Nothing to Write Home About: British Family Correspondence and the Settler Colonial Everyday in British Columbia

Awards:   Commended for The Wilson Book Prize, McMaster University 2020 (Canada)
Author:   Laura Ishiguro
Publisher:   University of British Columbia Press
ISBN:  

9780774838443


Pages:   308
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Nothing to Write Home About: British Family Correspondence and the Settler Colonial Everyday in British Columbia


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Awards

  • Commended for The Wilson Book Prize, McMaster University 2020 (Canada)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Laura Ishiguro
Publisher:   University of British Columbia Press
Imprint:   University of British Columbia Press
Weight:   0.460kg
ISBN:  

9780774838443


ISBN 10:   0774838442
Pages:   308
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part 1: Relative Distances 1 “Bind the Empire Together”: The Postal System, Family Letters, and British Columbia 2 “Affection Can Overstep Distance”: The Letter as Trans-Imperial Family Part 2: The Colonial Commonplace 3 “Absolutely Nothing Going on”: Epistolary Emotion and Unremarkable Colonial Knowledge 4 “A Dreadful Little Glutton”: Settler Food Practices and the Epistolary Everyday Part 3: Family Faultlines, Fractured Knowledge 5 “Irreparable Loss”: Family Rupture and Reconfiguration in Letters about Death 6 “Say Nothing”: Epistolary Gossip, Silence, and the Strategic Limits of Intimacy Conclusion Notes; Bibliography; Index

Reviews

Laura Ishiguro has written a fine book. Her meticulous examination of colonial correspondence is engaging and illuminating. She displays a considerable sensitivity for the language used by white settlers to discursively claim British Columbia and normalise their presence there. Ishiguro is especially skilful in summarising her conclusions at the end of each chapter, fluently articulating the tangled voices of British settlers. -- Robert Hogg * The Ormsby Review *


"""[...]seemingly disparate topics are interwoven with the central threads of settler colonialism and trans-imperial family relations to produce a cohesive and sophisticated analysis."" -- Erin Millions * Left History * Laura Ishiguro has written a fine book. Her meticulous examination of colonial correspondence is engaging and illuminating. She displays a considerable sensitivity for the language used by white settlers to discursively claim British Columbia and normalise their presence there. Ishiguro is especially skilful in summarising her conclusions at the end of each chapter, fluently articulating the tangled voices of British settlers. -- Robert Hogg * The Ormsby Review *"


""[...]seemingly disparate topics are interwoven with the central threads of settler colonialism and trans-imperial family relations to produce a cohesive and sophisticated analysis."" -- Erin Millions * Left History * Laura Ishiguro has written a fine book. Her meticulous examination of colonial correspondence is engaging and illuminating. She displays a considerable sensitivity for the language used by white settlers to discursively claim British Columbia and normalise their presence there. Ishiguro is especially skilful in summarising her conclusions at the end of each chapter, fluently articulating the tangled voices of British settlers. -- Robert Hogg * The Ormsby Review *


Author Information

Laura Ishiguro is an assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of British Columbia, where she is a historian of settler colonialism, mobility, family, and the everyday in Canada and the British Empire. Her research has been published in a number of edited collections and journals, including a 2016 article in BC Studies – “Growing Up and Grown Up […] in Our Future City: Discourses of Childhood and Settler Futurity in Colonial British Columbia” – which won the 2017 Canadian Committee on Migration, Ethnicity, and Transnationalism article prize. She has also coedited (with Esmé Cleall and Emily J. Manktelow) a 2013 special issue of the Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History on histories of family in the British Empire, and edited a 2016 special issue of BC Studies on histories of settler colonialism in British Columbia. She is an associate of the Wilson Institute for Canadian History at McMaster University (2017–20) and a recipient of the Killam Teaching Prize at UBC (2018).

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