From Milk-Medicine To Public (Re)Education Programs: An Examination Of Anishinabek Mothers' Responses To Hydroelectric Flooding In The Treaty #3 District, 1900-1975

This paper explores how Anishinabek women managed their households during the hydroelectric boom of the 1950s and provides new insight into flooding impact analyses. To date, historians have sought to understand how hydroelectric development compromised "subsistence" living. Research has a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 2015-12, Vol.32 (2), p.363-389
1. Verfasser: Luby, Brittany
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description This paper explores how Anishinabek women managed their households during the hydroelectric boom of the 1950s and provides new insight into flooding impact analyses. To date, historians have sought to understand how hydroelectric development compromised "subsistence" living. Research has addressed declining fish and game populations and the corresponding decline in male employment. But, what do these trends mean once the nets and traps have been emptied? By focusing on the family home, we discover that hydroelectric power generation on the Winnipeg River disrupted the environment's ability to provide resources necessary to maintain women's reproductive health (especially breast milk). Food shortages caused by hydroelectric development in the postwar era compromised Anishinabek women's ability to raise their children in accordance with cultural expectations. What emerges from this analysis is a new lens through which to theorize the voluntary enrolment of Anishinabek children in residential schools in northwestern Ontario.
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source University of Toronto Press; MEDLINE; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Animals
Cultural Characteristics
Electric power production
Environment
Environmental aspects
Family Relations
Female
Floods
Food supply
Health aspects
History of medicine and histology
History, 20th Century
Humans
Hydroelectric plants
Indians, North American
Influence
International Cooperation
Male
Medicine
Methylmercury
Milk
Mothers
Native peoples
Ontario
Power Plants
Social aspects
Water flooding
Women
title From Milk-Medicine To Public (Re)Education Programs: An Examination Of Anishinabek Mothers' Responses To Hydroelectric Flooding In The Treaty #3 District, 1900-1975
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