Atikamekw and Euro-Canadian Territorialities around the Saint-Maurice River (1850–1930)


Abstract

This essay focuses on the processes of territorialization, deterritorialization and reterritorialization through which Euro-Canadian society extended its control along the valley of the St. Maurice River between 1850 and 1930. That territory had been settled by the Atikamekw people where they had established their hunting and fishing grounds for centuries. However, the Atikamekw people were confronted by environmental and technological transformations around the St. Maurice River with the implementation of sociotechnical systems during that time period, as two successive phases of industrialization based on specific water use brought along a proliferation of urban centers and the arrival of the large-scale industry. This was particularly the case when the proliferation of hydroelectric dams along the St. Maurice River and its tributaries followed the construction of fluvial infrastructure to facilitate the floating of wood pulp harvested in the upper basin of the river. Not only did the technical activities surrounding the construction of hydroelectric facilities materially transform the St. Maurice River watershed, they also allowed a symbolic appropriation of the land by the production of maps and surveys that ‘erased’ the presence of the Atikamekw. Physical and symbolic boundaries resulting from these new forms of organization and configuration of the territory restricted the spatial practices and representations of the Atikamekw. Logging confined these people within isolated enclaves (the so-called “Indian reserves”), while dams bypassed their networks of exchange and communication. The aim of this essay is to understand the conflicts between the territorialities of the Atikamekw and that of the Euro-Canadians by focusing on the place of water uses within the geographical imaginations and the land use patterns of these populations.


Keywords

Canada; Saint-Maurice River; Atikamekw; territory; watershed; industrialization

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Published : 2021-09-30


CastonguayS., & SamsonH. (2021). Atikamekw and Euro-Canadian Territorialities around the Saint-Maurice River (1850–1930). Review of International American Studies, 14(1), 25-47. https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.10017

Stephane Castonguay  Stephane.Castonguay@uqtr.ca
CIEQ-UQTR  Canada
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3084-8400

Stéphane Castonguay is Professor of history at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières. He coedited Metropolitan Natures (2011) with Michèle Dagenais, and Urban Rivers (2012) with Matthew Evenden, both in the History of the Urban Environment series from the University of Pittsburgh Press. His most recent book, The Government of Natural Resources. Science, Territory and State Power in Quebec, 1867–1939 (UBC Press, 2021), deals with the historical geography of state formation and natural resource exploitation.


Hubert Samson 
Groupe DDM, Quebec City, Canada  Canada
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2411-1787

Hubert Samson is currently employed at Groupe DDM. While studying at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières (UQTR), he developed a special interest in environmental issues. Under the supervision of Professor Stéphane Castonguay, he completed his master’s degree at UQTR with a thesis focusing on the industrial transformation of the St-Maurice valley between 1900 and 1930. He has worked on the territorial relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples as well as the socio-environmental repercussions of industrialization in the lands of the Haute-Mauricie Atikamekw communities.






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