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Title: |
We Are All Treaty People |
| Sub-title: |
Prairie Essays |
Search Result:
| By (author): |
Roger Epp |
| ISBN10-13: |
0888645066 : 9780888645067 |
| Format: |
Paperback |
| Size: |
228x152x19mm |
| Pages: |
248 |
| Weight: |
.370 Kg. |
| Published: |
University of Alberta Press - December 2008 |
| List Price: |
23.99 Pounds Sterling |
| Availability: |
In Stock
Qty Available: 3 |
| Subjects: |
History of the Americas : Modern history to 20th century: c 1700 to c 1900 : Politics & government : Political science & theory : Western & Pacific Coast states |
| In his collection of Prairie essays--some of them personal, some poetic, some political--Roger Epp considers what it means to dwell attentively and responsibly in the rural West. He makes the provocative claim that Aboriginal and settler alike are Treaty people; he retells inherited family stories in that light; he reclaims the rural as a site of radical politics; and he thinks alongside contemporary farm people whose livelihoods and communities are now under intense economic and cultural pressure. We Are All Treaty People invites those who feel the pull of a prairie heritage to rediscover the landscapes of the rural West, and to dwell among its people and their political economy. Roger Epp is the dean of the University of Alberta's Augustana Campus in Camrose, where he is also professor of Political Studies. He is a co-editor of Writing Off the Rural West and a frequent speaker and media commentator on rural issues. A native of rural Saskatchewan, and a former daily newspaper journalist in Alberta, he increasingly has shaped his teaching and research towards questions of community survival, settler-aboriginal relations, agrarian political thought, and local democratic life. Like his parents and grandparents, Roger Epp has lived most of his life on Treaty Six land in Alberta and Saskatchewan. |
| Table of Contents: |
| Introduction -- A Prairie Accent; The Measure of a River; Oklahoma -- Meditations on Home & Homelessness; Hanley, Saskatchewan; "Their Own Emancipators" -- The Agrarian Movement in Alberta; Statues of Liberty -- The Political Tradition of the Producer; Populists, Patriots & Pariahs; We Are All Treaty People -- History, Reconciliation, & the "Settler Problem"; What is the Farm Crisis? -- Seven Short Commentaries; Two Albertas -- Rural & Urban Trajectories; A University at Home in the Rural; Notes; Index. |
| Reviews: |
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"...the essays provide interesting insights into the formative history and politics
of the prairies, and the contemporary challenges facing these rural spaces." - Ken Atkinson, University of York St John, British Journal of Canadian Studies, Volume 23 (Number 2), 2010
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"It is toward an honest understanding of our complicated interdependencies and conflicting interconnections that Roger Epp offers his rough and tender truths of life in the Canadian prairies. We Are All Treaty People: Prairie Essays is a collection that is simultaneously deeply moving and discomfiting; though carefully researched and elegantly written, its most significant narrative strength comes from its author's perhaps constitutional unwillingness to indulge in the easy obscurantism of mainstream cultural commentary. This is a rare and very welcome quality, one that more contemporary scholarship could profitably emulate." Daniel Heath Justice, Toronto Quarterly Spring 2011
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"Roger Epp...offers a thoughtful collection of essays, in We Are All Treaty People, on what it means to live in the rural west....There were powerful things going on in the rural west at one time, and Epp, in these essays, shows that power can be taken back and not left to our cities, or to faraway governments." Bill Robertson, The StarPhoenix, May 9, 2009
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"Dr. Epp has just published a book entitled We Are All Treaty People: Prairie Essays, a very readable collection of personal remembrances mixed with historical overviews of radical prairie politics and the relationship between First Nations people in western Canada and the settlers and their descendants. At core, itıs a book that reminds us of the importance of place in defining who we are as a people, something frequently lost in the noise of urban centres. It's a call back to the land and to rural Alberta." Ken Davis, CKUA Radio, May 17, 2009 (Hear the radio interview at: http://www.box.net/shared/rxbbp9vas5)
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"Roger Epp lives on the margin of a margin in two different ways. First of all, he's in Canada, which the US considers a margin, and second, he's on the prairies, which Canada considers marginal. The other way is more personal. Epp is a Mennonite, a community of conscience as defined by Stanley Fish in Hobbs' way as from conscire, to know in concert with another -- a consensus. His vocation is teaching and administering at a small university, Augustana, that was originally defined as a faith community, but is now attached to the University of Alberta, in Edmonton, the largest city in Alberta. Yet the students are mostly from small prairie towns. The sum of these marginalities has put Epp dead center in some of the most serious issues of our times about the safety and adequacy of our food.. Epp handles all this with friendly but dense prose.. If I were writing a prairie sermon, as I used to do, I would start on page 161 where Epp lists rural values: independence (not being bio-serfs to corporations and being able to cope on one's own in a practical sense), neighbourliness (pitching in for the other guy), 'good' work (as opposed to opportunism), rootedness, nature, mystery and gratitude, and community... [Epp] commends to us the daily, small initiatives and coalitions between concerned parties that eventually mount up to cultural revolution without bloodshed." Mary Strachan Scriver, The Goose, Spring 2009
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"Epp writes of his boyhood [on land around Hanley], of the Saskatchewan town that was, and is now, put there by a national policy to populate the West and feed the world, now left to do the best it can while the dictates of a new world economy charge past it. In subsequent essays, Epp, with clear and gentle persuasion, discusses the agrarian movement in Alberta.... He writes of farmers he knows who are passionate about the their work and the land; of the two-sided coin that is 'agrarian radicalism;' of our need to get beyond our Lockean rationale for subduing the land and its inhabitants and enter a phase of reconciliation and renewal.... There were powerful things going on the rural West at one time, and Epp shows that power can be taken back and not left to our cities, or to faraway governments." Bill Robertson, The Edmonton Journal, May 17, 2009
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"Roger Epp's exquisitely written We Are All Treaty People is about our region, the Prairie West, its landscape, its people, its rural and aboriginal past and present, and the future it might build for itself....We are all treaty people because we live in a state whose primarily distinguishing characteristic--constant negotiation between various peoples and levels of government--was determined by an Aboriginal approach to government, diplomacy and commercial relations. If jurisdictional disputes now seem like power grabs by provincial or (when the Liberals are in power) federal politicians, that's only because we've lost track of how treaty negotiations and renegotiations were and are understood by Indians--as attempts, necessarily contingent, to reach terms fair to everyone involved. Canadians, more than most people, are concerned about fairness." Alex Rettie, Alberta Views, October 2009
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"This collection of ten conversational essays by a Professor of Political Studies combines a Dreiser-like journalistic style with populist politics and autobiography." Anne Burke, Prairie Journal, November 2009
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