{"title":"Daniel Rück, The Laws and the Land: The Settler Colonial Invasion of Kahnawà:ke in Nineteenth-Century Canada","authors":"Daniel Sims","doi":"10.3138/cjh-57-2-2021-0131","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the summer of 2021, the Rotisken’rakéhte, often referred to as the Mohawk Warrior Society, undertook an action with a group of Kanien’kehá:ka of Kahnawà:ke community members to reclaim a piece of forested land immediately adjacent to the Kahnawà:ke reserve boundary (Deer 2021). The parcel in question falls within the former Seigneury of Sault Saint-Louis, the over 18,000-hectare stretch of Kahnawà:ke territory where Rück’s incisive historical account of settler colonial attrition takes place. The current land reclamation action, prompted by a March 2021 Chateauguay municipality rezoning by-law greenlighting a 290-unit housing development, is but the most recent iteration of centuries of Kanien’kehá:ka of Kahnawà:ke struggle to defend and reclaim their land. Similarly, three months earlier and 60 kilometres up the road, Kanien’kehá:ka of Kanehsata:ké land defenders put out a call for support because the municipality of Oka had once again moved to seize and develop the Sacred Pines (Kanehsata:ké Land Defenders 2020). The Pines is an unceded Kanehsata'kehró:non burial site stolen by Jesuit missionaries. The municipality of Oka’s 1990 approval of a golf course extension onto the site triggered the Oka uprising. Oka’s current mayor, Pascal Quevillon, has embarked on several public racist screeds against the Kanien’kehá:ka of Kanehsata:ké. In reading The Laws and the Land, one is confronted with the striking symmetries between the settler colonial invasion of Kahnawà:ke throughout the 19th century and the ongoing attempts by settler governments, real estate developers, and far-right community groups to secure, entrench, and extend settler control over Kanien’kehá:ka land. To be sure, the techniques and rationalities of settler colonial governance have undergone significant conceptual reordering due in no small part to the multiple crises of state legitimacy driven by Indigenous uprisings and","PeriodicalId":43085,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Journal of History-Annales Canadiennes d Histoire","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Canadian Journal of History-Annales Canadiennes d Histoire","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3138/cjh-57-2-2021-0131","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
In the summer of 2021, the Rotisken’rakéhte, often referred to as the Mohawk Warrior Society, undertook an action with a group of Kanien’kehá:ka of Kahnawà:ke community members to reclaim a piece of forested land immediately adjacent to the Kahnawà:ke reserve boundary (Deer 2021). The parcel in question falls within the former Seigneury of Sault Saint-Louis, the over 18,000-hectare stretch of Kahnawà:ke territory where Rück’s incisive historical account of settler colonial attrition takes place. The current land reclamation action, prompted by a March 2021 Chateauguay municipality rezoning by-law greenlighting a 290-unit housing development, is but the most recent iteration of centuries of Kanien’kehá:ka of Kahnawà:ke struggle to defend and reclaim their land. Similarly, three months earlier and 60 kilometres up the road, Kanien’kehá:ka of Kanehsata:ké land defenders put out a call for support because the municipality of Oka had once again moved to seize and develop the Sacred Pines (Kanehsata:ké Land Defenders 2020). The Pines is an unceded Kanehsata'kehró:non burial site stolen by Jesuit missionaries. The municipality of Oka’s 1990 approval of a golf course extension onto the site triggered the Oka uprising. Oka’s current mayor, Pascal Quevillon, has embarked on several public racist screeds against the Kanien’kehá:ka of Kanehsata:ké. In reading The Laws and the Land, one is confronted with the striking symmetries between the settler colonial invasion of Kahnawà:ke throughout the 19th century and the ongoing attempts by settler governments, real estate developers, and far-right community groups to secure, entrench, and extend settler control over Kanien’kehá:ka land. To be sure, the techniques and rationalities of settler colonial governance have undergone significant conceptual reordering due in no small part to the multiple crises of state legitimacy driven by Indigenous uprisings and
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of History/Annales canadiennes d’histoire (CJH/ACH), published by University of Toronto Press, is a peer-reviewed journal of general history publishing in both English and French. Geared to all professional historians, as well as to anyone interested in historical scholarship, it features articles and reviews by experts, and invites contributions from all areas of history. The journal has resisted the trend toward increased specialization and offers an excellent way to keep up with developments across the discipline. The CJH/ACH publishes three issues annually in spring, fall, and winter. While the content of our issues varies seasonally, each issue may contain a maximum of four articles, one or two historiographical review articles, and approximately forty book reviews, including one or two longer “feature reviews,” which typically consider one or two books in somewhat greater depth. Our winter issue regularly features a guest editor and focuses on a specific theme or topic of their choosing.