2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1541-0064.2008.00222.x
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Historical geography and early Canada: a life and an interpretation

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 … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Cole saw this as a prompt to reflect upon, and find new coherence in, his own diverse studies of colonization published through the preceding half‐century, including a 2004 piece in which he sought to broaden understanding of the ways in which colonialism dispossessed (Harris, 2004). Assembling many of his more theoretical essays in A bounded land (Harris, 2020), he sought to map the “underlying architecture of settler colonialism as it grew and evolved” between “rock and cold to the north and a political border to the south.” Drawing together a lifetime of thought about and concern for the land and people of northern North America, upon which he also reflected in Harris (2008a), the carefully curated essays in this collection defy easy summation—as their author observed in a Champlain Society podcast about the book (Harris, 2021). In a manner characteristic of Cole's corpus of work, however, A bounded land complicates and challenges established arguments, even as it draws inspiration from them.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Cole saw this as a prompt to reflect upon, and find new coherence in, his own diverse studies of colonization published through the preceding half‐century, including a 2004 piece in which he sought to broaden understanding of the ways in which colonialism dispossessed (Harris, 2004). Assembling many of his more theoretical essays in A bounded land (Harris, 2020), he sought to map the “underlying architecture of settler colonialism as it grew and evolved” between “rock and cold to the north and a political border to the south.” Drawing together a lifetime of thought about and concern for the land and people of northern North America, upon which he also reflected in Harris (2008a), the carefully curated essays in this collection defy easy summation—as their author observed in a Champlain Society podcast about the book (Harris, 2021). In a manner characteristic of Cole's corpus of work, however, A bounded land complicates and challenges established arguments, even as it draws inspiration from them.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%