Two recurring
themes in the texts I have read about colonialism are the gendered elements of
contact zones, and the role of intimacies in colonial contexts. Overall, these
texts show the inextricability of race and gender in colonial contexts
Van Kirk’s
seminal work on women in the fur trade catalyzed conversations between
historians drawing from the intersection of gender and colonialism. Given the
body of work that has drawn from Van Kirk’s scholarship, I am focusing
primarily on responses to Van Kirk, rather than her monograph itself. Among Van
Kirk’s major contributions is extending the concept of agency to include women
by exploring how women managed their marriages and altered native-newcomer
relations.[1]
In a context of mutual dependence, intermarriage was an essential means of
cultural interchange, even where it was not official condoned by the Hudson’s
Bay Company.[2]
Marriage took on unique customs for the fur traders, who defended their
relationships as customary and legitimate.[3]
Van Kirk shows a diversity of marriage practices in the backcountry, including
long-term monogamy and serial monogamy depending on the needs and values of fur
traders and First Nations communities.[4]
First Nations women became an integral part of the fur trade labour force, and
were important for diplomacy and cultural advising, in addition to the
emotional role of marriage.[5]
She is careful to note that not all marriages had a positive impact on First
Nations women’s lives; many found repeated abandonment, patriarchal authority
over children, and living within European social structures to be emotionally
challenging.[6]
By considering
the position of “women in between,” Van Kirk alludes to the idea of a contact
zone located within the bodies of women in the fur trade. This idea of “women
in between” evolved through the course of the fur trade, as European men began
to prefer mixed-blood women as marriage partners (89) and marriage customs
became more recognizably European.[7]
In discussing these marriages, Van Kirk portrays the cultural complexities of
the fur trade, and how ideas of race and gender interacted to shape men’s
treatment and opinions of their wives and children. Van Kirk’s monograph
follows a narrative in which white fur-trading men engaged first with First
Nations women, then mixed women, then brought white women into the backcountry
as their brides. Her final chapter portrays the complex interactions between
women of varying backgrounds in the fur trade, when First Nations women lost
their status as wives and were instead labeled as prostitutes on the basis of
their supposedly promiscuous bloodlines.[8]
Many Tender Ties has some of the
shortcomings one might expect from an early work that steps outside the comfort
zone of her peers. She generally relies on white men’s voices to craft a
narrative about Aboriginal women, for example, when there are no sources left
by First Nations women.[9]
This has the consequence of occasionally reiterating stereotypes of drudgery
that historians are now more inclined to question and refute.[10]
Today, a historian might have used oral histories or a more innovative approach
to examining fur trade records in order to pull out First Nations women’s
voices. Van Kirk finds their roles and experiences, but the women themselves still
remain shadowy. What this text also understandably lacks is a consideration of
the nuances of sex and gender; coming before Butler and Foucault’s work on this
thread, Van Kirk’s scholarship is particularly pioneering. According to Franca
Iacovetta, Van Kirk “had not committed to any particular theoretical paradigm
other than a feminist understanding that women had to be there, somewhere.”[11]
Jennifer Brown argues that this lack of engagement with theory has enabled Van
Kirk’s work to become a classic.[12]
Brownlie and
Korinek’s recent collection presents a multi-vocal response to Van Kirk’s work,
considering her legacy as a historian and the scholarly impact of her work, in
particular Many Tender Ties. Brownlie
and Korinek argue that considering women’s lives allows historians to take a
more integrated approach to history.[13]
In the case of Many Tender Ties, they
argue that Van Kirk illustrates how Western Canada becomes an active place, not
merely synonymous with the fur trade or a site for the extraction of staples.[14]
Elizabeth Jameson considers Van Kirk’s influence on American historians,
arguing that Van Kirk’s “narrative disrupted a mythic West that had marginalized
women and people of colour” and instead situated women at the centre of Innis’s
staples thesis.[15]
Kathryn McPherson’s consideration of domesticity in the contact zone of the
prairie west illustrates how settler women’s accounts of their interactions
with First Nations women situated themselves as “authentic” pioneers,
emphasizing their gendered and racialized claims to domesticity and sexual
respectability underscoring the significance of relying on settler women’s accounts
of native-newcomer relations that blur Aboriginal women’s motivations in these
interactions.[16]
In her chapter, Jarvis
Brownlie offers first nations perspectives on race, showing that discourses are
not solely the property of settlers. Instead, there was a two-way interchange,
in which images of “Indians” also discursively produced whites, unifying
disparate settlers in a racial dichotomy.[17]
Brownlie argues that settler newspaper narratives emphasized difference and
disconnection, in contrast with Indigenous writings that suggested connection
and continuity, focusing on a potential of solidarity, particularly among men.[18]
To me, her most compelling suggestion was that discourses and representations
that located Indigenous peoples in “anachronistic time” outside of historical
processes linked Indigenous peoples with death.[19]
Victoria Freeman places issues such as intermarriage in international context,
discussing how ideas of race and gender informed discourses of miscegenation.
For example, the assumption that Indigenous peoples were dying races made
miscegenation less of a threat to settler society, as it would supposedly be a
temporary concern.[20]
In certain colonial contexts, extramarital interracial sex could be less
concerning to colonial authorities, as it served as a potential means of
assimilation and a necessary outlet for white men in the absence of white women.[21]
Ann Laura Stoler
offers another collection, Haunted by
Empire, which draws on gendered themes of colonialism by considering affect
and intimacies in the United States and its empire. Her opening essay, to which
the subsequent chapters respond, extends Van Kirk’s work and situates it more
theoretically. In “Tense and Tender Ties,” Stoler brings together historiographies of postcolonial studies and North
American history to consider role of intimate domains, resisting scholarship
that sees American history as exceptional.[22] Drawing
on an idea she pulls from Albert Hurtado, Stoler discusses the “intimate
frontiers of empire,” a “social and cultural space where racial classifications
were defined and defied, where relations between colonizer and colonized could
powerfully confound or confirm the strictures of governance and the categories
of rule.”[23]
According to Stoler, “tender ties”—a phrase she borrows from Van Kirk—are
generated by Foucault’s “dense transfer points” of power and are a product of
the sexualization and racialization of imperial social policies, which
carefully distributed affect.[24] Combining
Foucault’s “dense transfer points” and Van Kirk’s “tender ties” gives
theoretical companionship to Van Kirk’s work. Although it is perhaps
troublesome that Stoler uses a quotation from a primary source and applies it
as a broader concept of intimacy, this term allows Stoler an extensive analysis
of intimate ties in colonial contexts.
Following Stoler’s introductory essays, the
remainder of the collection is a response to the idea of “tense and tender
ties,” showing how intimacy and affective bonds are critical in imperial and
colonial contexts. Using “intimacy” to refer to emotional as well as sexual
intimacy, the subsequent chapters show how intimacies were regulated according
to race and gender. I will elaborate on some of the most compelling. Nayan Shah
expands on these multiple meanings of intimacy, arguing that a dual meaning of
sexual and familiar relations, or innermost nature and character “calibrate”
legal definitions of self-possession and ownership of property. As such, the
management of the intimate was a process of bolstering norms and scrutinizing
deviancy.[25]
From a Canadian perspective, it is
troublesome that there is so little Canadian content in a collection that
labels itself as “North American”; this collection is more accurately an
exploration of the United States and its empire. Nonetheless, Stoler provides
critical insights into American imperialism. Situating the United States as an
imperial power, Stoler argues that “interventions in the microenvironments of
both subjugated and colonizing populations” enabled the social construction of
difference in colonial environments; empire was thus present in both public and
private, or intimate, spaces.[26]
Notably, racialized people also had the agency to intervene: Damon Salesa
considers the idea of “strategic intimacy” in her analysis of Samoan half-caste
people, described as an embodiment of intersections that show the connections
between the intimate and the strategic.[27]
The chapters
presented in this collection are diverse in their focus and methodology. Lisa
Lowes focuses on Chinese labourers,
arguing that their obscurity enabled modern humanism and racialized divisions
of labour. She posits that there is a gap in historical knowledge concerning
the intercontinental intersections of intimacies.[28] Gwenn
Miller’s essay shows the key role of Aleut and Alutiiq women as mediators in
the Russian expansion in to Alaska during the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries. Despite the paucity of written records, Miller argues
that historians can see evidence of proximity from material artifacts.[29] This
evidence of everyday life activities “encompass both violence and dependence;
the tension between the two is part and parcel of colonial ties.”[30] Shannon
Lee Dawdy’s close textual analysis of a slave-owner’s how-to manual suggests
that we consider the “domain of the intimate” as a global space in circuits of
knowledge production.[31]
Collectively, these chapters suggest an
extremely broad definition of intimacy. At times, this definition may be too
broad, or too contradictory, to be useful. There is tension between scholars in
how “intimacy” is defined. In some cases, this is problematic, such as in Laura
Wexler’s analysis of Kate Chopin’s experiences of domestic violence. Wexler
argues that other scholars position intimacy as equivalent to sexuality and
thus genital penetration, and calls for scholarship going beyond this narrow
vision of white male violence.[32] This
is troubling, as scholars in this collection had already employed a more plural
and nuanced concept of intimacy, so that Wexler was essentially arguing against
a straw man. Nonetheless, this is evidence of a complex and intersecting
conversation between historians on what is, at this point, a fairly novel
thread of analysis.
Three concluding chapters cement the
significance of this collection. Linda Gordon argues that historians need to
revive the concept of “internal colonialism” and include within it a gender
analysis.[33]
She stresses the need for an integration of gender with all facets of history,
as women and gender are key to state and colonial power.[34] Historians
can broaden their understanding of the meanings of accommodation and resistance,
she suggests, by studying the intimate.[35]
Catherine Hall’s commentary resituates
this collection’s contributions as an extension of Van Kirk’s work, suggesting
that readers consider Van Kirk’s scholarship through a lens of affect; the
control of Aboriginal women’s love, care and sex, she argues, shows the
importance of affect to colonial rule.[36] Finally,
Nancy Cott’s afterword stresses the need to consider intimacies in analyses of
governing strategies.[37]
According to Mary Louise Pratt in her
article “Arts of the Contact Zone,” contact zones are “social spaces where
cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each other, often in contexts of highly
asymmetrical relations of power, such as colonialism, slavery, or their
aftermaths as they are lived out in many parts of the world today.” They are,
she argues, a useful concept for reconsidering models of community.[38] Pratt
uses this concept to analyze phenomena such as autoethnography and
transculturation as products of an uneven relationship. For Pratt, contact
zones are places of chaos, anomaly, and heterogeneity.[39] Drawing
on Benedict Anderson’s work, she notes that contact can occur between imagined
entities, rather than stable and concrete communities.[40]
Katie Pickles and Myra Rutherdale add a
gendered dimension to Pratt’s concept in their edited collection, appropriately
entitled Contact Zones, in which chapters consider relationships between
settler and Aboriginal women in Canada. The dozen essays in this volume firmly
position urban streets, missions, legal systems, and cultural forms as contact
zones; what is unclear is whether these spaces formed one cohesive, interlinked
contact zone, or many discrete zones. Certainly, the chapters weave together
diverse theoretical paths to a contact zone and successfully position the
contact zone as a gendered colonial space. The purpose of the collection is
most clearly articulated by Adele Perry, who states, “gendered encounters in
British Columbia were…complicated interactions that cannot be disaggregated
from the asymmetrical power relations upon which Europe’s colonizing project
was premised, nourished, and maintained.”[41]
The arrangement and meanings attached to
physical space were an important element of contact zones. According to Jean
Barman, the streets of colonial Victoria were significant as a location that
signified Aboriginal women as sex workers – newcomer men assumed that women
claiming or taking up space were sexually available.[42] This
labeling of women as prostitutes was a way of constraining their agency.[43]
Jarvis Brownlie further highlights this extra surveillance placed upon
Aboriginal women’s sexuality, shown in the correspondence of Indian Agents who
assumed their right to regulate Aboriginal women’s sexuality and gender
expression, and exercised this regulation by controlling access to treaty
payments, relief, and the women’s own children.[44] Sarah
Carter shows how this regulation actually transgressed Canadian laws, as
withholding treaty payments was not legal, but a wide interpretation of the
Indian Act.[45]
Age adds another layer of complexity to Brownlie’s analysis; older women were
of economic concern to these Indian agents, rather than a moral or sexual problem.
Agents took a paternalistic tone of responsibility towards older women,
emphasizing a need to ensure their welfare.[46] Adele
Perry highlights the intersection of gendered and racialized bodies with
geographical spaces, arguing that a key colonial concern was reducing the
mobility of First Nations people, creating permanence in order to civilized
populations.[47]
Women’s labour was an important component of this intersection, as an important
capitalist commodity that gave women a ‘dangerous’ degree of independence.[48]
Contact Zones
also shows the doors opened by Van
Kirk’s scholarship, in Sherry Farrell Racette’s analysis of Métis women’s
sewing and artistic production. Farrell Racette draws upon oral history to
argue that Métis women’s sewing was integral to fur trade posts, enabling
economic and physical survival in a subarctic climate.[49] More
critically, however, she considers the symbolic power of clothing in giving
women power by dressing men, “[inscribing] their voices on the canvas of the
male body.”[50]
This fashioning of bodies was a two-way process; Myra Rutherdale situates
clothing as a symbol of missionary work, as Aboriginal women adopted or
resisted Western dress.[51] One
perhaps unusual element of Contact Zones is its significant engagement
with male theorists. Editors Katie Pickles and Myra Rutherdale point out that
this shows how Foucault and Derrida form a good deal of “the scaffolding for
much feminist thinking on the body.”[52] This
reliance is not unique to Contact Zones; despite the utility of Foucault
and Derrida, it is perhaps surprising that theories by feminist anti-racist
scholars have not figured more prominently in these collections.
In her frequently cited work, Imperial
Leather, Anne McClintock links colonialism with the conquest of colonized
women’s sexuality and labour, and explores what she refers to as a “dangerous
and contradictory liaison” of dyads such as money and sexuality, violence and
desire, and labour and resistance.[53] She
highlights a need for an integrated analysis of the “intimate, reciprocal, and
contradictory relations” between gender, race, and class, arguing, “an
elaborate analogy between race and gender became…an organizing trope for
other social forms” including, for example, the cult of domesticity.[54] In
colonial contexts where experiences, particularly those of violence, were not
written, McClintock extends the idea of discourse beyond its traditional
textual application to cover colonial actions as well.[55] Considering
gender and race, McClintock interrogates whiteness and masculinity, rather than
strictly focusing on the experiences of marginalized races.[56] Given
the ongoing colonial marginalization of women of colour, McClintock rejects
ideas such as “postcolonialism” and complicates notions of agency, calling for
“a more diverse politics of agency, involving the dense web of relations
between coercion, negotiation, complicity, refusal, dissembling, mimicry,
compromise, affiliation, and revolt.”[57]
In Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow,
Jacqueline Jones stresses the position
of black women as mothers.[58] This
is a perspective that is muted in analyses of Aboriginal Canadian women
considered in this paper – most of the other historians I have considered here focus
on women’s roles as wives. Women’s roles as mothers worked in relation
to their roles in the marketplace as paid or slave labour that reinforced their
subordinate status as black and as women.[59] Jones’s
focus on women’s agency rather than victimization appears to be a trend in the
study of women’s history during the 1980s. In this case, black women’s agency
was apparent in the extent of care that they applied to their work in different
contexts.[60]
Jones considers how black women’s labour was critical to industrial development,
by providing raw materials such as cotton, and by freeing white women from
daily domestic tasks so that they could shop, work outside the home in paid
labour or in social welfare activities; while black women played an important
role in development, they lacked social power, having only informal community
authority rather than control over their labour and production.[61] She illustrates
continuities and changes in black women’s roles and experiences prior to,
through, and following the civil war, then through the late nineteenth until
the late twentieth century, highlighting the commonalities and diversity of
black women.[62]
Finally, Kay Anderson’s Vancouver's Chinatown is a pioneering
work that demonstrates race as socially constructed. While Anderson’s emphasis
is on racial discourse, she shows how gendered discourse interweaves with the
racialization of Chinese people and spaces. Chinatown was a space for the
application and reproduction of white ideas about the Chinese, showing the geographical
underpinnings of racialization (and the racial underpinnings of geography?),
and how these constructions can be resilient as well as mutable.[63]
As the Chinese community was, for some time, largely male, the predominant
construction of a Chinese person was that of “John Chinaman,” a potential
threat to white women.[64]
Anderson’s work highlights an ongoing
thread in these analyses of gender and colonialism, where one can see
importance of physical space in the intersection of gender and race in colonial
contexts. Within this selection of work, readers can see the utility of
concepts such as the contact zone and a broad understanding of affect and intimacy
as tools for understanding the complex colonial linkages between race and
gender.
[1]
Sylvia Van Kirk, Many
Tender Ties: Women in Fur-Trade Society, 1670-1870 (Winnipeg: Watson &
Dwyer, 2011), 17, 73.
[2]
Ibid., 19, 23, 24.
[3]
Ibid., 44.
[4]
Ibid., 51.
[5]
Ibid., 55, 56, 64.
[6]
Ibid., 83-85.
[7]
Ibid.,106.
[8]
Van Kirk, Many
Tender Ties, 130.
[9]
Ibid., 73.
[10]
Ibid., 26-27.
[11]
Franca Iacovetta,
“Silvia Van Kirk: A Feminist Appreciation of Front-Line Work in the Academy,”
in Finding a Way to the Heart: Feminist Writings on Aboriginal and Women’s
History in Canada, ed. Robin Brownlie and Valerie Korinek (Winnipeg, MB:
University of Manitoba Press, 2012), 40.
[12]
Jennifer S.H. Brown,
“‘All These Stories About Women’: ‘Many Tender Ties’ and a New Fur Trade
History,” in Finding a Way to the Heart, 33.
[13]
Brownlie and Korinek,
eds., Finding a Way to the Heart,
3.
[14]
Ibid., 7, 9.
[15]
Elizabeth Jameson,
“Ties Across the Border,” in Finding a Way to the Heart, 66, 67.
[16]
Kathryn McPherson,
“Home Tales: Gender, Domesticity, and Colonialism in the Prairie West,
1870-1900,” in Finding a Way to the Heart, 232-233, 239.
[17]
Brownlie, “Others or
Brothers?: Competing Settler and Anishinabe Discourses About Race in Upper
Canada,” in Finding a Way to the Heart, 171.
[18]
Ibid.,173.
[19]
Ibid., 180.
[20]
Victoria Freeman,
“Attitudes Towards ‘Miscegenation’ In Canada, the United States, New Zealand,
and Australia, 1860-1914,” in Finding a Way to the Heart, 204.
[21]
Ibid., 207, 210.
[22]
Ann Laura Stoler, ed., Haunted
by Empire: Geographies of Intimacy in North American History, American
Encounters/global Interactions (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), 23, 31.
[23]
Ibid., 24.
[24]
Ibid., 24-25.
[25]
Nayan Shah,
“Adjudicating Intimacies on U.S. Frontiers,” in Haunted by Empire, 116, 118.
[26]
Stoler, ed., Haunted
by Empire, 1-2.
[27]
Damon Salesa, “Samoa’s
Half-Castes and Some Frontiers of Comparison,” in Haunted by Empire, 72.
[28]
Lisa Lowe, “The
Intimacies of Four Continents,” in Haunted by Empire, 191, 192.
[29]
Miller, Gwenn. “‘The
Perfect Mistress of Russian Economy’: Sighting the Intimate on a Colonial
Alaskan Terrain, 1784-1821,” in Haunted by Empire, 301.
[30]
Ibid., 315.
[31]
Shannon Lee Dawdy,
“Proper Caresses and Prudent Distance: A How-To Manual from Colonial
Louisiana,” in Haunted by Empire: Geographies of Intimacy in North American
History, ed. Ann Laura Stoler, American Encounters/global Interactions
(Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), 143.
[32]
Laura Wexler, “The Fair
Ensemble: Kate Chopin in St. Louis in 1904,” in Haunted by Empire, 275.
[33]
Linda Gordon, “Internal
Colonialism and Gender,” in Haunted by Empire, 427.
[34]
Ibid., 422-423.
[35]
Ibid., 443.
[36]
Catherine Hall,
“Commentary,” in Haunted by Empire,
456, 460.
[37]
Nancy F Cott,
“Afterword,” in Haunted by Empire,
470.
[38]
Mary Louise Pratt,
“Arts of the Contact Zone,” Profession (1991): 34.
[39]
Ibid., 34.
[40]
Ibid., 39.
[41]
Adele Perry,
“Metropolitan Knowledge, Colonial Practice, and Indigenous Womanhood: Missions
in Nineteenth-Century British Columbia,” in Contact Zones: Aboriginal and
Settler Women in Canada’s Colonial Past, ed. Katie Pickles and Myra
Rutherdale (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2005), 109.
[42]
Jean Barman,
“Aboriginal Women on the Streets of Victoria: Rethinking Transgressive
Sexuality during the Colonial Encounter,” in Contact Zones, 205–206.
[43]
Ibid., 221.
[44]
Robin Jarvis Brownlie,
“Intimate Surveillance: Indian Affairs, Colonization, and the Regulation of
Aboriginal Women’s Sexuality,” in Contact Zones, 163.
[45]
Sarah Carter, “Creating
‘Semi-Widows’ and ‘Supernumerary Wives’: Prohibiting Polygamy in Prairie
Canada’s Aboriginal Communities to 1900,” in Contact Zones, 153.
[46]
Brownlie, “Intimate
Surveillance,” 164.
[47]
Perry, “Metropolitan
Knowledge,” 113.
[48]
Ibid., 123.
[49]
Sherry Farrell Racette,
“Sewing for a Living: The Commodification of Metis Women’s Artistic
Production,” in Contact Zones, 24.
[50]
Ibid., 41-42.
[51]
Myra Rutherdale, “‘She
Was a Ragged Little Thing:’ Missionaries, Embodiment, and Refashioning
Aboriginal Womanhood in Northern Canada,” in Contact Zones, 240.
[52]
Pickles and Rutherdale,
Contact Zones, 3.
[53]
Anne McClintock, Imperial
Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Conquest (New York:
Routledge, 1995), 3-4.
[54]
McClintock, Imperial Leather, 5, 7.
[55]
Ibid., 16.
[56]
Ibid., 8.
[57]
Ibid., 11-13, 15.
[58]
Jacqueline Jones, Labor
of Love, Labor of Sorrow Black Women, Work, and the Family from Slavery to the
Present (New York: Basic Books, 1985), 3.
[59]
Ibid., 3.
[60]
Ibid., 5.
[61]
Ibid., 6, 7.
[62]
Jones, Labor of Love, 10.
[63]
Kay Anderson, Vancouver’s
Chinatown: Racial Discourse in Canada, 1875-1980 (Montreal; Buffalo:
McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1991), 6-7.
[64]
Ibid., 71, 98.
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