River of three peoples: an environmental and cultural history of the Wәlastәw / riviѐre St. Jean / St. John River, c. 1550 – 1850

dc.contributor.advisorMancke, Elizabeth
dc.contributor.advisorParenteau, Bill
dc.contributor.authorHall, Jason
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-01T16:21:52Z
dc.date.available2023-03-01T16:21:52Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.date.updated2019-03-29T00:00:00Z
dc.description.abstractThis study investigates how three distinct cultures – Maliseet, French, and British – engaged with and transformed the ecology of the Wəlastəkw/rivière St. Jean/St. John River, the largest river system in the Maritimes and New England. Ranging three centuries, ca. 1550‐1850, it examines cultural interactions relative to the river’s fish, banks, and flow to assess ecological changes. By developing comparisons among Maliseet, French, and British relationships to the river, it analyzes how cultural groups modified and expanded on the ecology of other peoples. Drawing upon a vast array of sources, including Maliseet oral traditions and language, archaeological surveys, scientific studies, historic maps and paintings, as well as diaries, letters, and reports of the waterway and its banks, this research makes significant contributions to a number of scholarly fields: river ecologies and human adaptations of them, Maliseet history, seigneurial settlement in colonial societies, Loyalist ecology, colonial and municipal legal history, historical cartography, and the role of ecological knowledge in governance and environmental activism. Moreover, it contributes to early modern North American environmental history, as well as global studies of rivers. This study brings a historical perspective to pressing economic and political issues facing the watershed today, including conflicts over natural resource use, the impacts of dam construction and removal, climate change adaptations, flood mitigation and prevention, fisheries conservation, and the effects of invasive species. While most historical scholarship on the region is focused on specific linguistic and ethnic groups, this study bridges these divides, bringing together Maliseet, Acadian, and British histories into a single study. The wider temporal and cultural scope and the centrality of the Wəlastəkw/rivière St. Jean/St. John River to the study’s analysis offers a poignant reminder that humanity’s intimate relationship to nature has points of commonality that are as important to understand as our points of difference. This study attempts to do both.
dc.description.copyright© Jason Hall, 2015
dc.description.notePh.D. University of New Brunswick, Department of History, 2015.
dc.formattext/xml
dc.format.extentxii, 451 pages
dc.format.mediumelectronic
dc.identifier.oclcOCoLC(1090813587)
dc.identifier.otherThesis 9662
dc.identifier.urihttps://unbscholar.lib.unb.ca/handle/1882/13647
dc.language.isoen_CA
dc.publisherUniversity of New Brunswick
dc.rightshttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
dc.subject.classificationWəlastəkw
dc.subject.classificationWolastoq
dc.subject.disciplineHistory
dc.subject.lcshHuman ecology--Saint John River (Me. and N.B.)
dc.subject.lcshIndigenous peoples--Ecology--Saint John River (Me. and N.B.)
dc.subject.lcshSaint John River (Me. and N.B.)--History.
dc.subject.lcshSaint John River (Me. and N.B.)--Environmental aspects.
dc.titleRiver of three peoples: an environmental and cultural history of the Wәlastәw / riviѐre St. Jean / St. John River, c. 1550 – 1850
dc.typedoctoral thesis
thesis.degree.disciplineHistory
thesis.degree.fullnameDoctor of Philosophy
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of New Brunswick
thesis.degree.leveldoctoral
thesis.degree.namePh.D.

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