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Citation: 

Conrad, Margaret, Natalie Dubé, David Northrup, and Keith Owre. “‘I want to know my bloodline’: New Brunswickers and Their Pasts.” Journal of New Brunswick Studies 1 (2010): 1-28.

Abstract/Summary: 

New Brunswick is a product of wars fought from 1689 to 1815. During these wars, all of which included battles on North American soil, the social relations among the First Nations, French, and British inhabitants were forged, often in blood. These conflicts became the foundation for mutable but seemingly mutually exclusive identities that are documented in a recent survey of New Brunswickers on how they engage the past in their everyday lives. In this paper, we describe the eighteenth-century context in which many New Brunswick cultural identities were constructed and address the findings of the Canadians and Their Pasts survey in a province where popular engagement with history is complicated by diverse perceptions of the past.

Source/Credit: 
Journal of New Brunswick Studies