Category Archives: Bibliography

Bibliography

Adcock, T. (2016) “The Maximum of Mishap: Adventurous Tourists and the State in the Northwest Territories, 1926-1948.” Social History, 49(99). 431-452.

 

Anderson, B. (2006) Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism. London: Verso.

 

Benedickson, J. (1997) Idleness, Water, and a Canoe: Reflections on Paddling for Pleasure. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

 

Braun, B. (2002). The Intemperate Rainforest: Nature, Culture, and Power on Canada’s West Coast. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

 

Buxton, W. J. (2013) “North by Northwest: Harold Innis and “the Advancement of Knowledge of the Canadian North” in William J. Buxton (Ed.) Harold Innis and the North: Appraisals and Contestations. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

 

CBC News. (May 12, 2009) “By the Numbers”  CBC. Retrieved: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/by-the-numbers-1.801937

 

Cooke, L. (2015) “‘North’ in Contemporary Canadian National-Cultural Imaginaries: a Haunted Phantasm.” Settler Colonial Studies. DOI: 10.1080/2201473X.2014.1001307

 

Cooke, L. (2017) “Carving ‘Turns’ and Unsettling the Ground Under our Feet: A Reading of Sun Peaks Resort as Settler Colonial Moral Terrain.” Tourist Studies, 17(1). 36-53.

 

Cooke, L. (2018). Windshields, Wilderness, and Walmart: Cultural Logics of the Frontier in Yukon, Canada. In In B.S.R. Grimwood, B.S.R. et al. (Eds.) New Moral Natures in Tourism.  43-55. London & New York: Routledge.

 

Cronon, W. (1995) “The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature.” in William Cronon, ed. Uncommon ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W.W. Norton & Co. pp. 69-90.

 

Dean, M. (2013). Inheriting a Canoe Paddle. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

 

De Costa, R. & Clark, T. (2016) ” On the Responsibility to Engage: non-Indigenous People in Settler States.” Settler Colonial Studies, 6(3). 191-208.

 

Erickson, B. (2013). Canoe Nation: Nature, Race, and the Making of a Canadian Icon. Vancouver: UBC Press.

 

Erickson, B. (2018). Anachronistic Others and Embedded Dangers. In B.S.R. Grimwood, B.S.R. et al. (Eds.) New Moral Natures in Tourism.  43-55. London & New York: Routledge.

 

Francis, D. (n.d.) “Magical Thinking.” Geist: Fact+Fiction of North America. Retreived: https://www.geist.com/fact/columns/magical-thinking/

 

Grace, S. (2001). Canada and the Idea of North. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queens University Press.

 

Grant, S. (1988). “Symbols and Myths: Images of Canoe and North.” In B. Horwood and J. Raffan, Canexus: The Canoe in Canadian Culture. Toronto: Beltegeuse Books.

 

Grimwood, B. S. R. (2011). “‘Thinking Outside the Gunnels’: Considering Natures and the Moral Terrain of canoe Travel.” Leisure/Loisir, 35(1). 49-69.

 

Grimwood, B. S. R. (2015) “Advancing Tourism’s Moral Morphology: Relational Metaphors for Just and Sustainable Tourism” Tourist Studies, 15(1). 3-26.

 

Grimwood et al. (2017). “Decolonising Tourism Mobilities? Planning Research Within a First Nations Community in Northern Canada.” in Jillian Rickely et al. (Eds.) Tourism and Leisure Mobilities: Politics, Work, and Play. 232-247. London: Routledge.

 

Hamelin, L. E. (1979) Canadian Nordicity: It’s Your North, too. Translated by William Barr. Montreal: Harvest House.

 

Hartling, N. (1998) Nahanni: River of Gold…River of Dreams. Merrickville: Canadian Recreational Canoeing Association.

 

Henderson, W. (2018) “Indian Act.” The Canadian Encyclopaedia. Retrieved: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/indian-act

 

Hulan, R. (2002) Northern Experience and the Myths of Canadian Culture. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

 

Mackey, E. (1998) “Becoming Indigenous: Land, Belonging, and the Appropriation of Aboriginality in Canadian Nationalist Narratives.” Social Analysis, 42(2). 150-178.

 

Mackey, E. (2000). “Death by Landscape: Race, Nature, and Gender in Canadian Nationalist Mythology.” Canadian Woman Studies, 20 (2). 125-130.

 

Macoun, A. & Strakosch, E. (2013) “The Ethical Demands of Settler Colonial Theory.” Settler Colonial Studies, 3(3-4). 426-443.

 

Massey, D. (2004). “Geographies of Responsibility” Geografiska Annaler 86, B (1). 5-18.

 

Massey, D. (2005) for space. London: SAGE Publishing.

 

Moss, J. (1994) Enduring Dreams: An Exploration of Arctic Landscape. Concord: House of Anasi Press.

 

Mullins, P. (2009). “Living Stories of the Landscape: Perceptions of Place through Canoeing in Canada’s North.” Tourism Geographies, 11(2). 233-255.

 

Nelson, G. (2017) The Magnificent Nahanni: The Struggle to Protect a Wild Place. Regina: University of Regina Press.

 

Newberry, L. (2012) “Canoe Pedagogy and Colonial History: Exploring Contested Spaces of Outdoor Education.” Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 17. 30-45.

 

Raffan, J. (2000) Bark, Skin, and Cedar: Exploring the Canoe in Canadian Experience. Toronto: Harper Collins Publishing.

 

Rifkin, M. (2013) “Settler Common Sense” Settler Colonial Studies, 3(3-4). 322-340.

 

Rutherford, S. (2011) Governing the Wild: Ecotours of Power. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

 

Statistics Canada. (March 28, 2019) “Canada’s Population Estimates: Subprovincial areas, July 1, 2018.” The Daily. Retrieved: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/190328/dq190328b-eng.htm?indid=4047-2&indgeo=0#analysis

 

Tagaq, T. (2018) Split Tooth. Toronto: Penguin Random House.

 

Thorpe, J. (2012). Temagami’s Tangled Wild: Race, Gender, and the Making of Canadian Nature. Vancouver: UBC Press.

 

Tuck, E. & Yang, K. W. (2012) “Decolonization is not a metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education, & Society, 1(1). 1-40.

 

Veracini, L. (2013). “‘Settler colonialism’: Career of a Concept.” The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 41(2). 313-333.

 

Wilderness Act of 1964, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1131-1136 (2017)