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First Nations Studies
1020E -
Introduction to First Nations Studies
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An interdisciplinary survey of First Nations issues, from academic and community perspectives including indigenous knowledge, historical background, oral history, socio-political context, arts, language and culture. Specific practical examples will be explored by researchers and community members actually engaged in their contemporary documentation and resolution.
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First Nations Studies
2101E -
Iroquoian Perspective and Tradition
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Through the in-depth examination of Iroquoian (Mohawk) language, mythology, legends, and ceremonial texts, this course offers an introduction to the unique world view of the Iroquoian people and an examination of its continuing relevance in contemporary Iroquoian society.
Prerequisite(s):
Any Arts and Humanities or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2102E -
Algonquian Perspective and Tradition
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A continuation of Algonquian language acquisition (e.g., Ojibwe) utilizing mythology, legends and ceremonial texts as the basis for examining a unique world view of the Algonquian peoples and their continuation and survival in contemporary Algonquian communities.
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First Nations Studies
2103F/G -
Lunaape Language, Culture and History
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Students will be introduced to the basics of the Lunaape (Delaware) language, a North American Indigenous language. Students will examine the relationships of that language to various culturally relevant concepts and historical experiences of the Lunaape people.
Antirequisite(s):
FNS 2253F/G taken Fall 2014.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2111E -
Perspectives on Native-Newcomer Relations, c. 1500 to Present
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An examination of issues surrounding First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples since first contact. It explores the development of current relationships with the governments and peoples of Canada based on interaction with European powers, settlers and subsequent British and Canadian administrations. Indigenous historical knowledge and community perspectives will be emphasized.
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First Nations Studies
2112 -
Iroquoian Language and Culture
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In this course the student will learn the basics of a particular North American aboriginal language (Mohawk) and will examine the relationships of that language to various culturally relevant concepts.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2113 -
Algonquian Language and Culture
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Students will learn the basics of a particular North American Aboriginal language (e.g., Ojibwe) and will examine the relationships of that language to various culturally relevant concepts.
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First Nations Studies
2132F/G -
Cultures of Native North America
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This course will examine the traditional cultures and culture areas of Native North America. Contemporary peoples will be compared in Canada and the United States as a product of different histories and different traditional ways of life.
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First Nations Studies
2203F/G -
Indigenous Peoples, Globalization, and the Environment
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An examination of natural resource development emphasizing the interplay between indigenous people, the state and transnational developers. Topics include: environmentalism and livelihood; land rights; corporate power and state policies; common property and community-based resource management; NGOs in environmental politics; sustainability and the greening of development.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2204E-2210E -
Selected Topics in First Nations Studies
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First Nations Studies
2211F/G -
Cultures of the Caribbean
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An introduction to the Caribbean and circum-Caribbean, emphasizing religion, aesthetic styles, current political processes, and relationships of the region and its peoples to Canada.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2212F/G -
Cultures of the Pacific
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The cultures of Polynesia, Micronesia and Melanesia with an emphasis on indigenous social structures. Other topics include ecology and economy, male-female relations, ritual and cosmology, hierarchical and egalitarian political systems, Pacific history, and contemporary political and economic issues.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2216F/G -
Cultures of Latin America
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The cultural history of Latin American societies. Topics include the historical formation of indigenous communities, and a wide variety of contemporary social problems in Latin America.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2217F/G -
First Nations Traditional Cultures of Canada
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Cultural and linguistic areas of Canada, subsistence patterns, social and political organization, religion, ethnohistory of the fur trade and Metis, treaties, accessing First Nations viewpoints.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2218F/G -
Contemporary First Nations Issues in Canada
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Education, land claims, sovereignty, social justice, hunting and fishing rights, co-management of resources, spirituality, pow-wows, oral history, language maintenance; media representation, cross-cultural mis-communication, Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2231F/G -
Archaeology of North America
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An overview of the archaeology of native peoples north of Mexico. Topics include the evolution of Plains bison hunting, the origins of agriculture and Pueblo societies in the Southwest, the development of social complexity amongst the mound builders of the Mississippi Valley, and the colonization of the High Arctic.
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First Nations Studies
2232F/G -
Prehistoric Civilizations of Mesoamerica
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The prehistoric societies of Mexico and Central America. Topics include the entry of humans into the New World and their arrival in Mesoamerica; appearance of agriculture and settled village life; evolution of cities and civilizations; development of historic Aztec and Maya societies; effect of the Spanish Conquest.
Antirequisite(s):
Anthropology 2232F/G.
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First Nations Studies
2233F/G -
Archaeology of Ontario and the Great Lakes
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The prehistoric societies of Ontario and surrounding areas. Topics include the entry of humans into the New World and their arrival in Ontario; development of agriculture; appearance of historic period societies such as the Huron, Neutral and Ojibwa; impact of European settlement and economic systems on native societies.
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First Nations Studies
2234F/G -
Andean Prehistory
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This course will focus primarily on the prehistory of the Peruvian Andes and Coast, with some overlap into Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile and Amazonia. We will study the area's archaeological record in some detail, touching on a variety of themes that are of general archaeological interest, e.g. agricultural origins, trade, the rise of complex societies, the role of religious ideology, and the interpretation of archaeological evidence.
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First Nations Studies
2251F/G-2261F/G -
Selected Topics in First Nations Studies
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First Nations Studies
2500F/G -
North American Indigenous Arts
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An introduction to the decorative expressions of selected North American Indigenous peoples, from before contact to the present, providing descriptions of manufacture and use with culturally relevant explanations for non-ritual and ritual applications. Students will have the opportunity to understand and appreciate Indigenous worldviews through artistic expressions in daily life.
Antirequisite(s):
FNS 2254F/G.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2501F/G -
Iroquoian Arts
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An introduction to the decorative expression of Iroquoian peoples, from before contact to the present, providing descriptions of manufacture and use with culturally relevant explanations for non-ritual and ritual applications. Students will have the opportunity to understand and appreciate the Iroquoian worldview through its artistic expressions in daily life.
Antirequisite(s):
FNS 2255F/G.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2601F/G -
Indigenous Environments
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The consequences of physical environmental change for Indigenous communities around the globe will be examined in relation to the processes of colonialism and environmental dispossession. Topics include: identity, culture, local economies, social functioning, food security and health.
Prerequisite(s):
1.0 course from Geography 1100, 1300A/B, 1400F/G, 1500F/G, 2131A/B, 2153A/B (taken after September 2012), or First Nations Studies 1020E; Women's Studies 1020E, Health Sciences 1001A/B and Health Sciences 1002A/B, or the former Health Sciences 1000; Sociology 1020, 1021E, 1025A/B, 1026F/G, 1027A/B or enrolment in the Major in Ecosystem Health or in any of the Globalization Studies modules, or permission from the Instructor.
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First Nations Studies
2901E -
The First Nations in Canadian History
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First Nations peoples are the original inhabitants of Canada. This course will examine history recorded since European contact with all possible efforts to privilege an Aboriginal point of view and the contribution Aboriginal peoples have made and continue to make to Canada as a nation-state and as a cultural community.
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First Nations Studies
2910F/G -
Contacts: Indigenous and European People
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An overview of first contacts between Indigenous People and Europeans in the Americas. First
contact took many forms – from prophecy to physical meetings – since the late 1400s. Students will use a combination of primary and secondary sources to explore a series of different first contacts throughout the Americas.
Antirequisite(s):
History 2811F/G.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
2919F/G -
The Iroquoians: Their History and Culture
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An examination of the culture and history of the Iroquoian Peoples from European contact to present day as presented by historical and contemporary writings and interpretation of events. Students will use a combination of primary and secondary sources drawn from both Iroquoian and Non-Iroquoian traditions.
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Registration in second year or higher of any program.
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First Nations Studies
3001F/G -
Special Topics in First Nations Studies
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Special topics of current interest in the First Nations. List of special topics may be available in the Program office.
Antirequisite(s):
Prerequisite(s):
Third of fourth year registration in any program with approval of the Director.
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First Nations Studies
3002E -
Special Topics in First Nations Studies
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Special topics of interest in First Nations Studies. List of topics may be available in the Program's office.
Antirequisite(s):
Prerequisite(s):
Registration in third year in any program.
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First Nations Studies
3003 -
Special Topics in First Nations Studies
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Topic available in the office of First Nations Studies.
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One 2000-level First Nations course or permission of the Director of First Nations Studies.
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First Nations Studies
3011F/G -
Readings in First Nations Studies
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Individual reading and research of current interest in First Nations topics. Students must make arrangements with a Professor in the First Nations Studies program. An application must be completed with approval from the Instructor and the Director. Applications are available in the First Nations Studies office.
Antirequisite(s):
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Third or fourth year registration in any program with approval of the Director.
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First Nations Studies
3140F/G -
Indigenous Knowledge and Traditions
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Indigenous knowledge, as a distinctive field of study, is emerging as an important tool in the movement toward self determination and empowerment. This course will examine Indigenous beliefs, ways of knowing, and worldviews to understand their differences and similarities, while exploring contemporary expressions through a variety of sources and interpretations.
Antirequisite(s):
First Nations Studies 3141F/G.
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First Nations Studies
3500F/G -
Indigenous Music
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Students will learn basic Indigenous music philosophy and apply this knowledge through practical singing and performative experience while examining the philosophical disposition of Indigenous music. Students will come away from this course with practical experience and experiential knowledge of Indigenous music (traditional cultural or contemporary).
Antirequisite(s):
FNS 3001F/G taken Fall 2013 or Fall 2014.
Prerequisite(s):
Any first year Arts or Social Science 1.0 or 0.5 Essay course.
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First Nations Studies
3722F/G -
First Nations Political and Legal Issues
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Political and legal issues are inseparable in contemporary examinations of land use, self-determination, governance, individual and community rights. This course will examine the legal institutions and practices of traditional First Nations cultures as well as contemporary practice.
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First Nations Studies
3817F/G -
Cultural Structures of First Nations Imagination
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Representations of the First Nations, particularly by First Nations writers and artists. Folklore, art, oral tradition, fiction, poetry and drama analyzed in relation to performance of First Nations identity in contemporary Canadian society.
Antirequisite(s):
Anthropology 3317F/G.
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First Nations Studies
3880F/G -
First Nations Literatures
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North American aboriginal texts in English. The course may include a variety of genres, including oral traditions, narrative, poetry, drama, and film.
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First Nations Studies
4001F/G -
Advanced Special Topics in First Nations Studies
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Special topics of current interest in First Nations Studies. List of special topics may be vailable from the First Nations Studies office.
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Registration in fourth year in any program.
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First Nations Studies
4002E -
Advanced Special Topics in First Nations Studies
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Special topics of current interest in First Nations Studies. Consult the First Nations Studies Office for the current topic.
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Registration in fourth year in any program or by special permission of the Director.
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First Nations Studies
4011F/G -
Supervised Readings/ Research in First Nations Studies
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Individual reading and research of current interest in First Nations topics. Student must make arrangements with a Professor in the First Nations Studies program. An application must be completed with approval from the Instructor and the Director. Applications are available in the First Nations Studies office.
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Fourth year registration in any program with the approval of the Director.
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First Nations Studies
4022E -
Field School in First Nations Studies
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An advanced seminar course combining in-class discussions of theoretical texts, research papers alongside community-based research. Students will be trained in appropriate methodologies and ethics of working with First Nations Communities. Areas of research and instruction may include land claims, self-government, education, health care, and urban issues.
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Prerequisite(s):
Registration in fourth year, a 70% average in First Nations Studies, 1.5 courses from First Nations Studies 3140F/G, 3141F/G, 3306F/G, 3722F/G, 3911F/G, 3921F/G, 3971F/G, or permission of the instructor.
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First Nations Studies
4023F/G -
Community-Based Research in First Nations Studies
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This is an advanced community-based experiential course that combines in-class discussions with community based research. Students will train in methodologies and ethics of working with First Nations communities. Areas of research may include but not limited to ecological restoration, land claims, self-government, education, health and wellness and urban issues.
Prerequisite(s):
Permission of the Department and in third or fourth year of a First Nations Studies Module.
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First Nations Studies
4141F/G -
Ethics and Epistemology in First Nations Studies
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Ethical research in First Nations Studies depends on respect for traditional cultural and social practices. The course will examine the underlying philosophical assumptions around social and political life among various Canadian First Nations. Successful cross-cultural communication depends on this intersection of ethical and epistemological premises.
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First Nations Studies
4722F/G -
Indigenous Law and Justice
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Concepts of Indigenous law and justice are explored, initially within their contexts of origin and later in relation to settler state concepts of law and justice. Additionally, students will gain an understanding of past legal decisions regarding Indigenous peoples that form the basis of contemporary Indigenous law in Canada.
Antirequisite(s):
FNS 4001F/G taken Fall 2011 or Fall 2012.
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First Nations Studies
4901F/G -
Topics in First Nations History
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Students will research a variety of specialized historical subjects relating to political, social, and economic interactions with non-Natives. After sampling secondary writings, student will draw on archival, visual, and oral records to offer first-hand experiences in dealing with the complexity of source materials.
Prerequisite(s):
2.0 First Nations Studies or History courses at the 2200 level or above.
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First Nations Studies
4902F/G -
Land Claims and Primary Historical Research Methods
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This course offers students practical skills to conduct historical research into land claims and their historical context in Canada. The course focuses upon government documents and explores topics including oral history, comprehensive and specific claims process, claims and the courts, role of industry, and governments’ duty to consult First Nations.
Antirequisite(s):
History 4817F/G
Prerequisite(s):
2.0 First Nations Studies or History courses at the 2200 level or above, or permission of Director of First Nations Studies Program.
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First Nations Studies
4903F/G -
Indigenous Historical Research and Methodologies
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This course examines Indigenous constructions of history as well as issues and tensions between Indigenous peoples and the contemporary discipline of history. Themes will include Indigenous historical methodologies (including but not limited to oral histories), re-examining the colonial historic record, and contemporary Tribal Nation history projects.
Prerequisite(s):
History 2209E or FNS 2901E; and one other History course at the 2200 level or above, or one FNS 2000-level course or above
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