Cover
Contents
Prologue
Map
Introduction: Decolonizing Ethnohistory
Chapter 1: Kinship Obligations to the Environment: Interpreting Stó:lō Xexá:ls Stories of the Fraser Canyon
Chapter 2: Relationships: A Study of Memory, Change, and Identity at a Place Called I:yem
Chapter 3: Crossing Paths: Knowing and Navigating Routes of Access to Stó:lō Fishing Sites
Chapter 4: Stó:lō Ancestral Names, Identity, and the Politics of History
Chapter 5: Caring for the Dead: Diversity and Commonality Among the Stó:lō
Chapter 6: Food as a Window into Stó:lō Tradition and Stó:lō-Newcomer Relations
Chapter 7: “Bringing Home All That Has Left”: The Skulkayn/Stalo Heritage Project and the Stó:lō Cultural Revival
Chapter 8: Totem Tigers and Salish Sluggers: A History of Boxing in Stó:lō Territory, 1912–1985
Chapter 9: “I Was Born a Logger”: Stó:lō Identities Forged in the Forest
Chapter 10: “They’re Always Looking for the Bad Stuff”: Rediscovering the Stories of Coqualeetza Indian Hospital with Fresh Eyes and Ears
Epilogue: Next Steps in Indigenous Community-Engaged Research: Supporting Research Self-Suffiiency in Indigenous Communities
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Contributors