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Opening Ungava to Industry: A Decentring Approach to Indigenous History in Subarctic Québec, 1937–54

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Opening Ungava to Industry: A Decentring Approach to Indigenous History in Subarctic Québec, 1937–54
Abstract
This article examines the period leading up to the establishment of the Schefferville iron mine in subarctic Québec, Canada, with a focus on the years 1937–54. The beginning of iron ore mining at Schefferville was a decisive moment in the growth of the modern Québec state, opening the way for the industrial exploitation of the province’s natural resources – mineral and otherwise – in the hinterland. Relying on oral and written sources, the research emphasizes the roles and actions of Innu individuals during this phase of development conducted by exploration companies and the Iron Ore Company of Canada at the heart of their ancestral homeland. If the early mining experience at Schefferville evolved largely to the detriment of the Indigenous communities inhabiting the region, a decentring approach to ethnohistory in the context of industrial colonialism reveals that the Innu also worked to determine their own engagement with the mining world, adjusting and maintaining their practices on the land while participating in the wage labour economy.
Publication
Cultural Geographies
Volume
21
Issue
1
Pages
79-97
Date
2014
Journal Abbr
Cultural Geographies
Language
English
ISSN
14744740
Short Title
Opening Ungava to industry
Accessed
11/28/14, 7:35 PM
Citation
Boutet, J.-S. (2014). Opening Ungava to Industry: A Decentring Approach to Indigenous History in Subarctic Québec, 1937–54. Cultural Geographies, 21(1), 79–97. https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474012469761