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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Travis Hay , Teri Redsky FiddlerPublisher: University of Manitoba Press Imprint: University of Manitoba Press Weight: 0.333kg ISBN: 9780887559402ISBN 10: 0887559409 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 30 September 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews""An important text in understanding the sordid history of Canada's disastrous Indian policy. Hay takes care to address these topics in an appropriate and respectful manner and steps away from the history of settler colonial scholarship that presumes to write about Indigenous peoples rather than with them.""--Caden Colegrove ""Prairie History"" ""Travis Hay wisely interprets this study and its impact through a larger study of colonial science and its operation in Canada and internationally... Hay also includes the history of Indigenous peoples speaking back to colonial science, most notably through the histories of Jacob and Josias Fiddler, a father and son, who both served as chiefs at Sandy Lake First Nation.""--Catherine Carstairs ""The Canadian Historical Review"" ""Hay's chapters on Canada's early settler colonialism and Indian policy are illuminating and well worth reading. On the science of settler colonialism, he brings to life the men who were instrumental in establishing the Indian policies, shored by the intensive and perpetual study of First Nations people.""--Sheilla Jones ""Winnipeg Free Press"" ""Hay's book incites productive outrage towards the unjust practices in Canada's federal and provincial healthcare systems [and] invites his readers to consider who benefits, and who is harmed, when settlers conduct extractive research within Indigenous communities.""--Lauren Luchenski ""Ontario History"" ""Inventing the Thrifty Gene is a wonderful book: it turns the tables on the scientists--it is their ""settler science"" that should be dissected instead. What we learn is that it is bad science and that it has been bad science since its inception."" --Lorenzo Veracini ""University of Toronto Quarterly"" ""Inventing the Thrifty Gene is an excellent read. Hay ably shows that settler science is complicit in masking the real causes of negative Indigenous health outcomes. He eloquently explores the history of settler-colonial science, as well as various policies that helped create the mythological notion of the thrifty gene."" --Karl Hele ""Anishinabek News"" ""Travis Hay has written a passionate indictment of the impact that the science of settler colonialism has had on First Nations communities... Inventing the Thrifty Gene is a welcome addition to a growing body of scholarship that criticizes the privileging of genetic explanations when trying to understand the roots of ill health. Hay draws heavily on this scholarship, which he cites often and generously. What he contributes is a unique synthesis of past work, coupled with his own archival research, to reveal the long and sustained indifference to the health of First Nations peoples [in Canada]."" --Arleen Marcia Tuchman ""American Review of Canadian Studies"" An important text in understanding the sordid history of Canada's disastrous Indian policy. Hay takes care to address these topics in an appropriate and respectful manner and steps away from the history of settler colonial scholarship that presumes to write about Indigenous peoples rather than with them. --Caden Colegrove Prairie History Travis Hay has written a passionate indictment of the impact that the science of settler colonialism has had on First Nations communities... Inventing the Thrifty Gene is a welcome addition to a growing body of scholarship that criticizes the privileging of genetic explanations when trying to understand the roots of ill health. Hay draws heavily on this scholarship, which he cites often and generously. What he contributes is a unique synthesis of past work, coupled with his own archival research, to reveal the long and sustained indifference to the health of First Nations peoples [in Canada]. --Arleen Marcia Tuchman American Review of Canadian Studies Travis Hay wisely interprets this study and its impact through a larger study of colonial science and its operation in Canada and internationally... Hay also includes the history of Indigenous peoples speaking back to colonial science, most notably through the histories of Jacob and Josias Fiddler, a father and son, who both served as chiefs at Sandy Lake First Nation. --Catherine Carstairs The Canadian Historical Review Hay's chapters on Canada's early settler colonialism and Indian policy are illuminating and well worth reading. On the science of settler colonialism, he brings to life the men who were instrumental in establishing the Indian policies, shored by the intensive and perpetual study of First Nations people. --Sheilla Jones Winnipeg Free Press Hay's book incites productive outrage towards the unjust practices in Canada's federal and provincial healthcare systems [and] invites his readers to consider who benefits, and who is harmed, when settlers conduct extractive research within Indigenous communities. --Lauren Luchenski Ontario History """An important text in understanding the sordid history of Canada's disastrous Indian policy. Hay takes care to address these topics in an appropriate and respectful manner and steps away from the history of settler colonial scholarship that presumes to write about Indigenous peoples rather than with them.""--Caden Colegrove ""Prairie History"" ""Travis Hay wisely interprets this study and its impact through a larger study of colonial science and its operation in Canada and internationally... Hay also includes the history of Indigenous peoples speaking back to colonial science, most notably through the histories of Jacob and Josias Fiddler, a father and son, who both served as chiefs at Sandy Lake First Nation.""--Catherine Carstairs ""The Canadian Historical Review"" ""Hay's chapters on Canada's early settler colonialism and Indian policy are illuminating and well worth reading. On the science of settler colonialism, he brings to life the men who were instrumental in establishing the Indian policies, shored by the intensive and perpetual study of First Nations people.""--Sheilla Jones ""Winnipeg Free Press"" ""Hay's book incites productive outrage towards the unjust practices in Canada's federal and provincial healthcare systems [and] invites his readers to consider who benefits, and who is harmed, when settlers conduct extractive research within Indigenous communities.""--Lauren Luchenski ""Ontario History"" ""Inventing the Thrifty Gene is a wonderful book: it turns the tables on the scientists--it is their ""settler science"" that should be dissected instead. What we learn is that it is bad science and that it has been bad science since its inception."" --Lorenzo Veracini ""University of Toronto Quarterly"" ""Inventing the Thrifty Gene is an excellent read. Hay ably shows that settler science is complicit in masking the real causes of negative Indigenous health outcomes. He eloquently explores the history of settler-colonial science, as well as various policies that helped create the mythological notion of the thrifty gene."" --Karl Hele ""Anishinabek News"" ""Travis Hay has written a passionate indictment of the impact that the science of settler colonialism has had on First Nations communities... Inventing the Thrifty Gene is a welcome addition to a growing body of scholarship that criticizes the privileging of genetic explanations when trying to understand the roots of ill health. Hay draws heavily on this scholarship, which he cites often and generously. What he contributes is a unique synthesis of past work, coupled with his own archival research, to reveal the long and sustained indifference to the health of First Nations peoples [in Canada]."" --Arleen Marcia Tuchman ""American Review of Canadian Studies""" Hay's chapters on Canada's early settler colonialism and Indian policy are illuminating and well worth reading. On the science of settler colonialism, he brings to life the men who were instrumental in establishing the Indian policies, shored by the intensive and perpetual study of First Nations people.--Sheilla Jones Winnipeg Free Press Author InformationTravis Hay is a historian of Canadian settler colonialism who was born and raised in Thunder Bay, Ontario. He is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Indigenous Learning Department at Lakehead University. Theresa (Teri) Redsky Fiddler is an Anishinabe Elder originally from Big Grassy and Shoal Lake First Nation. She is an educator, an advocate, and an important figure in Nishnawbe Aski Nation’s Health Transformation initiative. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |