The Subarctic Indians and the Fur Trade, 1680-1860

Yerbury, J. Colin

Vancouver, 1986


$45.00
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Details

Hardcover with dust jacket, 189 pages, 6x9.25 in - 15.5x23.5 cm, B&W illustrations.

Condition

Boards worn at corners and edges. Spine rubbed at head and heel, bumped at heel. Fore-edge lightly spotted. Jacket creased and lightly rubbed, closed tears to front and back, chipped on back at bottom. Jacket spine chipped at head, closed tears at heel. Inscription by previous owner on front free endpaper.

Notes

In this academic book, J. Colin Yerbury explores the impacts of the European fur trade on Athapaskan-speaking First Nations groups living in (what is now) northern Canada using source documents written by explorers, traders, officials, and settlers. Dividing two hundred years of indigenous-trader contact into four distinct periods, Yerbury examines ethnohistorical sources to analyze the economic and social impact of fur trading on indigenous groups. He concludes by summarizing sociocultural adaptations occasioned by the fur trade ranging from shifts in hunting patterns to interactions with new diseases to altered kinship systems. Throughout, Yerbury quotes from travel narratives, administrative journals, Hudson’s Bay Company records, and other period documents. Includes endnotes, bibliography, and index.

ISBN

0774802413