Islands of Truth
The Imperial Fashioning of Vancouver Island
Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Islands of Truth
The Imperial Fashioning of Vancouver Island
In Islands of Truth, Daniel Clayton examines a series of encounters with the Native peoples and territory of Vancouver Island in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Although he focuses on a particular region and period, Clayton also meditates on how representations of land and people, and studies of the past, serve and shape specific interests, and how the dawn of Native-Western contact in this part of the world might be studied 200 years later, in the light of ongoing struggles between Natives and non-Natives over land and cultural status.
Between the 1770s and 1850s, the Native people of Vancouver Island were engaged by three sets of forces that were of general importance in the history of Western overseas expansion: the West’s scientific exploration of the world in the Age of Enlightenment; capitalist practices of exchange; and the geopolitics of nation-state rivalry. Islands of Truth discusses these developments, the geographies they worked through, and the stories about land, identity, and empire stemming from this period that have shaped understanding of British Columbia’s past and present.
Clayton questions premises underlying much of present B.C. historical writing, arguing that international literature offers more fruitful ways of framing local historical experiences. Islands of Truth is a timely, provocative, and vital contribution to post-colonial studies.

Table of Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1: Spaces of European Exploration Introduction
1 Captain Cook, the Enlightenment, and Symbolic Violence
2 Successful Intercourse Was Had with the Natives?
3 Captain Cook and the Spaces of Contact at Nootka Sound
4 Cook Books
5 Histories, Genealogies, and Spaces of the Other
Part 2: Geographies of Capital Introduction
6 The Conflictual Economy of Truth of the Maritime Fur Trade
7 Native Power and Commercial Contact at Nootka Sound
8 The Spatial Politics of Exchange at Clayoquot Sound
9 Regional Geographies of Accommodation and Appropriation
Part 3: Circulating Knowledge and Power Introduction
10 The Ledger, the Map, and British Imperial Vision
11 Circumscribing Vancouver Island
12 Delineating the Oregon Territory
13 Mythical Localities
14 Conclusion: The Loss of Locality
Notes; Bibliography; Index
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