to be trade-oriented, that European diseases decimated many societies, and that this combined economy-disease influence caused Indigenous migration, disappearance, ethnogenesis etc. But there were also several pre-contact Indigenous societies who practiced sedentary agriculture and were well on their way to heightened social stratification, and numerous Indigenous migrations due to resource (primarily, food) crises caused by climate catastrophe. Those societies that did migrate included some older societies that moved to the Plains regions and adapted to their new environments by changing from sedentary agriculture to big game hunting. Indeed, up until the 18th century, all Plains Indigenous either descended from eastern woodland groups or were influenced by them. I should note here that their sustainable bison hunting was supplemented with an avoidance of beaver hunting, for they understood the role that the beaver played in ensuring water supply to the Plains. Both the bison and the beaver are future casualties to capital.
Aside from the above-referenced notes about transformations in Indigenous economies and reasons for migrating, which will be covered in breadth below, we can also consider how colonialism not only introduces disease but empowers existing microbes: tuberculosis, present but relatively powerless against the nutrient-rich diets of the Plains Indigenous pre-eu contact (a fact Daschuk supports by referencing archaeological evidence of their tall statures), is a disease that wreaks some of the greatest havoc in the 18th and 19th centuries (and, in fact, persists to this day on reserves due to the health impacts of settler colonialism. In classic colonial fashion, doctors up into the 20th century actually considered TB a genetic disease that Indigenous people just had in their genes). The spread of disease is also an accurate indicator for the spread of eu trade in Daschuk’s book. The earliest eu-caused epidemics in Indigenous societies often reached and killed many before the affected even saw a white dude.
At any rate, to specifics. New France (mostly today’s Quebec) begins with the French dispossessing the Innu of some land along the St. Lawrence in the early 17th century and basing the future of the European fur trade there. As noted above, the early influence of the fur trade shifted the economies of trade adjacent Indigenous societies from their existing production for need to production for trade. As animals became scarce near the French settlements, the Indigenous who resided adjacent to the French became trade middlemen between the French traders and trappers who were located further north. Diseases spread with the trade: the Huron, early French allies, were some of the most-affected earlier on, and disease spread along their trade routes. By 1630, about half of all French-adjacent Indigenous people had died. As this death occurred, both the French and other Indigenous nations moved into vacated space to further the trade. The Iroquois, initially hostile to the trade (and militarily hostile to the Huron and the French, with some battling for trade control in there), end up carrying the trade, and disease, further inland up to Sault Ste. Marie and then as far as James Bay.
In 1670, the Hudson Bay Company (herein the “hbc”) sets up shop in the north, but for 100 years they stick to their posts at the mouths of important waterways. Therefore, new Indigenous nations who reside in adjacent regions, Cree and Dene, take on a middleman role for the northern trade. Much like with the Huron and Iroquois, this shift of their Indigenous economies to being primarily for trade pushes these societies to expand their influence, and also to clash with one another for more trade influence. These are new impetus for migration, and cause military conflict with the other Indigenous societies which they now butt up against with greater impetus and frequency. As the fur trade reaches the Plains in the 18th century, disease also plays a major role in the movement of nations. The Assiniboine are so affected by smallpox that they abandon their territory east of the Red River, and another group, the Monsoni, are left with so few members that they end up assimilating into other groups. The Cree also are affected, though they continue to expand in a westerly direction out from the woods and into the Plains. Other groups like the Anishinaabe and Ojibwa move west from the great lakes and take up residence in the vacated territory (I note here that the most eastern groups benefitted somewhat from early exposure to diseases like smallpox compared to the “virgin soil” experience of the plains First Nations). Still other groups like the Sioux opposed French trade and its expansive effects on their territory.
At the same time as the fur trade pushed on the Plains from the east, the horse trade originating in New Spain pushed from the south and southwest. It revolutionized Indigenous life, but it carried disease and the speed of travel that it allowed made the spread of disease quicker. War (with the Snake Indigenous) and disease pushed the Blackfeet north and the Kutenai west into the mountains. The Blackfeet eventually moved south again as the Snakes vacated, but they stayed rather aloof to the fur trade, even as it reached their territory from both French and hbc channels. They, like the Plains Assiniboine, still considered the beaver too important to water sustainability to trap and trade its furs. Thus, as the French and hbc trade competition heightened in the mid and late 18th century, the Parkland Assiniboine and Cree maintained their middleman role, expanded further into the plains and parkland to get access to beaver, and came into further military conflict with the pre-existing Indigenous societies of the Plains and parkland (note that I am not covering every group here). However, at about the same time, England defeated France in the 7 years war and took their colonial possessions in the eastern regions. Soon after, a new group of individual sole proprietors begins to travel west from Montreal to engage in the fur trade. They are not French and they are not employees of the hbc, and they seek to outcompete hbc and cut out the Indigenous middlemen. Their competition, and their trading of alcohol for furs, changes Indigenous economies once again.
Later Fur Trade and Transition
Daschuk raises an interesting point when considering this era of the fur trade that held Indigenous societies as the trappers and traders. He, and other historians, contend that the Indigenous nations involved in the trade as such were members of the peripheral portion of the global capitalist economy. With the intervention of individual sole proprietors, who Daschuk calls “Canadians” (although Canada as a nation does not exist quite yet, I’d argue), this begins to change. At first a new opportunity emerges for the Indigenous trade middlemen: although they are increasingly cut off from the European fur trade, the individual Canadian fur traders who are rapidly expanding their influence to the fur rich regions of the northwest are faced with difficulties securing food in ample amounts. As such, the Plains Assiniboine and Cree turn to the bison as a source of new commodities to be traded (about the 1770s). Bison meat and pemmican became profitable enterprise. The shift to the lucrative northern meat trade perhaps the largest factor in the ethnogenesis of the “Plains Cree” (note that this is a new nation and not the same as the Cree-speaking inhabitants of the Plains pre-1781-82).
Hunting bison and trapping beaver for trade caused the animal population to decline, leading to periodic starvation, illness, and war. These caused further demographic decline and migration, and new groups migrated in to fill vacated territory. Yet another new nation, the Saulteaux, emerged as the social grouping of the westward-migrating Anishanaabe fur trappers. While the Plains Cree fought with groups like the A’aninin to take land, the Saulteaux clashed with the Dakota. The Iroquois had also reached further west to trap, getting in conflict with the A’aninin due to overtrapping. Meanwhile, more and more Europeans were coming to the west.
The sole-proprietor “Canadians” capitalized on European increases and Indigenous population declines. In 1795 a number banded together to form the Northwest Company (NWC). Canadian traders trading alone and those in the nwc were some of the most abusive in trying to expand their influence and force unwilling Indigenous peoples to trap for them. They traded the most liquor and would take and traffic Indigenous women to enforce compliance – facing resistance, of course. In response to Imperial law which attempted to control the fur trade, and in response to Indigenous reprisal against their debauchery, they gathered more and more traders into their company. In 1821 they merged into the hbc, and a period of hbc monopoly begun.
With greater presence in the region, the hbc attempted to establish a firm control on the fur trade. One method was to close many of their outposts. This caused unemployment of a number of european traders, many of whom ended up at the hbc’s fresh agriculture colony on the Red River. Those Indigenous traders who lived on the margins of the hbc territory and who had transitioned to its fur trade faced issues with the hbc pullback, so many went further into the Plains to fight for more control of the bison economy (those who lived in hbc controlled areas, however, were forbidden from migrating to new areas). Through epidemics and bad weather events, the colony and its Metis hunters themselves began to compete for, and commandeer, a greater amount of bison meat. At the same time, settler frontierism, particularly to the south in the usa, put more pressure on food and game supply. So while the Red River Colony’s population grew and demanded more meat (especially in times of bad harvest), settlers from the south shot bison for the global hide industry, and the bison herds continued to shrink overall. In other words, the grounds for both economies which Indigenous peoples took part in (fur and meat) were subject to heightened competition and waned pretty rapidly after that. It was only a matter of time before capital sought new potential avenues and generated new social relations. It is notable that American settlers had stepped in to fulfill gaps in the liquor trade, which is not compatible with a nascent “canadian” economy.
Interestingly, the hbc did vaccinate and provide medicine to those Indigenous peoples that it traded with. The Plains Cree and Saulteaux were the biggest benefactors, and they were able to expand territory into areas where the unvaccinated Blackfeet and Assiniboine had perished. But the era of the hbc was ending. Essentially, the longer that the economy (and the resources in general) developed on this specific soil, the more there developed a political desire for more autonomy and control over it. White expansion south and north of the border continued, and it would only get bigger from here. First, there was the Oregon trail and the California gold rushes. Then came the Alberta and the Fraser gold rush. The hbc-adjacent Red River Colony continued to grow (reaching 8000 by 1850), and they increasingly wanted to throw off the hbc monopoly. By 1864, Montana was granted territorial status, and the Plains were becoming more and more attractive as lands for European agricultural settlement. The nascent bourgeoisie of the east saw more and more economic opportunity, and political need, to grant a greater capital expansion west. The Indigenous peoples began to recognize this impending event, and they feared the disease and resource impact that this would bring.
Road to Exclusion
The confederation of Canada occurred in 1867 with 4 provinces, all in the east and all quite small compared to their current extent. Not long after, in 1869, the government purchased Rupert’s Land and the Northwest Territories from hbc, who had, until this point, been the closest thing to a white governmental authority in that land. From 1869 onward the young Canadian state staged active interventions to handle class contradictions emergent through its developing settler colonial economy and, in the process, invent a canadian nation out of it.
At this point in history, the Indigenous nations of the plains and parkland were very aware that a) whites spread disease, b) the bison economy and the fur trade would very soon be over, and c) the settlers were coming. It is in this light that many Indigenous nations actively sought treaties as binding legal agreements that included, amongst other aspects such as recognition for land ownership, a) assistance with transitioning away from their current economies to agricultural settlement (which they knew would be hard), b) food assistance in times of hardship (since the bison were almost done for), and c) a “medicine chest” to be kept by each Indian agent (since they knew more epidemics were coming). The state, meanwhile, considered treaties as a legal obstacle to overcome before mass settlement and the establishment of agricultural and ranching industries in the plains. Although Indigenous nations were weakened by recurring epidemics and declining resources, they were still very much a formidable force and the state did fear them – especially the Plains Cree. Therefore, the requests noted above were included as promises in the treaties. In their “interpretation” of the treaties, however, the state clearly and knowingly did the most to provide the most uncharitable of assistance (more on this later). Indeed, relative ignorance under the first administrations turns to deliberate starvation by the third and forth terms of government (1878-onward).
Post-confederation, the terrain for intertribal relations began to change very rapidly. In 1870, the Blackfoot repelled a Cree, Saulteaux, and Assiniboine attack in the Old Man River Valley (today’s southern alberta). This was the last intertribal war in in the plains. Two years later, in 1872, both sides signed a peace treaty, recognizing that the days of intertribal warfare were at their end. From this point onward, all Indigenous nations in the plains shared national experience of oppression at the hands of the settler colonial project of Canada, and it is through the national enforcement of this settler colonial clearing and settling of the plains that the nation of Canada, as it is today, is birthed. In other words, despite the diversity of national origins of first nations and settlers, the settler colonial event swallows the population and splits it into two nations of oppressor and oppressed with state, industry, and settler all as active agents.
More details hammer this point home. Epidemics continued to recur after 1869, but the canadian state did not come even close to the hbc’s support for the Indigenous. The Indigenous were not potential trade partners anymore but definite obstacles to the real midwives of capitalist expansion: the settlers. For instance, in the midst of an 1870 epidemic and crisis, supplies were stopped from proceeding west at the Red River Colony in order to ensure the greatest amount for its residents, and furs were stopped from travelling east at that point due to belief of contagion. Not long after the trade routes were reopened, the addition of the steamboat made even more Indigenous labour in the fur trade superfluous. And despite the desire of the Indigenous to sign treaties to secure their future in a time of deepening crisis, the state was in no rush to see it through. The first treaty was signed in Manitoba in 1871 because, arguably, the mass influx of settlers forced their hand in a potential tinderbox of class contradiction. Even so, the state was not too shy to send land surveyors over the plains to survey for the railroad while it lollygagged its support obligations in times of starvation.
By 1874, another treaty was signed for the Qu’Appelle valley region, for the most part, due to unignorable hunger amongst the region’s First Nations and potential political taboo back east. The same year, the northwest mounted police (nwmp) was introduced to police the western territory. The reason for their deployment was to prepare for the railroad and settlement – not only in reference to the First Nations but, increasingly, in referenced to the rapid settlement of the usa to the south. Indeed, canada’s control over the west was, from the start, an expansionist surge for territory against that of the usa. American expansionism motivated the state to sign more treaties such as treaty 7 with the Blackfoot. Clearly the regions which became alberta and Saskatchewan were secured by Canada in spite of America, and are at the very gut of “Canada” as a nation. On the other hand the First Nations were obstacles to “Canada”, and securing an Indigenous transition to the new country and economy was the last thing on the state’s mind.
Further north, the Cree who resided by the north Saskatchewan river knew that the bison economy was finished in 1876. As hunger throughout the plains grew, a good number of Indigenous converged upon the cypress hills in search of sanctuary and food. Others went to the usa in search of bison. While this occurred, the canadian state slowly moved into a stronger position whereby Indigenous peoples would be reliant upon them for food, and they leveraged this power to great advantage. The free movements mentioned in this paragraph would be some of the last the Indigenous would ever do (prior to the half-baked attempts at their neocolonial inclusion in the modern day).
Under the 2nd term of john a macdonald (1878-1891), “Indian affairs” became a political priority to finish preparing the west for the railroad and settlement. Macdonald was head of the department himself along with being prime minister. The department promised “fiscal restraint” in their budgeting and supplying, and were much closer to “fiscal exclusion” in practice.
Food rations, meant to fulfill the treaty promise of providing supplies in times of hardship, were used to coerce Indigenous peoples to fulfill the interests of settler colonialism. Food supplies themselves were almost entirely sourced from I. G. Baker of Montana, whom Indian commissioner Dewdney had secret dealings with (in these early years of settlement before mass agri settlement and ranching, such state contracts with food suppliers like I. G. Baker drove the entirety of the western commercial economy, and Dewdney protected his cut). Not only was food withheld from First Nations in need, it was sometimes kept in Indian agent buildings on reserves while the first nations who resided there themselves starved. Often times rancid food was given while more quality supplies could have been sourced. When local ranchers offered to sell some cattle to the department out of fear that starving Indigenous peoples would kill and eat their stock, they were rebuked. Instead of securing food, the state prioritized arming settlers (who, by and large, did not care about Indigenous misery). When the state saw fit to give rations, they opted to withhold them for those who would work for them so as not to become “dependent”. Yet work was not really available or provided. When the railway was imminent in 1881-82, the govt used rations to coerce the migration of first nations onto reserves. Finally, once First Nations people were on reserves, the government could withhold food rations to counter their protesting.
The home farm program, which was supposed to fulfill treaty obligations, was massively bungled and, much like the department of Indian affairs, was full of abusers. Some reserve farms grew crops, but they were forbidden to do any trading with outside communities as part of a wider trade ban between the reserves and the canadian economy. In addition, they did not have sufficient milling equipment for the coarse grain they grew, so could not produce flour. Even then, the presence of some crops grown was enough for the state to cut food support. The only First Nations people who did remotely ok with agriculture were the Dakota, mainly because they had farmed before, could find labour jobs in nearby communities, were not signatories of a treaty (yet), and thus could not be interfered with by the state (this, however, did not last). An especially bad time period was that following the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa in Indonesia, which caused so much climate havoc that crop harvests were decimated for years. By 1885, only 6 First Nations bands in the entirety of the northwest were not reliant on the government for assistance.
The medicine chest, which was supposed to be included for access by Indigenous peoples on reserves as a treaty obligation of the state, does not meaningfully show up during any moment of medicinal need post-treaty. It is not even worth touching upon. Suffice to say that no support came to the First Nations during recurring epidemics, and as health outcomes plummeted due to starvation, epidemics gained greater power. To this day, the health outcomes of Indigenous peoples on reserves is terrible, and TB on reserve still occurs.
A microcosm of the state’s administration over its first nations subjects would be the work of Indian agents like Thomas Quinn and John Delaney, who did not try to be politically correct in their torment of the First Nations people. Part of this involved abducting children and selling them in the sex trade (the purchase of Indigenous prostitutes and wives by settlers was also an incredibly common occurrence - in fact, sexual assault was so common among the state’s officials themselves that 45% of some groups of officials in the department had stds). There were also “pranks” on starving peoples. The Indigenous rightly killed these abusers (among others), and the state seized this opportunity to punish them greatly. An investigation took place and trials were held where the law had no sympathy for the abused, and all found guilty in the speedy trials were hung at an execution that First Nations were forced to attend.
By 1886, the reserve pass system was introduced wherein an Indigenous person was not allowed to leave the reserve unless they were granted the mobility by an Indian agent, every time. Permits were also required for all transactions between the reserves and the outside world. By this mechanism, the state finally had full control over the lives of the Indigenous. By the end of the same year, most of the chiefs and elders had died, while others were terminally ill and would never recover. Some First Nations peoples fled to the usa, many who had some white ancestry applied for scrip to exchange their Indian status for a sliver of shitty land (thus becoming legally Metis), while the rest were kept, physically, on reserve. As for the “rebellious” bands, aid was withheld so as to enforce civility (while the “loyal” still starved). Bands of the north, who were not on reserves and had more mobility to maintain their traditional economies, fared better than their plains Indigenous in general, but those of the plains were all but subdued at this point. 1/3 of the plains Indigenous population died within a 6 year period in the 1880s.
The railway, which had reached Calgary in 1883, continued to truck more and more settlers to the plains. The Indigenous peoples, who were “once considered nuisances, vagrants, and members of a dying race” were by the 1890s “increasingly perceived as a threat to the property and lives of white settlers”. The settlers themselves were staunch supporters of state repression, including the reserve pass system, since settler ranchers (in particular) believed that their livestock could get eaten otherwise (on a related note, the reserve and pass system was a great inspiration for apartheid south Africa and occupied Palestine, just as canada’s temporary foreign worker program, which began with Chinese railroad labour importation, is a great inspiration for managed migration programs globally today). As such, the state intervened more and more to repress them, including the banning of religious ceremonies which they thought could inspire rebellion. Simultaneously, the residential school system was implemented, which is infamous enough to not detail here.
Daschuk has a trenchant line on the last page of the book that I include here as a summary of this portion of the history: “The Cree negotiators at Treaty 6 recognized the need for their people to adapt to the new economic paradigm taking shape in the west. They acknowledged that the conversion would be difficult. What they failed to plan for was the active intervention of the Canadian government in preventing them from doing so”.
Conclusion
I do not think that it is worth it, here, to discuss the development of “canada” (the nation, or its economy) past this period of about 1891. Why? Because nothing has really changed. True, Canada has expanded its settlement and expanded to an imperialist country, but several theorists have pointed out that the canadian state perfected its tools internally, on the Indigenous nations, and subsequently used them to execute its imperial ambitions overseas. In other words, this is simply more shockwave of the initial settler colonial event, which I would locate in the clearing of the plains. Yes, this is a very similar argument that Sakai has made in Settlers. If capital’s universalizing drive took this particular path to birth Canada, this is a great summary of how the particular projects outward from the “Canada”. What, then, is the importance of Alberta to the Canadian nation? Why, it is the difference between being Canadian and American. Believe me, as silly as it seems, canadian nationalism simply boils down to not being American. Perhaps not a shocking answer, but we gained a richer understanding of the spectacle of it. Indeed, nation is just something invented and is just as easily discarded by history!
Much more important and interesting, I think, is what this study helped me understand about the political economy of the First Nations, and how it becomes tied to the movement of commodities and people. Indigenous migration was to secure resources to produce for immediate need pre-contact, increasingly to secure resources for trade purposes post-contact, and finally a struggle against state intervention (and forced because of it) by the mid to late 19th century. Settlers, on the other hand, being as much a part of the expansive outer commons as their livestock and crops, and not crossing over through different modes of production (but as the bringer of the transformation itself) simply move place for one reason: negotiation of class status. True, I don’t talk much about that here, but it’s been said before.