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Author Korneski, Kurt, 1975- author.

Title Conflicted colony : critical episodes in nineteenth-century Newfoundland and Labrador / Kurt Korneski.

Publication Info. Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, 2016.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource
text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary "Moments of crisis can illuminate aspects of history that are often hard to discern. This book uses five lesser known conflicts - "critical episodes"--To examine the history of Newfoundland and parts of mainland North America to its north. Nineteenth-century Newfoundland was an archetypal borderland: a space where changes in the relative authority of different imperial, national, and indigenous claimants to territories shaped the opportunities and identities of a large number of people. Drawing on borderlands scholarship, this work sheds new light on the process of state formation in Newfoundland. It shifts the focus to areas outside of St. John's to show how formal agreements and overlapping claims and commercial networks figured into the lives and imaginings of differently positioned populations. The intersection of such claims produced distinctive commercial and social relations which, in turn, sustained regionally-based sensibilities and identities that differed markedly from those of the Avalon-basedmerchants and politicians who have been the focus of previous studies. While those differences contributed to conflict, they also help us understand the informal systems of governance as well as the kinds of political movements and perspectives that emerged among settlers who depended on distinct ecological settings. Exploring these cases localizes the imaginings of colonial politicians and the political and economic project associated with them. It reveals that strikingly different interests, and even different imagined borders, existed in other parts of the island. To realize their aims and to make their imagined boundaries actually inform social, economic, political, and cultural systems in Newfoundland and Labrador the architects of Newfoundland's colonial state expressed a late nineteenth century program of internal colonialism exerted from St. John's. The book enriches the social history of Newfoundland and Labrador, but also broadens, deepens, and clarifies our understanding of the processes by which Newfoundland became an integrated Dominion in the British Empire."-- Provided by publisher.
Contents 1. The French, the Americans, and the Making of a "Riot" : The Fortune Bay Dispute, 1878 -- 2. Troubles down North: Unsettling Settlers in Hamilton Inlet, 1871-1883 -- 3. Which Road to the Future? : Social Unrest, Landward Development, and Eastern Perspectives -- 4. Place and Resistance to the "Government of St John's" : The St George's Bay Dispute of 1889-1892 -- 5. More French Shore Problems: The Lobster Controversy on Newfoundland's Treaty Coast, 1890-1904 -- Conclusion.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Newfoundland and Labrador -- History -- 19th century.
Newfoundland and Labrador.
History.
Chronological Term 19th century
Subject Newfoundland and Labrador -- Economic conditions -- 19th century.
Economic conditions.
Newfoundland and Labrador -- Social conditions -- 19th century.
Social conditions.
Newfoundland and Labrador -- Politics and government -- 19th century.
Politics and government.
Chronological Term 1800-1899
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Electronic books.
History.
Other Form: Korneski, Kurt, 1975- Conflicted colony.: Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2016] ©2016 (CaOONL)20169014959 (OCoLC)946215487
ISBN 9780773599505 (pdf)
0773599509
9780773599512 (epub)
0773599517
9780773547797