The Free People - Li Gens Libres
A History of the Métis Community of Batoche, Saskatchewan
Description
Revised and expanded to include fresh research, a discussion of recent interpretive trends, and a review of new literature since the publication of the first edition in 1990, The Free People - Li Gens Libres : A History of the M, is a comprehensive history of the Métis community and national historic site of Batoche, Saskatchewan.
Diane Payment has a long personal association with Batoche; her study is the culmination of thirty years of documentary and field research as a participant-observer within the community. Her inquiry draws on a range of dictated and written historical sources, both Métis and non-Métis, as well as more recent oral history narratives and personal observations.
The Free People is one of the few studies on Métis communities in western and northern Canada. Payment's approach demonstrates that any understanding of Métis culture cannot be based on European or Euro-Canadian historical models, but on its own values and traditions. She argues that Batoche has persisted as a community despite conflict, crisis, and prejudice from immigrant ethnic groups and institutions such as the Canadian government and the Roman Catholic Church, succeeding in maintaining its uniquely Métis identity.
Reviews
Foreword
Testimonials
Author?s Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of IllustrationsIntroduction
Review of Major Literature and Interpretive Trends Since 1985
Methodology
The Long Road to Batoche1: Society and Culture
Social Organization and Family
Customs and Traditions
Relations with First Nations
Relations with Settlers2. The Métis and the Roman Catholic Church
Cultures in Conflict
1885: The Riel Factor
The General and the Priests
Relations After 18853: Political Activism
St. Laurent Council and the Territorial Government Era
A National Feast Day, A Flag, An Anthem
The Last Stand: Armed Resistance
Métis Rights after 18854. Economy
The Early Commerce: Fur Trade, Buffalo Hunt, Freighting, and Other Enterprises
Merchant Trading
The Later Years5: Land Claims on the South Saskatchewan River
Customary Landholding and the Manitoba Precedent
Aboriginal Land Claims through Scrip in 1886 and 1800–19006: Hard Times and Coming of Age: Batoche since the 1930s
Women?s Work and More
Off to War
Political Resurgence and Growth
Cultural Revival and RenewalAppendices
1.1. Métis Wintering at St. Laurent de Grandin Mission 31 December 1897
1.2 Families of St. Antoine de Padoue Parish, Batoche, 1924
1.3 Métis Songs
2. Claims for Losses Suffered in 1885, Batoche and Vicinity
3. Notes on Quantitative Analysis of Homestead Declarations
4.1 Beneficiaries of Land Scrip, Batoche and Vicinity, 1885–87
4.2 Beneficiaries of Land Scrip, Batoche and Vicinity, 1900Notes
Selected Bibliography
Oral History Interviews
Unpublished Manuscript Sources
Published SourcesIndex