The Line Which Separates: Race, Gender, and the Making of the Alberta-Montana Borderlands - Softcover

Book 1 of 5: Race and Ethnicity in the American West

McManus, Sheila

 
9780888644343: The Line Which Separates: Race, Gender, and the Making of the Alberta-Montana Borderlands

Synopsis

In the late nineteenth century the forty-ninth parallel was a key site of Canadian and American efforts to shape their respective nations and to create national identities. The international border sliced through Blackfoot country, creating the Alberta-Montana borderlands yet the dynamic arising out of this region's landscape, aboriginal people, newcomers, railroads, and ongoing cross-border ties proved to challenge each government's efforts to colonize and nationalize this region. Sheila McManus makes an important and useful comparison between American and Canadian government policies and attitudes regarding race, gender, and homesteading. Drawing on government maps and reports, oral testimony, and personal papers, The Line Which Separates explores the uneven way in which the borderlands divided a previously cohesive region.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

Sheila McManus is Associate Professor of History at the University of Lethbridge in southern Alberta. Her book, The Line Which Separates, was co-published by the University of Nebraska Press and The University of Alberta Press in 2005. Currently, she is writing a textbook on women in the U.S. West.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title