![]() ![]() “Provides a synthesis of the fur trade through time and across the continent. ![]() ![]() One of the key points repeatedly highlighted by Nassaney is the active role of both Indigenous and non-indigenous peoples in the fur trade, in contrast to traditional narratives which emphasize European colonization and trade as shaping largely passive Indigenous societies.”―Canadian Journal of Archaeology ![]() By leading the reader through these divergent narratives, Nassaney makes clear that critical examination and reflection is an essential part of scholarship, and that the fur trade is fertile ground for rethinking old ideas through new interpretive filters.”―Journal of Anthropological Research The fur trade has also been a ‘test bed’ for scholarly consideration of processes of culture contact, diffusion, and acculturation. “Demonstrates that what we perceive about the fur trade often reflects origin myths of modern USA and Canada. Absorbing.”―Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology Admirably balances the enormous numbers of sites, peoples, historical events, and colonial enterprises with some of the important research directions that have defined and are defining the field of fur trade studies in archaeology. “Impressive and ambitious, covering centuries of time and much of the North American continent. A solid introduction to the archaeology of the fur trade, as well as to the myriad archaeological issues associated with colonial interaction.”―American Antiquity ![]()
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