ABSTRACT

In this highly original volume of social history, Karen Anderson makes a provocative claim: the subjugation of women in seventeenth-century New France was linked with the brutal colonization of native Indian populations. Before colonization, the Huron and Montagnais tribes lived in gender-egalitarian societies. The domination of women by men was only one effect of French "civilization"--along with warfare, disease, famine and Jesuit proselytization--which combined to destroy Indian culture and sexual equality. Anderson's is an interdisciplinary, cross-cultural, feminist case study of the historical and political construction of gender and racial inequality.

chapter 1|12 pages

‘Proud, Disobedient and Ill-Tempered'

chapter 5|31 pages

‘This Little Fury of Hell'

chapter 6|28 pages

‘Women Sustain the Families'

chapter 8|30 pages

‘Death Over a Slow Fire'

chapter 9|32 pages

‘Chain Her by One Foot'

chapter 10|6 pages

Conclusions