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A Canadian climate of mind: passages from fur to energy and beyond PDF

367 Pages·2016·22.362 MB·English
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A Canadian Climate of Mind 27649_Leduc_text.indd 1 2016-02-19 09:01:42 27649_Leduc_text.indd 2 2016-02-19 09:01:42 A Canadian Climate of Mind Passages from Fur to Energy and Beyond Timothy B. Leduc McGill-Q ueen’s University Press Montreal & Kingston London Chicago • • 27649_Leduc_text.indd 3 2016-02-19 09:01:42 © McGill- Queen’s University Press 2016 isbn 978- 0- 7735- 4761- 2 (cloth) isbn 978- 0- 7735- 4762- 9 (paper) isbn 978- 0- 7735- 9871- 3 (ePDF) isbn 978- 0- 7735- 9880- 5 (ePUB) Legal deposit second quarter 2016 Bibliothèque nationale du Québec Printed in Canada on acid- free paper that is 100% ancient forest free (100% post- consumer recycled), processed chlorine free This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences, through the Awards to Scholarly Publications Program, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Funding has also been received from the Faculty of Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier University. McGill- Queen’s University Press acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for our publishing activities. Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Leduc, Timothy B., 1970–, author A Canadian climate of mind: passages from fur to energy and beyond / Timothy B. Leduc. Includes bibliographical references and index. Issued in print and electronic formats. isbn 978-0-7735-4761-2 (cloth). – isbn 978-0-7735-4762-9 (paper). – isbn 978-0-7735-9871-3 (epdf). – isbn 978-0-7735-9880-5 (epub) 1. Human ecology – Canada. 2. Native peoples – Ecology – Canada. 3. Human beings – Effect of climate on – Canada. 4. Climatic changes – Canada. 5. Climatic changes – Psychological aspects. 6. Climatic changes – Social aspects – Canada. I. Title. GF511.L43 2016 304.20971 C2015-908342-7 C2015-908343-5 This book was typeset by Interscript in 10.5/14 Sabon. 27649_Leduc_text.indd 4 2016-03-07 14:48:00 Contents Illustrations vii Foreword by William Woodworth Raweno:kwas ix Acknowledgments xv Introduction: Oh! Stranger … 3 1 When the Pain Started 19 2 Meeting Place in the Forest 50 3 Shapes of Violence 79 4 Protectress of Canada 111 5 One Mind, One Heart, One Mouth 147 6 Darkness Will Cover the Earth 184 7 A Life That Is Real 220 Epilogue: Look with Reverence 258 Glossary of Indigenous and Braided Terms 275 Notes 281 Bibliography 319 Index 341 27649_Leduc_text.indd 5 2016-02-19 09:01:42 27649_Leduc_text.indd 6 2016-02-19 09:01:42 Illustrations Unless otherwise specified, the photographs found in this book were taken by the author. Apart from various works in the public domain that are referred to below, I want to give specific thanks to the follow- ing individuals and organizations for allowing me to include their images in this book: Barbara and David Clark, Kevin Gordon, Jamie Leduc, and City of Toronto Museums and Heritage Services. 1 Howard Tomb in 1874–75 (Permission to reprint courtesy of the City of Toronto Museums and Heritage Services, 1978.41.42) 4 2 Two Row Wampum held by William Woodworth Raweno:kwas (spring 2015) 5 3 Toronto marsh with a great blue heron (summer 2015) 20 4 Toronto traffic along a sunny Lake Ontario (summer 2015) 22 5 Toronto traffic along a dark Lake Ontario (summer 2015) 23 6 Fallen onerahtase’ko:wa near passage de taronto (winter 2015) 52 7 French Map of Lake Ontario, 1675 (By Father Pierre Raffeix, first published in 1688, courtesy of Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. Original with Bibliothèque Nationale in France) 53 8 Power dam where the longue sault once ran (spring 2015) 80 9 Looking south at Lake Ontario (Courtesy of City of Toronto, Toronto Culture, Museums and Heritage Services, reference no. 1970.214.19) 80 27649_Leduc_text.indd 7 2016-02-19 09:01:42 viii Illustrations 10 Bitumen-s ands development in Alberta, 2012 (Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, The Interior) 81 11 Saint Kateri Tekakwitha (Permission to reprint courtesy of Kevin Gordon) 112 12 Colum Cille’s cell on Isle of Iona (spring 2005) 113 13 Blue Virgin with Lake Ontario view (summer 2015) 148 14 Turtle Island at Night, 2012 (Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, nasa Earth Observatory, October 2012) 149 15 Labyrinth east of passage de taronto (summer 2015) 186 16 Staghorn sumacs in summer (summer 2015) 187 17 Great blue heron on a rock (Photo taken by Barbara and David Clark in 2015. Permission to courtesy of Barbara and David Clark) 221 18 Rose cross on Howard tomb (winter 2015) 222 19 Turtle rattle (summer 2015) 223 20 cn Tower and White Pine (winter and summer 2015). Designed by and courtesy of Jamie Leduc. 259 27649_Leduc_text.indd 8 2016-02-19 09:01:42 Foreword William Woodworth Raweno:kwas The profound understanding with which A Canadian Climate of Mind weaves together what might seem at first disparate narratives conveys to us a healing cultural integration perhaps unique in the literature around our relationship with nature. The sensitive life-e ncounters so compassionately recounted in this book are suffused with the spirit of a great elder in the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) tradition. Jacob Ezra Thomas was a traditional chief of the Six Nations Confederacy. He carried the chiefly duties of the Snipe Clan of the Cayuga Nation with the title Deyawenhethon (He Is So Real in a Double Way). Jake was my teacher, and through me he became a teacher to Tim Leduc as he considered the complex challenges to minding a passage through our climate of change in these lands we call Canada. To me, Leduc’s book is the culmination of our mutual journeying, friendship, and respect for all those who have come before us. Our kindred spirits coalesced around the mixed ancestries of our relation- ship – Native, British, French, and the incredible natural world of southern Ontario. As the following pages attest, this is a region imbued with a rich natural history, vibrant pre-h istoric Native settlement, and complex colonial narratives that are evident even in the dense urban- ity of a place like Toron:to – the place where our relationship and this book begins. All of our work together seemed surrounded by our mutual ancestors, and particularly the ever-a ppearing spirit of Jake Thomas as I shared with Tim the many teachings and experiences of my time with Jake at Six Nations an hour west of Toronto. 27649_Leduc_text.indd 9 2016-02-19 09:01:42

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