2005
DOI: 10.1353/jaf.2005.0057
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Stories from the Margins: Toward a More Inclusive British Columbia Historiography

Abstract: Drawing on the oral narratives of Okanagan storyteller Harry Robinson (1900–1990), this article challenges historians, folklorists, and others to consider how the early Boasian ethnographic archive has shaped our understanding of Aboriginal historical consciousness. At every turn, Robinson challenges the archive's fixation on a static Golden Age Past. Robinson's Coyote, for example, is important not for what he represents in the deep past, but for his fluid relationships with non-Aboriginal peoples from the be… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“… In addition to the Robinson books, see Wickwire, “Stories from the Margins”; Wickwire, “They Wanted. Me to Help Them”; Wickwire, “We Shall Drink From the Stream”; and Wickwire, “Women in Ethnography.”…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“… In addition to the Robinson books, see Wickwire, “Stories from the Margins”; Wickwire, “They Wanted. Me to Help Them”; Wickwire, “We Shall Drink From the Stream”; and Wickwire, “Women in Ethnography.”…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%