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Winner of the 2024 William Mills Prize for Non-Fiction Polar Books One of the few biographies of an Inuk man from the 19th Century--separated from his family, community, and language--finding his place in history. > Tataneuck's life was shaped by the inescapable, harsh environments he lived within, and he was an important, but not widely recognized, player in the struggle for the possession of northwest North America waged by Britain, Russia, and the United States. He left no diaries or letters. Using the Hudson's Bay Company's journals and historical archives, historian Renee Fossett has…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Winner of the 2024 William Mills Prize for Non-Fiction Polar Books One of the few biographies of an Inuk man from the 19th Century--separated from his family, community, and language--finding his place in history. > Tataneuck's life was shaped by the inescapable, harsh environments he lived within, and he was an important, but not widely recognized, player in the struggle for the possession of northwest North America waged by Britain, Russia, and the United States. He left no diaries or letters. Using the Hudson's Bay Company's journals and historical archives, historian Renee Fossett has pieced together a compelling biography of Augustine and the historical times he lived through: climate disasters, lethal disease episodes, and political upheavals on an international scale. While The Life and Times of Augustine Tataneuck is a captivating portrait of an Inuk man who lived an extraordinary life, it also is an arresting, unique glimpse into the North as it was in the 19th century and into the lives of trappers, translators, and labourers who are seldom written about and often absent in the historical record.
Autorenporträt
Renee Fossett had a PhD in history from the University of Manitoba and was a Harington Fellow at the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies at the University of Winnipeg. She lived in the Arctic for ten years as a community teacher.