Assignment 2:6 “Contrapuntal Cartographies”

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 In order to address this question you will need to refer to Sparke’s article, “A Map that Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation.” You can easily find this article online. Read the section titled: “Contrapuntal Cartographies” (468 – 470). Write a blog that explains Sparke’s analysis of what Judge McEachern might have meant by this statement: “We’ll call this the map that roared.”


In his article “A Map that Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation,” in the section titled “Contrapuntal Cartographies” Sparke interprets Justice McEachern’s statement “we’ll call this the map that roared” as a dehumanizing and belittling comment. It is meant to position the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan peoples as a small and harmless group behaving as if they could stand up to and take on the titan that is the Crown government. Sparke parallels the quote with the title of the film “the Mouse that Roared” to indicate the Indigenous group as a “ramshackled, anachronistic nation” (Sparke, 468). It is a blatant attempt at discrediting the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan peoples despite their willingness to adapt and superimpose Indigenous land ownership understandings unto settler land/ownership concepts by literally creating a colonial/Eurocentric physical map detailing how they use the land as livelihood.

A brief search into Justice McEachern reveals he was notorious for disrespecting the Indigenous peoples who came before him in court. Detailed in an article from the Vancouver Sun it is noted ‘in his infamous 1991 decision, Delgamuukw v B.C., McEachern described the life of First Nations before colonization as “nasty, brutish, and short” because they had “no written language, no horses or wheeled vehicles”’ (Mulgrew, 2017). This vulgar statement reiterates yet another example of the insidious misconception in western culture that a written language in some way bares prestige and superiority to languages that do not have a written component. Mulgrew goes on to state “McEachern’s entire book-length decision reeked of the presumption of European superiority, the lynchpin of colonial cruelties that continues to have ill repercussions for First Nations” (2017).

In reality the creation of this map shows both the willingness and adaptability of the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan peoples to engage with settler court, play by settler rules, and take to task settler notions of land ownership, an incredible and admirable feat in its own right. Clearly McEachern’s condescension did not go unnoticed as “the Supreme Court of Canada overturned the decision in 1997 saying that, contrary to what McEachern had written, oral histories could be considered legitimate evidence. It was unprecedented” (Mulgrew, 2017).

It is impossible to look at this question without considering the events currently taking place at the Gidimt’en checkpoint and the ongoing protests and blockades occurring across Canada. Sparke uses the term “contrapuntal cartographies” (468) as the title of the section addressing Justice McEachern and the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan peoples. This play on words conjures an image of two lines of music existing simultaneously in some kind of harmony, suggesting the two ongoing and unfolding histories of Indigenous Canada and mainstream Canada are in some way compatible. However, Canadian reality is one of colonial racism, genocide, rape, and murder inflicted on Indigenous people. The Canadian government has much to answer for in the past and has clearly learned nothing from the insidious attacks it continues to perpetrate against Indigenous peoples.

Works Cited:

Sparke, Matthew. “A Map That Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 88, no. 3, 1998, pp. 463–495. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2564238. Accessed 20 Feb. 2020.

Keay, Bill. “Ian Mulgrew: Busted! Begbie Decision, Grand Chief Cast Pall over Top Judges’ McEachern Move.” Vancouver Sun, 5 June 2017, vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/ian-mulgrew-busted-begbie-decision-grand-chief-cast-pall-over-top-judges-mceachern-move.

“Unist’ot’en and Gidimt’en Checkpoints on High Alert as RCMP Plan Tactical Unit Assault.” Mother Theme, unistoten.camp/unistoten-and-gidimten-checkpoints-on-high-alert-as-rcmp-plan-tactical-unit-assault/.

Sparke, Matthew. “Figure 1 from A Map That Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation: Semantic Scholar.” Figure 1 from A Map That Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation | Semantic Scholar, 1 Jan. 1998, www.semanticscholar.org/paper/A-Map-that-Roared-and-an-Original-Atlas:-Canada,-of-Sparke/2877846a8126623bd1bccddc415bd4cf59be357a/figure/0.

Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, 1991 CanLII 2372 (BC SC), <http://canlii.ca/t/1g2kh>, retrieved on 2020-02-20

Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010