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The Free People - Li Gens Libres: A History of the Métis Community of Batoche, Saskatchewan / Edition 2
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Barnes and Noble
The Free People - Li Gens Libres: A History of the Métis Community of Batoche, Saskatchewan / Edition 2
Current price: $34.95
Barnes and Noble
The Free People - Li Gens Libres: A History of the Métis Community of Batoche, Saskatchewan / Edition 2
Current price: $34.95
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Revised and expanded to include fresh research, a discussion of recent interpretive trends, and a review of new literature, The
Free People—Li Gens Libres
is a comprehensive history of the Métis community and national historic site of Batoche, Saskatchewan.
Diane Payment has a long personal association with Batoche; her study is the culmination of thirty years of documentary and field research as a participant-observer within the community. Her inquiry draws on a range of dictated and written historical sources, both Métis and non–Métis, as well as more recent oral history narratives and personal observations.
The Free People
is one of the few studies on Métis communities in western and northern Canada. Payment's approach demonstrates that any understanding of Métis culture cannot be based on European or Euro–Canadian historical models, but on its own values and traditions. She argues that Batoche has persisted as a community despite conflict, crisis, and prejudice from immigrant ethnic groups and institutions such as the Canadian government and the Roman Catholic Church, succeeding in maintaining its uniquely Métis identity.
Free People—Li Gens Libres
is a comprehensive history of the Métis community and national historic site of Batoche, Saskatchewan.
Diane Payment has a long personal association with Batoche; her study is the culmination of thirty years of documentary and field research as a participant-observer within the community. Her inquiry draws on a range of dictated and written historical sources, both Métis and non–Métis, as well as more recent oral history narratives and personal observations.
The Free People
is one of the few studies on Métis communities in western and northern Canada. Payment's approach demonstrates that any understanding of Métis culture cannot be based on European or Euro–Canadian historical models, but on its own values and traditions. She argues that Batoche has persisted as a community despite conflict, crisis, and prejudice from immigrant ethnic groups and institutions such as the Canadian government and the Roman Catholic Church, succeeding in maintaining its uniquely Métis identity.