@prefix vivo: . @prefix edm: . @prefix ns0: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . vivo:departmentOrSchool "Arts, Faculty of"@en, "Anthropology, Department of"@en ; edm:dataProvider "DSpace"@en ; ns0:degreeCampus "UBCV"@en ; dcterms:creator "Bourgeois, Robyn S."@en ; dcterms:issued "2009-11-21T20:58:03Z"@en, "2004"@en ; vivo:relatedDegree "Master of Arts - MA"@en ; ns0:degreeGrantor "University of British Columbia"@en ; dcterms:description "This thesis examines the social construction of white racial identities in the small, rural British Columbia community of Armstrong during the time period 1890-1930. Focusing on public documents - newspapers and the minutes and legislation of the local city councils – I utilize an intersectional framework, incorporating critical race, feminist, anti-colonial, Marxist, and queer theory and scholarship to critically interrogate the construction of whiteness and its dominant status in Armstrong. Employing critical discourse analysis, this thesis dissects how whiteness was raced, classed, gendered, and sexualized within the public discourse of the community. My analysis of whiteness follows three major themes: land, morality, and weddings. In my discussion of land use, I demonstrate how racialized constructions of land use, which demonstrated the superior nature of white land use and the inferior nature of Chinese and First Nations land use, were employed by white Armstrong to affirm and reaffirm their dominant status in the community. Further white control over land was facilitated by the construction of the ideal white immigrant within newspaper-run immigration schemes. In my discussion of morality, I make clear that not only did moral issues divide white from non-white, but they also contributed to fracturing and hierarchical ordering within whiteness itself. Thus, while Christianity and alcohol helped divide white from non-white, issues pertaining to the moral training of white youth and temperance and the Women's Christian Temperance Union served to divide and order whiteness itself. Finally, in my discussion of weddings, I demonstrate how the institutionalization of middle-/upper-class weddings within the newspapers contributed to the establishment of gendered, classed, and sexualized norms [particularly a heterosexual norm] for white Armstrong. Further analysis of the heterosexual norm demonstrates a fractured white masculinity in the community. Finally, this section concludes with a discussion of the ideal white feminine ideals of wife and mother and the role that consumption played in establishing a fractured white femininity."@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://circle.library.ubc.ca/rest/handle/2429/15508?expand=metadata"@en ; dcterms:extent "16073828 bytes"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note "W H I T E W A S H I N G H I S T O R Y : S O C I A L C O N S T R U C T I O N S O F W H I T E N E S S IN A R M S T R O N G , B . C . , 1890-1930 by R O B Y N S. B O U R G E O I S B . A . , Okanagan University College, 2002 A THESIS S U B M I T T E D IN P A R T I A L F U L F I L M E N T O F T H E R E Q U I R E M E N T S F O R T H E D E G R E E O F M A S T E R O F A R T S in T H E F A C U L T Y O F G R A D U A T E STUDIES D E P A R T M E N T O F A N T H R O P O L O G Y A N D S O C I O L G Y We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F BRITISH C O L U M B I A July 2004 © Robyn S. Bourgeois, 2004 T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F B R I T I S H C O L U M B I A F A C U L T Y OF G R A D U A T E S T U D I E S Library Authorization In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the head of my department or by his or her representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Robyn S. Bourgeois Name of Author (please print) Date (dd/mm/yyyy) Title of Thesis: Whitewashing History: Social Constructions of Whiteness in Armstrong, B.C, 1890-1930 Degree: Master of Arts Year: 2004 Department of The University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC Canada Anthropology and Sociology 11 A B S T R A C T This thesis examines the social construction of white racial identities in the small, rural British Columbia community of Armstrong during the time period 1890-1930. Focusing on public documents - newspapers and the minutes and legislation of the local city councils - 1 utilize an intersectional framework, incorporating critical race, feminist, anti-colonial, Marxist, and queer theory and scholarship to critically interrogate the construction of whiteness and its dominant status in Armstrong. Employing critical discourse analysis, this thesis dissects how whiteness was raced, classed, gendered, and sexualized within the public discourse of the community. M y analysis of whiteness follows three major themes: land, morality, and weddings. In my discussion of land use, I demonstrate how racialized constructions of land use, which demonstrated the superior nature of white land use and the inferior nature of Chinese and First Nations land use, were employed by white Armstrong to affirm and reaffirm their dominant status in the community. Further white control over land was facilitated by the construction of the ideal white immigrant within newspaper-run immigration schemes. In my discussion of morality, I make clear that not only did moral issues divide white from non-white, but they also contributed to fracturing and hierarchical ordering within whiteness itself. Thus, while Christianity and alcohol helped divide white from non-white, issues pertaining to the moral training of white youth and temperance and the Women's Christian Temperance Union served to divide and order whiteness itself. Finally, in my discussion of weddings, I demonstrate how the institutionalization of middle-/upper-class weddings within the newspapers contributed to the establishment of gendered, classed, and sexualized norms [particularly a heterosexual norm] for white Armstrong. Further analysis of the heterosexual norm demonstrates a fractured white masculinity in the community. Finally, this section concludes with a discussion of the ideal white feminine ideals of wife and mother and the role that consumption played in establishing a fractured white femininity. Ill T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S Abstract ii Table of Contents iii List of Figures v List of Abbreviations vii Acknowledgments viii C H A P T E R O N E Questioning the Past: A n Introduction 1 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 A Brief History of Armstrong-Spallumcheen 3 1.3 Whiteness as a Subject of Investigation - Race, Racism, and Racialisation .. 9 1.4 Overview 17 C H A P T E R T W O Examining Whiteness: Origins, Methods, and Frameworks 19 2.1 Introduction 19 2.2 Review of the Literature 20 2.3 Tools of the Trade - Research Methodology 34 2.4 A Note on Primary Sources 42 2.5 Conclusion 45 C H A P T E R T H R E E \"Landless Men and Manless Land\" - Whiteness, Land, and Immigration 47 3.1 Introduction 47 3.2 The Coming of Civilization - Settlement and the Myth of the Overlanders .. 49 3.3 Making Use of Manless Land - Whiteness and the Regulation of Land Use in Armstrong 61 3.4 The \"Yellow Peril\" - The Chinese and White Racism 68 3.5 Landless Men -Whiteness and the Regulation of Immigration 76 3.6 Conclusion 86 C H A P T E R F O U R \"Good White Folk\": Whiteness and the Moral Realm 88 4.1 Introduction 88 4.2 \"God Bless Us Everyone\" - Whiteness and the Church 89 4.3 Good Little Boys and Girls - A Case Study in Gendered Moral Reform 99 4.4 Battling the Devil Liquor - Booze, Busts, and Boundaries 106 4.5 Saving Our Souls - Temperance, Morality, and the W C T U 113 4.6 Conclusion 119 iv Table of Contents cont. C H A P T E R F I V E 'White' Weddings: Whiteness, Gender and Heteronormativity ..122 5.1 Introduction 122 5.2 Putting the 'Public' in Marital Bliss 123 5.3 Queering Class: \"Gentlemen,\" the Working Class, and Homo-Iconography 136 5.4 Consuming Women: Wedded Bliss, White Womanhood, and Consumption 144 5.5 Conclusion 155 C H A P T E R SIX Conclusion 157 Bibliography 165 Appendix A - Anti-Chinese Resolution 173 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1.1 - Armstrong's Downtown Core, Circa 1901 ( A S M A S # 1501) p.4 Figure 1.2 - Armstrong, British Columbia p.5 Figure 1.3 — Chinese Family in Your Mouth? p. 14 Figure 1.4- White Meals p. 16 Figure 1.5 - White Laundry p. 16 Figure 3.1 - Augustus and Catherine Schubert, Circa 1890 ( A S M A S # 3874) p.49 Figure 3.2 - Armstrong-Spallumcheen and the Indian Reserves p.64 Figure 3.3 - The \"Ideal\" Immigrants p.80 Figure 3.4 - The \"Assimilable\" Poles p. 82 Figure 4.1 - The Official Directory p.91 Figure 4.2 - The Churches p.91 Figure 4.3 - The Christmas \"Card\" p.92 Figure 4.4 - \"The Drinkers\" (In Armstrong Hotel, Date Unknown. A S M A S # 5282) .p. 106 Figure 5.1 - The Holtby wedding in Armstrong, Circa 1903 ( A S M A S # 4520) p. 123 Figure 5.2 - The Homosocial Miners p. 137 Figure 5.3 - The \"Homo-erotic\" Overalls p.138 Figure 5.4 - The Gentleman p. 139 Figure 5.5 - Gentleman and his dog p. 139 Figure 5.6 - The Heterosexual Couple p. 140 Figure 5.7 - The 'Heterosexual Gaze' p. 140 Figure 5.8 - \"Lovely Ladies\" p. 143 vi List of Figures cont. Figure 5.9 - Getting Into the Home p. 149 V l l L I S T O F A B B R E V I A T I O N S A S M A S = Armstrong Spallumcheen Museum and Art Scoiety W C T U = Women's Christian Temperance Movements Vlll Acknowledgements Firstly, this project would not have been possible without the financial support I was fortunate to receive during my master's degree. This includes Teaching Assistantships and a Fellowship from the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at the University of British Columbia, as well as a Canadian Graduate Scholarship (2003-2004) from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. I would like to thank my supervisor, Dr. Gillian Creese, and thesis committee member, Dr. Becki Ross, for the incredible support and insight they provided during the undertaking of this project. Their diligence and dedication to this project - from reading multiple drafts and providing extensive written feedback, to their patience when the complexities o f non-academic life invaded the academic- has been truly awe-inspiring. Their careful comments and suggestions pushed me beyond what I believed to be my own limits and helped me to produce a piece of work that far exceeds any expectations I had for my thesis. I have long looked up to both of these women as role models, and I consider myself extremely fortunate to have had the opportunity to work with them. As well, I would like to thank professors Thomas Kemple, Dawn Currie, and Cole Harris, each of whom made important contributions to this project. Also, I would like to thank Renisa Mawani for her support and friendship. M y summer in the archives will always be treasured, and the experience was enhanced by the important work of others. I would like to thank the Armstrong Spallumcheen Museum and Art Society for tolerating my presence in the archives, as well as the individual members who supplied interesting tidbits for my research. I am forever indebted to curator Lisa Mori , whose friendship and assistance during this project was invaluable. Indeed, this thesis was very much inspired by conversations we had during my tenure at the Museum. I would also like to thank Joan Cowan and the Enderby Museum for allowing me access to physical copies o f some of the newspapers included in this project. During my master's degree, I was fortunate enough to be a resident member of Green College, U B C . It is an environment rich in both ideas and friendship, and many a discussion over dinner provoked serious thought and consideration about my own research. In particular, I would like to thank my closest \"greenies\" for their friendship and their support-Charmian Bennett, Phillip Jefferies, Laura Lapp, Kristina Llewellyn, and Kelley Main. There were times during this master's process that I know I would not have made it through if it had not been for all o f you! I would also like to extend a thank you to Chef Sherry Geraghty for not only feeding me, but also for being a true friend and confidante. I value tremendously the friendship and support I received from my fellow graduate students in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at U B C . I am forever indebted to Erin Bentley, Thea Berretta, Leamore Cohen, Jonathon Hanvelt, Shelley Ketchell, Genevieve LaPointe, Mayumi Nakamura, Brandy Wiebe, and Sara Young. We shared work, we shared fun, and some of us even shared kisses and cinnamon gum. M y friendship with each of you has sustained me during this degree process, and I am truly a better person for knowing each and every one o f you. I would also like to thank Richard Fredericks. As my T A supervisor, ix but more importantly, as a fellow graduate student, he provided important insight and advice about graduate life. In addition, Richard's gifts of books frequently came at a time pertinent to an area of research in my thesis, and I am forever grateful for his kindness and generosity. A s one of the only relic friendships existing from my Armstrong life, I would like to thank Jeanette Evans for her support and friendship. I cannot imagine my life without her! Especially important to this research project was her implementation of research \"lunch breaks\" at the local pub - for while these breaks removed me from the archives and my research, and frequently resulted in a serious beer buzz, the time gave me a chance to escape the solitariness of research and provided the break necessary to return to things with fresh eyes. She is truly an angel and we should all be lucky enough to have a \"Nettie\" in our lives! Perhaps the biggest thank you belongs to my family, who have supported me, both financially and emotionally, during this project. Their unending support and incredible endurance in dealing with the trials and tribulations of my life never fails to amaze me. I love you all very much and I am forever grateful that each of you is a part of my life. Thus, a big thank you and a million hugs to Jane and Parker; Bradly; Lawrence, Barb, Anna, Robin, and Jessica; and Avalon and Syd. I would also like to thank my cousin and friend, Jamie McGregor. Although eight years my junior and still in high school, he has long been a formidable intellectual opponent, and our many discussions pertaining to this thesis often challenged me and encouraged me to go further in my work. Y o u have long been an important family ally, and I look forward to future debates as you now enter university. Also, a special thank you to my little Auntie Mavis. C33SO In closing, I would like to dedicate this thesis to my friend and step-sister, Jessica Fighter. Whether coincidence or fate, my thesis project began at the same time Jessica began an ordeal of her own: she was diagnosed and received treatment for cancer. At only twelve years old, Jessica faced the battle of her young life, and through it all, her indomitable spirit and sense of humour shone through. She was/is so strong and brave, and whenever I faced moments of defeat in my research and in my life, thoughts of her amazing character inspired me to new levels. She is truly an amazing person, and she has taught me so much about life, and for these reasons, this thesis is dedicated to her. 1 Chapter I Questioning the Past: An Introduction M y brother and I discovered at an early age that we were different. One day we were riding in a car with one of our cousins, and she kindly pointed out that we were different colours: my brother was brown and I was white.1 While we both had inky black hair and eyes, I had the light skin of my Scottish mother and my brother had the darker skin of my Cree father. M y cousin teased and taunted us about being different- she and her brother were the same colour. But my brother and I didn't really care. After all, our mother and father were different colours and they loved each other, and loved us, and were loved by others, so being different was okay with us. But as we got older, things changed. While I could walk into the corner store and shop freely, my brother was followed and harassed by the cashier. I thought perhaps that the cashier just didn't trust boys, but when she did the same to other dark-skinned boys and girls, I realized the truth - it was our skin colour that resulted in our differential treatment. Things got more complicated when we got to high school, where my brother was readily accepted into the First Nations club, but I was told I was \"too white\" to be Cree. Furthermore, while I was constructed by staff and teachers as popular and intelligent, and a valuable contribution ' There has been some debate about whether one should use quotation marks, or \"scare quotes\", when discussing issues of race. Some social scientists have taken to using quotation marks with terms such as race, white, and black, in an attempt to overcome the problems inherent in using such terms analytically- that is, quotation marks suggest the socially constructed nature of race over inherent biological conceptions (Miles and Brown 2003:90). However, as Miles and Brown argue, \"race\" is too often used as a codeword for race - that is biological conceptions of race (2003:90). Deciding whether or not to use scare quotes was a dilemma for me; however, I have decided, in general, that I will not use quotation marks around such terms. As I am quite clear throughout this thesis that I advocate a conception of race as socially constructed, it seems unnecessary to use scare quotes throughout to reemphasize this point. Furthermore, I find quotation marks an effective means of drawing the reader's attention to specific words, and as such, would like to reserve them for this more specific purpose. Therefore, unless wanting to specifically draw the reader's attention to such terms, I will not use scare quotes around terms such as race, white, or non-white. 2 to the school community, my brother and other First Nations students were constructed as \"misfits\" and \"deviants,\" and were either forced into remedial courses or out of the school completely. In fact, as a result of such harassment, my brother dropped out of high school just a year before his graduation. At the same time, however, I have experienced slippages in my own whiteness. The same cousin who established the colour difference between me and my brother, also established a colour difference between herself and me. As children, I remember she held her arm up next to mine and, laughing, said, \"You're not really white...you're not brown, but you're not really white!\" \"She's mahogany,\" her dad quickly offered. M y brother also likes to remind me that I am not white. During a recent argument, my brother proclaimed, \"You think you are so great. You go and get educated and get degrees and stuff, and you think you are so superior. But no matter what, you will always be a squaw!\" What these experiences have made clear for me is that whiteness is a difficult concept to negotiate. In many ways, the privilege of my light skin, and thus my inclusion in the white population, has played an important role in my life. Whiteness has been both a \"blessing\" and a \"curse\"- it has excluded me from harassment directed at non-whites, such as that which my brother has faced, but it has also excluded me from embracing my Cree heritage. In fact, it bothers me so much when people \"erase\" my Cree ancestry by simply \"calling it as they see it\" and including me in the privileged category of whiteness. At the same time, however, I have been complicit in the erasure and visibility of my Cree heritage. Within the contemporary racial paradigms that structure Canadian society, I have purposely withheld and revealed my Cree ancestry when I have perceived substantial benefit or disadvantage from doing so. However, this privilege of mediating my own racial identity is not one 3 afforded to my darker-skinned counterparts. For me, the privilege of my light skin has very much allowed me to carefully mediate Canada's racial/colour line to my own advantage. Importantly, however, it is these experiences which have served as the impetus for this thesis. M y own experiences with the variability and slippages within the white racial category have inspired me to dissect and dismantle the constructions of whiteness. As such, the purpose of this thesis is to explore the social construction of whiteness within the public discourse of the community of Armstrong, B . C . , from 1890 to 1930. Focusing specifically on newspapers and city council minutes, I will explore the social construction of multiple white racial identities in the community, using an inclusive and intersectional framework that includes how whiteness is constructed in terms of race, class, gender, and sexuality. By employing a critical feminist, Marxist, anti-racist and queer theoretical framework, this thesis is aimed at unpacking and teasing out socially and historically constructed understandings of whiteness. A Brief of History of Armstrong-Spallumcheen 2 Armstrong-Spallumcheen, a small community of approximately 10,000 people located five hundred kilometres slightly north-east of Vancouver (see figure 1.1.), serves as the focus of this research for two important reasons. Firstly, Armstrong is my hometown - 1 grew up, attended school, and continue to spend my summers in this small town. As Antonio Gramsci 21 make reference throughout the thesis to \"Armstrong\", as well as Armstrong-Spallumcheen, which may be confusing for the reader. However, the two are actually the same thing. When the community was established in 1892, the city centre was referred to as Armstrong, but the surrounding municipality was referred to as Spallumcheen, and it was the municipality that governed itself and the city centre. When Armstrong was consolidated as a city in 1913, it was officially given a separate governing body, but remained attached to Spallumcheen as the only city within the municipality. As such, the area was known as Armstrong-Spallumcheen. To this day, the two areas remain connected, although the Spallumcheen is frequently dropped and the whole community is simply referred to as \"Armstrong\". As such, references to Armstrong and Armstrong-Spallumcheen, unless specifically delimited (such as Armstrong city proper or the municipality of Spallumcheen), refer to the community as a whole. 4 once wrote, \"[t]he starting point of critical elaboration is the consciousness of what one really is, and is 'knowing thyself as a product of the historical processes to date which has deposited in you an infinity o f traces, without leaving an inventory\" (1971:324). Thus, in a somewhat selfish attempt to come to terms with the social soil of which I am very much a product, I decided to focus my scholarly attention on Armstrong. However, Armstrong is also an important community for historical social analysis. Not only is Armstrong the product of colonial white settlement, it is an example of rural and interior settlement within the province of British Columbia. Much of the scholarship on whiteness has focused on urban centres or the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island3 (see, for example, Perry 2001), so I felt it important to explore white racial constructions in a small, rural settlement in the interior of the province. As such, Armstrong emerged as a perfect candidate for my research. Figure 1.1- Armstrong's Downtown Core, Circa 1901 (ASMAS # 1501) Elizabeth Furniss' The Burden of History (1999), which examines constructions of racial identities in Williams Lake, B.C., is an important exception. 5 V-\\ 1 NUT T N - O \\ y^*. 1 * Nelson j W BRITISH COLUMBIA j \\ cdLOMBIE-BRITANNlQUE j A L A S K A V , ( | lies de la A Reine-CharlotttJ 1 J Queen i „ Charlotte Queen Charlotte Islands miliston \\ _ JL, Hazelirjk H u d s o n ' s jg jg J \\ \"Crv * Tumbler. I itimat_ Houston* V ^ — ^ ^ ^ f c r t ' Ridge -LEGEND / LEGENDS . Provincial capital / Capttale provinciate # Other populated places / Autres lieux habites Trans-Canada Highway / v La Transcanadienne Major road / Route principal* Ferry route / Traversier International boundary / Front lere Internationale Provincial boundary / Limtte provinciate Coolo\" PACIFIC OCEAN OCEAN PACIFIQUE Sound <__ Vancouver Island >, J 7I& dfr \"SJirtCOuW Tofirta1 Armstrong •OS km I—. Scale / Echelle o 100 ac tniooet^ ^A c^''' V K^rilooi.., 7'ywftstlerbC Jr^ttTrVernonV* j*iI«vern>ere^ II In l iT*ll fiTlf TIB WafJ Jli^'T^/t'Ca^eflWl V *0*n brook . _S|____,h DOTTED STATES OF AMERICA Juan de Fuca Str < i r ? V v » e t o r i a £ T A T S - L \\ 1 S l Y A M f i K i y r E Oct de Juar dtr Fuca 300 _ J km © 2002. Her Ma>esty the CKieen in Right 4f Canada, MatuCM Resources Canada. Sd Majeste la Reine du cherf du Canada, Reuourtes natureli« Canada. Figure 1.2- Armstrong, British Columbia (http://atlas.gc.ca/site/english/maps/reference/provincesterritories/british_columbia/referencemap_view_image The year 1866 marks, in the majority of official accounts, the commencement of the history of Armstrong-Spallumcheen. It was in this year that Alexander Leslie (A.L.) Fortune, a member of the Overlander4 expedition that brought a large, predominantly male 5 settler 4 An in-depth discussion of the Overlanders is undertaken in chapter three. 6 group into the gold fields of British Columbia, made his way into the Spallumcheen Valley and decided to make his home on the bluffs overlooking the current townsite of Armstrong. Commencing Armstrong's \"official\" history at this point, however, contributes to the erasure of the histories of aboriginal peoples who had long made their home in the Valley. In fact, when Fortune arrived in the area, both the Spallumcheen/Spe'lmeticin/Splats'in6 and Okanagan/S-Ookanhkchinx Indian tribes had been making their homes in the area for approximately 5000 years (Cowan 2002:2). However, recognizing that my research is centered on the construction of white racial identities, this brief history will focus on a white settler/dominant/official version of the history of Armstrong. This is not aimed at contributing to the erasure and marginalization of First Nations history; however, since this is an analysis of whiteness in Armstrong, and since this whiteness existed within a specific white settler construction of history, I believe it is essential to emphasize and outline the history that serves as the basis for Armstrong's white settler society. After Fortune's arrival in 1866, settlers from all parts of Canada made their way into the Spallumcheen Valley and established homesteads. With Indian reserves firmly established by 1870 (Harris 2002:334), the land within the Spallumcheen Valley had 5 While the Overlander group was intended for men only, one woman, Catherine Schubert, defied this rule so as not to be separated from her husband who was part of the group. With her three small children in tow, the pregnant Catherine secretly followed the all-male group out of Fort Garry (now Winnipeg). She was soon discovered, and despite pressure on the Schubert family to abandon the trek (as the Indians, it was argued, proved a serious threat against Catherine and the children), Catherine and the children made their way to British Columbia as part of the Overlanders. Please see chapter three for an in-depth discussion of the Catherine Schubert story (Shilvock 1986:6). 6The three separate names I have included here are all names for a single Indian tribe. \"Spallumcheen\" is the anglicized version of the historic Indian name \"Spe'Iemtcin\" (meaning flat or prairie shore) (Cowan 2002:2). Splats'in is the contemporary Indian name of the same tribe. I have chosen to include the three versions of the same tribe name at this point, as this is a discussion of the erasure of First Nations in the official history of Armstrong, and as such, I do not wish to be complicit in such a process through the erasing of the traditional and contemporary Indian \"versions\" of Spallumcheen. However, I do recognize that this thesis is centered on the construction of white racial identities, and as such, the \"white\" version of history. As such, when discussing the \"official\" white-centered version of Armstrong's history, I will make use of the anglicized \"Spallumcheen\". 7 effectively been cleared for such settlement. By the 1880s, a small community called Lansdowne was established on the hills just north of the current townsite of Armstrong. The community boasted a general store, a blacksmith, a furniture store, and a confectionary; along with a church, cemetery, and school house (see Serra 1968:5-6). In fact, by the beginning of the 1890s, sixty-eight families made their home in and around Lansdowne (for a complete list, see Serra 1968:7-9). However, the coming of the railway would have a serious impact on the small community. In August of 1890, the Shuswap and Okanagan Railway, a branch of the Canadian National Railway, announced that they would be building a railline from Sicamous to Okanagan Landing, which would include the Spallumcheen Valley. As Serra explains, Originally the railway interests wished the townsite near Davis Creek [Lansdowne] and attempted negotiations with Mr. Davis who owned the land at the time. Mr. Davis, however, wished the railway to purchase his entire farm so an agreement was never reached. Eventually the railway people were able to make a better deal with Robert Wood for the present townsite of Armstrong (Serra 1968:10). As such, in 1891, realizing that the railway had passed them by, the citizens of Lansdowne launched a mass exodus and moved their community to the railway and the new community of Armstrong, named after William Charles Heaton-Armstrong, the London capitalist who financed the Shuswap and Okanagan Railway, (Serra 1968:11; Parker, Havinga & Rougeau 1982:2-3). Although governed by a municipal council since 1892, Armstrong was incorporated as a city in 1913. The townsite, with a population of 1200, formed the city of Armstrong, while the surrounding rural areas remained part of the municipality of Spallumcheen. However, since both areas had originally been governed by the same municipal council, Armstrong and Spallumcheen continued to grow and work in tandem. Thus, while Armstrong served as the central business district for the area, with sales and service industries 8 dominating the city economy, the surrounding municipality of Spallumcheen, with vast acres of land and an abundance of natural resources, provided an economic counterpart. Forestry, agriculture, and farming provided the backbone of the community's economy. Lumber, cordwood, and agriculture products dominated the exports of the community (see, for example, \"Armstrong, B . C . \" 1908:70). However, Armstrong-Spallumcheen would become famous for, of all things, celery. Once known as the \"Celery Capital of Canada\" (Critchley 1999:9), Armstrong's celery was known far and wide, and was shipped by express to every city west of Winnipeg (\"Armstrong, B . C . \" 1908:70). Importantly, in the making of the \"Celery Capital,\" while the majority of land was owned and operated by white capitalists, the actual work was performed by Chinese immigrant workers (a consequence of city council and Board of Trade proclamations prohibiting the ownership of land by the Chinese). With a population averaging about 500, although growing as high as 900 men 7 during the First World War, the Chinese performed much of the agricultural work within the community (Critchley 1999:11). Agriculture remained the leading industry until the 1950s, when competition from California (namely, the ability to cheaply produce agricultural goods, as well as the benefit of year round production) drove industrial agriculture in Armstrong out of business (Critchely1999:9). However, many companies had established strong economic markets (such as the Armstrong Cheese Factory and the local sawmills), and many more companies made their way into the community (such as Buckerfield's [seed and animal feed], Roger's 7 It is important to recognize that the majority of Chinese migrant workers in the community were, in fact, men. Quite simply, there were very few Chinese women in Canada (Roy 1989:17). In the beginning, Chinese men came to Canada to earn money for families they had left at home. However, with the implementation of anti-Chinese legislation, such as the Head Taxes and the Exclusion Act of 1923, many families were prohibited from reuniting in Canada. As such, the Chinese population in Canada was dominated by men (Roy 1989:19, 266). However, some Chinese women did manage to make it to Canada. For an excellent account of the experiences of one of these women, see Denise Chong's The Concubine's Children (1995). 9 Flour, and Colonial Farms [commercial chicken farm]). Furthermore, Armstrong's sales and service sector continued to flourish and grow, with an emphasis on increasing tourism to the small community. According to the 2001 Census, approximately 4,256 people make their home in Armstrong city proper (Statistics Canada 2001a), with 5,134 people inhabiting the surrounding municipality o f Spallumcheen (Statistics Canada 2001b). Whiteness as a Subject of Investigation- Race, Racism, and Racialisation The major problem surrounding whiteness and white racial identities is that, too often, they evade investigation. As scholars such as Frankenberg (1993), Hale (1998), and Hage (2000) have argued, whiteness occupies an invisible and unmarked position in our society. Whiteness, as Frankenberg argues, serves as the non-defined defmers of others - an invisible norm used to construct others as \"racial\" or \"cultural,\" but nonetheless, different (1993:197). Too often scholarship has emphasized white racism and dominance in Canadian society, but has failed to turn its critical gaze towards the constructions of the dominant white racial identity (for example, Ward 1990). I have been accused of'recentering the centre' by focusing my critical attention on white racial identities. M y goal, however, is not to perpetuate white supremacy, but instead, to dismantle and dissect the social constructions of whiteness that have been employed in establishing white dominance. M y goal is to understand the meaning of whiteness and to understand how these meanings served to establish white supremacy in the community of Armstrong. This is important, for as Ruth Frankenberg argues, Naming \"whiteness\" displaces it from the unmarked, unnamed status that is itself an effect of its dominance...To speak of whiteness is...to assign everyone a place in the relations of racism. It is to emphasize that racism is not merely an - 10 option for white people— that, rather, racism shapes white people's lives and identities in a way that is inseparable from other facets of daily life (1993:6). To suggest that whiteness is unmarked and unnamed, however, is not to suggest that it is completely invisible. For, as demonstrated by the public documents analyzed for this research project, I would argue that, while unmarked and unnamed, there is a hyper-visibility of whiteness in the public discourse of Armstrong. In fact, I would argue that the public documents provide a sort of handbook of whiteness, detailing appropriate behaviour, facilitating communication amongst the white community, and providing the discursive basis for white dominance in Armstrong. Short of appearances as examples of deviance and racial degeneracy, or as perceived threats against white racial dominance, non-white populations rarely appeared as the subjects of the public discourse. Instead, the subject honour was bestowed almost exclusively on those perceived as white. Importantly, this public discourse was made by and for the white members of the community. The newspapers and the councils were dominated by white, middle-class, men who sought to define and shape discursive constructions that emphasized white racial supremacy and non-white inferiority. The public discourse, as such, reflects the ideas and interests of white Armstrong, which, as a result, makes whiteness hyper-visible within the documents. Implicit in an analysis of whiteness is a connection to race, racism, and racialization. While I am employing an inclusive framework for my analysis (that is, I am exploring how whiteness is constructed, not solely in terms of race, but also in terms of gender, class, and sexuality), whiteness is nonetheless an intimate part of race, racism and racialization. One of the most common conceptions of race is that of bio logically-based racial categories that separate the human population into hierarchical and discrete categories. 11 In the past, people were differentiated on the basis of phenotypical features and cultural prescriptives which lead to populations being \"represented as distinctive by virtue of a specific profile of (sometimes real and sometimes imagined) biological and cultural attributes\" (Miles and Brown, 2003:89). However, in contemporary Europe, North America, and Australasia, \"the idea of'race' is now usually used to differentiate collectives distinguished by skin colour, so that \"races\" are either 'black' or 'white'\" (Miles and Brown 2003:89). Foucault contends that biological definitions o f race emerged within the mid-nineteenth century as a means of contending with changes in social discourse (2003:80). Accordingly, At a time when discourse...was being displaced, translated, or converted into a revolutionary discourse, at the time when the notion of race struggle was about to be replaced by that of class struggle... at the time when this conversion was going on, it was in fact only natural that attempts should be made by one side to recode the old counterhistory not in terms of class, but in terms of race- races in the biological and medical sense of the term (2003:80). Importantly, however, Foucault argues that this transformation to biological understandings of race provided the basis for racism: This racism takes over and reconverts the form and function of the discourse of race struggle, but it distorts them, and it will be characterized by the fact that the theme of historical war - with its battles, its invasions, its looting, its victories, and its defeats - will be replaced by the postevolutionist theme of struggle for existence. It is no longer a battle in the sense that the warrior would understand the term, but a struggle in the biological sense: the differentiation of species, natural selection, and the survival of the fittest species...I think that racism is born at the point when the theme of racial purity replaces that of race struggle, and when counterhistory begins to be converted into a biological racism (2003:80-81). As history has shown, biological conceptions of race have provided an important discursive framework for racial discrimination and genocide. While perhaps a product of mid-nineteenth century discursive constructions, biological conceptions of race continue to provide the fundamental basis for some academic 12 and public race discourse. In the 1990's, Herrnstein and Murray released their New York Times Bestseller, The Bell Curve- Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life (1996), in which they argued for the biological supremacy of the white race over non-white races on the basis o f I.Q. testing. In addition, white supremacists continue to use the discourse of biological race for their cause. In a recent interview with William Pierce 8, head of the neo-Nazi oriented National Alliance, references to biological notions of race were central to his white supremacist perspectives: Interviewer: Why do you think that blacks can't compete by themselves? Pierce: They're biologically different Interviewer: And this biological difference, you think, is the major source of their difficulties here? Pierce: Yes, that's the major source of their difficulties. Interviewer: You don't think it's due to discrimination or poverty or of a legacy of past injustice? Pierce: Well, all of these things are sort of interrelated. If blacks, say, had naturally the same sort of abilities that whites have and they were able to innovate and create and succeed the way whites have historically, I think a lot of discrimination would have disappeared. That is, a lot of the discrimination is based on recognition of the biological differences (Nieli 2003:270). Biological conceptions of race are, however, just one way o f looking at racial identities. Anti-racist scholars have challenged biological conceptions of race, arguing that the variability and inconsistency in racial categorization suggests we are dealing, \"not [with] a given, natural division of the world's population, but the application of historically and culturally specific meanings to the totality o f human physiology\" (Miles and Brown 2003:89). According to Miles and Brown, \"[t]his is made evident by historical evidence that records that certain populations have been categorized as different 'races' at different 8 This interview with William Pierce was conducted on December 27, 1999 by Russ Nieli , lecturer in Poltics at Princeton University, and was included in the edited collection Contemporary Voices of White Nationalism in America (2003). 13 historical times and in different places\" (2003:89). In terms of whiteness, the works of Hale (1998) and Hage (2000), but particularly that of Jacobson (1998), have demonstrated how different ethnic groups, including Jews, Italians, and the Irish, have been variably constructed as \"white\" and \"non-white.\" Such work suggests that these slippages in whiteness are a product of socially constructed and mediated, and not biological or genetically determined, racial identities. For the purposes of exploring whiteness in Armstrong, I have found it particularly useful to employ a social constructionist perspective of racial identities. As an anti-racist scholar, I am committed to an understanding of race as historically and culturally specific discursive constructs. As Miles and Brown argue, \"there is no scientific justification for using the term [race] to refer to a discrete hierarchy of'races' distinguished by phenotypical features such as skin colour\" (2003:83). Furthermore, in the everyday world, the facts of biological difference are secondary to the meanings that are attributed to them and, indeed, to imagined biological difference...Thus, when the idea of'race' is employed, it is the result of a process of signification whereby certain somatic characteristics are attributed with meaning and are used to organize populations into distinct groups that are races (Miles and Brown 2003:88-89). In fact, I would argue that it is this process of attributing meaning that is of interest for my research. I am not interested so much in arguing the bases for racial separation, but in exploring the processes by which specific racial categories - whether this be through biology or a socially constructed discourse - are produced. M y emphasis, as such, is on racialisation-as Miles defines it, \"a synonym for the concept of'racial categorization', defined as 'a process of delineation of group boundaries and of allocation of persons within those boundaries\" (in Miles and Brown 2003:100). Racialisation, in essence, is the construction of racial difference - it is \"the dialectical process of signification\" (Miles and Brown 2003:101). 1 4 Therefore, in analysing the construction of whiteness, I am trying to assess the discursive practices - whether rooted in biology or social imagination - through which white racial identities are constructed, and through which meaning is attached to \"being white.\" D o y o u f e e l « 3 i i l a s t y e a r v s . if Chinese fam-ily had jnst 'mov-ed out £ — gr~-Have you that l>al loon-like sensation itfter eating\" ? If so . • • • n m E x t r a c t of •S arsaji a r i l l a \"With X*ot«ssium I o d i d e . $1.00, Si*c for Five Dollars. Armstrong Pharmacy R. R- B U R N S , Figure 1.3: Chinese Family in Your Mouth? (Armstrong Advertiser Apr i l 2,1903:1) One other important element of the study of whiteness is its link to racism. In beginning this study, I expected to find a certain amount of prejudice, but was unprepared for 15 the prolific and explicit racism that would emerge within the documents. Anti-Chinese, Japanese, South Asian, and First Nations sentiments filled the newspapers and council documents. For example, in an Armstrong Advertiser (one of the community's newspapers) editorial on the \"Chinese problem\", it was argued This brings us to a point we would make, that although the Chinaman is not wanted as an owner of truck growing land, is he such a very undesirable citizen in other directions? We give the churches due consideration for their attitude towards \"a Heathen\", but it takes all sorts to make a world, and as washermen, cooks and house servants...it fills a long felt want. This point does not appeal to the struggling farmer, but, we are not going to be struggling all our lives and will we not experience a time of prosperity? And when this prosperity comes we cannot all be bosses and cooks at the same time. Somebody will have to do the menial jobs and it's the Jap or the Chink who will then be in demand... (December 11, 1913:4). Furthermore, In other lands where other races are of a more assertive disposition, John Chinaman is a gentleman compared to a Jew. We have no [sic] admitted Jews in trade as yet, they have not made their presence felt, except in the junk market. But wait till the Jews get busy! One healthy Jew will do more harm to prices than ten of the at present despised John Chinamen (Armstrong Advertiser December 11, 1913:4). Such racist sentiments were regularly asserted in editorials, articles, and letters to the editor. Degrading racial stereotypes became common place in advertising: in an Armstrong Pharmacy advertisement for Extract of Sarsparilla (figure 1.3), for example, it was asked, \"Have you a taste in your mouth as if a Chinese family had just moved out?\" (Armstrong Advertiser April 2, 1903:1). In addition, the proclamation \"White Labour Only\" became the hallmark of business advertising (figures 1.4 and 1.5) As an anti-racist scholar, but also as a Cree woman, I found reading this blatant and prolific racist discourse painful. It infuriated and enraged me, but made me realize how important critical anti-racist scholarship is. However, despite how troubling it was for me to read, it is important to note that this racist discourse provided the foundation for my analysis 16 of the social construction of whiteness. One of the most important consequences of racialisation is that the ascription of \"real or imagined.. .characteristics with meaning to \\ SAWYER'S RESTAURANT j ] AND TEA PARLORS Balk Cnndiei,. Toffies, (Juan, Nat Hire, Chooolatos in Bnlk Chocolate Boxes. Wisdoara WourloNul Wutera, Cider, •Nuta of Bll.kibds. Kreeb Kpnstod Pesnats This is not old stock but nil goods jast PBESIt tN The Hace ^ 'io. go for \"•a' Good Meal Meals Cooked and Served by White Labor Only Figure 1.4- White Meals (Armstrong Advertiser January 14,1915:8) A new', laundry -has been started, in ' E a s t y i e w and w i l l be ready .f^ont Monday next to-]&&K ••af'teEia.li snr.ts. ot; liiundrjr work aifil clothes cleaning- and pressing. C a l l w i l l be made for work and del ivery made. 5 1 8 - i . p 'Labor, Figure 1.5: White Laundry (Armstrong Advertiser A p r i l 25,1912:8) define the Other necessarily entails defining Self by the same criteria\" (Miles and Brown 2003:101). As such, within this racist discourse, both white and non-white racial identities are constructed by the dominant white society. Furthermore, constructions of white and non-white are the cornerstone of racist discourse. After all, the purpose of such discourse was to assert the supremacy of whiteness and the inferiority of non-whites, and as such, it was essential to clearly define who was included and excluded from each category. As such, this discourse provides a fruitful resource for culling meanings of whiteness. In the pursuit of anti-racist discourse that will truly challenge society's racial hierarchy and its propensity towards racism, it is essential to include critical analyses of whiteness. Social constructions of whiteness, after all, provide the discursive basis for white 17 supremacy. If we are to challenge white dominance and undermine claims to supremacy, and thus the legitimation for racism, prejudice, and violence, it is absolutely necessary, in conjunction with reclamation projects of silenced racial groups, that we turn our critical attention towards the white race and the meaning of whiteness. Overview The central goal of this thesis is to develop an understanding of the social construction of whiteness in the public discourse of the community of Armstrong during the time period 1890 to 1930. Employing a framework that facilitates an inclusive reading of whiteness along the lines of race, class, gender, and sexuality, this thesis will focus on the multiple white racial identities that are constructed within the newspapers and city council minutes and legislation of Armstrong. Chapter Two provides an in-depth examination of the research tools employed in-this study. To begin, the chapter provides a review of the existing work on whiteness, followed by a discussion of the research questions and the rationale for the many aspects of the current study. Furthermore, this chapter describes my method of analysis - that is, critical discourse analysis. Finally, the variety of theoretical concepts and frameworks that inform my research are addressed. Chapter Two, as such, provides the reader with the foundational elements of the study. Chapter Three is an examination of whiteness and its relationship to land use and immigration. I argue that through racially aligned constructions of land use, white settler society was able to affirm and reaffirm their legal and social right to possess the community's land. Such racial constructions saw white land use equated with \"progress\" and 18 \"civilization,\" while First Nations land use was constructed as \"uncivilized\" and \"wasteful,\" and Chinese land use as \"bleeding the land.\" Furthermore, constructions of whiteness and non-whiteness were deployed as a means of regulating those who had access to land - that is, in terms of immigration. Intimately involved in this are constructions of white masculinity, which serve as the basis for much of the discourse on land use and immigration. As this chapter will make clear, such racialized constructions provide the basis for community legislation that prohibited \"yellow\" land use, as well as immigration schemes that targeted those specifically constructed as \"white.\" Chapter Four focuses on whiteness and its relation to morality. As this chapter makes clear, being a white citizen meant also being Christian and temperate. Through the discourses of Christianity and Prohibition, whiteness is constructed as morally superior to non-whiteness counterparts. In fact, white morality is considered of such a superior nature that the discourse emphasizes the duty of whites to provide their goodness and purity to the immoral -specifically the non-white Chinese and First Nations. Chapter Five is an examination of whiteness, gender, and heteronormativity. Themed around weddings, this chapter addresses the divide created within whiteness through the institutionalization of marriage. The establishment of a heterosexual norm is further investigated in relation to the constructions of masculinity in newspaper advertisements. Finally, addressing the ideals of womanhood enshrined by marriage, this chapter ends with an analysis of the role of consumption in being a good white wife and mother. Through the development of each chapter, a clear picture of the construction of whiteness and the variety of white racial identities existing within the public discourse of the community of Armstrong will be established. 19 Chapter II Examining Whiteness: Origins, Methods, and Frameworks While this study of white racial identities in Armstrong emerges from a very personal place - my own experiences with whiteness and my desire to know more about the community I come from- it also involves very practical and technical considerations of methodology: how does one carry out research on the social construction of white racial identities in a small community? As an academic, I am encouraged to formulate a rigorous research design that will withstand academic scrutiny. At the same time, my academic and personal political commitments challenge me to construct a framework that reflects these commitments. Furthermore, the scope and scale of my research clearly impacts the methodological framework I can employ. Methodology, as such, becomes an important issue. This chapter is an introduction to the methodology of this project. Beginning with a review of the contemporary literature on whiteness, this chapter will outline the origins of my study of whiteness in Armstrong-Spallumcheen, including a discussion of the absences which serve as the impetus for my own research. Furthermore, this chapter will address the practical elements of research methodology, including clarification and rationalization for specific concepts. Finally, this chapter will outline the theoretical frameworks which inform the research project. In combination with the introduction, this chapter will provide the reader with an understanding of the origins, methodology, and theoretical frameworks of this study. 20 Review of the Literature In North America, critical anti-racist scholars have long critiqued mainstream academia for its misrepresentation, if not complete neglect, of people of colour (see, for example, Hi l l Collins 2000; hooks 2000, for example). The solution within much of anti-racist and anti-colonial scholarship has been an intensive archaeology and genealogy of the lives of minority peoples. Yet much of this project has failed to turn its critical gaze towards the very centre of race relations in North America - namely, at whiteness. As Ruth Frankenberg argues, ...the white Western self as racial being has for the most part remained unexamined and unnamed. On the one hand, studies of racial and cultural identities have tended to view the range of potential subjects of research as limited to those who differ from the (unnamed) norm. On the other hand, whiteness has elsewhere been simultaneously ignored and universalized: studies on the dominant race or culture, unless focused on racism per se, bracket issues of race and culture and presume by implication the racial neutrality of the subject (1993:18). Furthermore, Timothy Stanley contends that [rjacism is only discussed as something that affected Jews and people of colour, not as a phenomenon that shaped 'whiteness'; and Anglo-Europeans' power and privilege...for histories to be meaningful to new generations of young people, mentioning gender, ethnic, sexual, or racialized minorities, while leaving the national grand narratives [of white, Anglo Canadian history] intact, is not enough (2000:90-91). Thus, within the last fifteen years, a number of academics have undertaken critical research on whiteness. Becoming known as critical whiteness studies (Rasmussen, Klinenberg, Nexica & Wray 2001), this field includes the work of Ruth Frankenberg (1993; 1997), Matthew Frye Jacobson (1998), and Grace Elizabeth Hale (1998) in the United States; Ghassen Hage (1998) working in Australia; and Adele Perry (2001), Sherene Razack (1998; 2002), Frances Henry and Carol Tator (2002), Elizabeth Furniss (1999), and Eva Mackey (2002) in Canada. Employing an array of critical theoretical frameworks, these academics 21 have begun the process of dissecting and deconstructing white racial identities. This process has included examinations of specific white racial identities - for example, white labourers in pre-confederation British Columbia, as presented by Adele Perry (1998); the variability in the ethnic composition of the \"white race\" (Jacobson 1998 is a prime example of this), and whiteness as a position of power in society. In attempting to understand the social dominance of white racial identities, these recent studies of whiteness have been pursued along three major theoretical themes.1 These themes include: 1. Whiteness as fluid, mutable, and unstable 2. Whiteness as a social construction 3. Whiteness as unmarked and invisible Furthermore, although on a minor level, whiteness has been examined as a sort of coping mechanism for social instability and rapid change (Hale 1998). In this section, I will discuss the development of these themes within the field of critical whiteness studies. Whiteness as Fluid, Mutable, and Unstable One of the key findings of the work on whiteness is that of the fluid, mutable, and unstable nature of whiteness as a racial category. As addressed in the introduction of this thesis, many scholars have long attempted to link racial identities - such as White, Asian, Black, and the like - to inherent biological differences (Frankenberg 1993:13; Jacobson 1998:31-38). By linking race to biology, racial categories and, subsequently, racial differences were deemed natural, and thus inevitable. 1 It is important to note that these themes are not mutually exclusive. As the proceeding discussion will show, these themes intersect and build off one another. 22 However, one of the consequences of such a conception of race is a reliance on a stable and immutable racial structure. If racial categories and differences are linked inherently to our biology, then such categories should remain relatively stable, as biological make-up will provide clear and precise guidelines for racial division. A s such, there should be little to no uncertainty about an individual's racial make-up or membership in a specific racial category. Yet as much o f the work on whiteness makes clear, membership in the white race, and as a consequence, the meaning of whiteness, has been neither stable nor immutable. In fact, as the historiographies of whiteness make clear, there has rarely been consensus surrounding who counts as white. In Whiteness of a Different Colour- European Immigration and the Alchemy of Race (1998), Mathew Frye Jacobson traces the fluidity of whiteness in the United States from 1790 to 1965. Focusing on public documents, such as governmental policy, legal code, and popular culture, Jacobson demonstrates how certain European immigrant groups, such as the Irish, Jews, and those from Eastern European countries, have been variably constituted as \"white\" and \"non-white.\" In fact, he argues that the composition of whiteness in the United States can be divided in three epochs: [First]...the nation's first naturalization law in 1790 (limiting naturalized citizenship to \"free white persons\") demonstrates the republican convergence of race and fitness for self-government; the law's wording denote an unconflicted view of the presumed character and unambiguous boundaries of whiteness. [Secondly]... fifty years later... beg inn ing with the massive influx of highly undesirable but nonetheless \"white\" people from Ireland, whiteness was subject to new interpretations. The period of mass European immigration, from the 1840's to the restrictive legislation of 1924, witnessed a fracturing of whiteness into a hierarchy of plural and scientifically determined white races...Finally, in the 1920's and after, partly because the crisis of over-inclusive whiteness had been solved by restrictive legislation and partly in response to a new racial alchemy generated by African-American migrations to the North and West, whiteness was reconsolidated: the late nineteenth century's probationary white groups were now remade and granted the scientific stamp of authenticity as the unitary Caucasian race (Jacobson 1998:7-8). 23 Thus, throughout American history, who counted as \"white\" was fluid and mutable. For example, [i]n certain regions of the Jim Crow South Italians occupied a racial middle ground within the otherwise unforgiving, binary caste system of white-over-black. Politically, Italians were indeed white enough for naturalization and for the ballot, but socially they represented a problem population at best. Their distance from a more abiding brand of social whiten ess... was marked by the common epithet \"dago\"—a word whose decidedly racial meaning was widely recognized at the time and was underscored by the more obviously racial \"white nigger\" (Jacobson 1998:57). While once welcome immigrants to the United States, the influx of Irish brought about by the Potato Famine in Ireland saw their status as \"white\" (and thus welcomed immigrants and potential citizens in the US) challenged. The Irish, contended governmental agents, were of an \"inherited organic imperfection, vitiated constitution, or poor stock\" and were \"constitutionally incapable of intelligent participation in the government of the nation\" (Jacobson 1998:48). As such, the Irish were considered a bull in a china shop: \"the Irish bull amongst the American china - dangerous, you know\" (Jacobson 1998:49). With these peculiarities of \"Celtic blood,\" the Irish were excluded from the white race. In Canada, Adele Perry's (2001) work on pre-confederation British Columbia demonstrates how various groups of whites, including miners and men engaging in interracial marriage, had their very whiteness challenged. In the case of miners, social reformers such as the Temperance movement, the Mechanics Institute, and Christian missionaries, disapproved of their \"uncivilized\" lifestyle (including drinking and living without women in a homosocial environment) and sought to bring the miners back to appropriate whiteness (Perry 2001:95). Thus, according to Perry, [a]s much as this discourse [of social reform] pivoted on the romantic idealized view of womanhood often remarked on in the literature on women's history, it rested on a deep distrust of manhood, especially working-class manhood. In British Columbia, critiques of homosocial culture were also premised on an ambiguous view of settler men's claim to whiteness. To groups like the Columbia Mission, gold miners were an appropriate object of civilizing efforts akin to those 24 directed against the First Nations people locally and indigenous populations throughout the world. This suggests how, for many observers, settler men's claim to membership on the white side of the imperial divide was far from secure (2001:95). Furthermore, the proclivity of settler men to sexual relations with First Nations women brought forth challenges to their whiteness (Perry 2001:98-101). In fact, the colonial government, in conjunction with social reform groups, undertook a massive campaign to persuade white male settlers and their Indian concubines to \"recreate themselves anew\" by undertaking civil marriage. According to Perry, the discourse surrounding civil marriage \"used overlapping languages of manliness, race, and morality to convince lax white men to protect both lesser beings and the reputation of their race and the colony\" (2001:101; emphasis added). Thus, not only would participation in civil marriage bring the couple closer to whiteness, it would improve \"the tarnished reputation of their once-noble race\" (Perry 2001:102). In conclusion, what becomes clear as a result of the work o f Jacobson and Perry is the fluidity, mutability, and instability of the \"white race\". Such work delineating the variability in white racial membership challenges the notion of a monolithic and all-encompassing whiteness by demonstrating the fractured and turbulent construction of white racial identities. Such findings carry important consequences for race theory, as the mutability and instability of whiteness undermines the notion of stable, biologically based racial categories. As will become clear in the next section, this mutability contributes to an understanding of whiteness and of white racial identities as social constructions. 25 Whiteness as a Social Construction As mentioned above, a consequence of the fractured nature and instability o f whiteness is the undermining of races as scientific biological categories. Thus, following in the footsteps of other critical anti-racist scholars (Omi and Winant 1986; Miles and Brown 2003), academics within the field of whiteness studies have emphasized the conception of whiteness as a social construction. That is, whiteness is viewed not as a product of biology, but instead as a product of society. According to Jacobson, whiteness is a \"public fiction\" (1998:11). That is, ...race resides not in nature but in politics and culture. One of the tasks before the historian is to discover which racial categories are useful to whom at a given moment and why. Racial categories themselves—their vicissitudes and the contests over them—reflect the competing notions of history, peoplehood, and collective destiny by which power has been organized and contested (Jacobson 1998:9). Yet, and more importantly for Jacobson, race is not just a conception; it is also a perception -\"the problem is not just how races are comprehended, but how they are seen\" (1998:9). As a social construct, race functions as an ideology to inform social perceptions. Referring to the work of Franz Boas, Jacobson argues \"the eye that sees is a means of perception conditioned by the tradition that the possessor has been reared in\" (1998:10; emphasis added). As such, race emerges as a product of society that is employed for social comprehension. Furthermore, Jacobson contends that the second part of the equation of race as a social construct \"consists of the ways in which those conceptions of difference successfully masquerade as a feature of the natural landscape\" (1998:10). In fact, \"the awesome power of race as an ideology resides precisely in its ability to pass as a feature of the natural landscape\" (Jacobson 1998:10). To claim that race is a social construction is not to claim that such conceptions do not have real and tangible consequences for people. Ruth Frankenberg, in her work on contemporary white women (1993), also argues for a theoretical conception of whiteness and 26 race as social constructs. Focusing on the work of Omi and Winant (1986) on the instability of racial categories, Frankenberg contends that, [i]n order to think about white women and race...it is critical to reflect on the meaning and history...of the category \"race\" itself, and similarly that of the idea of \"racism\". I have found most useful those analyses that view race as a socially constructed rather than an inherently meaningfiil category, one linked to relations of power and processes of struggle, and whose meaning changes over time (1993:11). However, [r]ace, like gender, is \"real\" in the sense that is has real, though changing, effects in the world, and real, tangible and complex impact on individuals' sense of self, experiences, and life chances. In asserting that race and racial difference are socially constructed , I do not minimize their social and political reality, but rather insist that their reality is, precisely, social and political rather than inherent or static (Frankenberg 1993:11). Thus, advocating a position of whiteness as a social construction does not predicate the denial of the real and tangible affects of racial distinctions. A n excellent example of the social construction of whiteness is presented in Elizabeth Furniss's book The Burden of History (1999). Exploring race relations in Williams Lake, British Columbia, Furniss argues that both past and contemporary conceptions of whiteness and \"Indian-ness\" have been shaped by what she refers to as the \"Frontier Myth\" (1999:16). This complex consists of a form of historical consciousness - an awareness of history - that is culturally conditioned and deeply influenced by Canada's colonial heritage. This historical consciousness is made manifest as a historical epistemology: a way of knowing about history that provides a certain set of rules and assumptions that guide how \"truths\" about the past, and by extension the present, are to be created, understood, and conveyed (Furniss 1999:17). According to Furniss, [t]he Frontier Myth developed in the United States over a period of three centuries and can be identified in a variety of genres ranging from early settlers' narratives to nineteenth century dime store novels and Wild West shows to contemporary Hollywood movies. It contains several standard themes. The story begins with the settlers' journey to the wilderness and their cultural, moral, and material regression to the more \"primitive\" conditions encountered there. The frontier experience involves a series of encounters with morally opposed forces, the most important being civilization and wilderness, humans and nature, and whites and Indians... 27 The themes of conflict and violence are central to those encounters as the protagon-ists (white settlers) struggle against the harsh environment and climate and the unknown and potentially hostile Indians (1999:17-18). This myth has had real consequences for both whites and Aboriginals. At its roots, the myth creates a dichotomy that posits the [white] settler against the First Nations people. Furthermore, this dichotomy sees the linkages of certain terms and characteristics to each side of the dichotomy. Thus white is constructed as settler, hero, civilized, and morally superior; First Nations, on the other hand, are constructed as uncivilized, wild, primitive, and inferior. Through the examination of public discourse, including textbooks, books published by local amateur historians, and the Williams Lake museum, Furniss demonstrates that this myth has shaped the communities understandings of whiteness and Indianness. Furthermore, and perhaps most compellingly, Furniss examines contemporary interactions between whites and First Nations, in terms of prominent legal battles and the Williams Lake Stampede, and demonstrates how this mythical dichotomy continues to construct race relations - relations which continue to position whites in power and the First Nations as inferior and weak. This understanding of racial identities as products of society carries important implications for critical anti-racist scholarship. After all, if racial identities are social discursive products - that is, if race is not concretely rooted in biology and the naturalness and inevitability of human genetics - then there is the potential for changing the established racial hierarchy. Such an approach challenges notions of race, particularly the \"natural\" dominance of white racial identities, by arguing that this dominance is not a product of biology, but is the product of human discursive and material production. By dissecting and deconstructing white racial dominance, critical anti-racist scholars can make important steps towards dismantling white supremacy. 28 Whiteness as Unmarked and Invisible A s Ruth Frankenberg argues, whiteness tends to be the nondefined definer of other people (1993:197). In many cases, whiteness functions as a norm which individuals and social groups are compared to and judged against. Frankenberg argues, \"whiteness comes to be an unmarked or neutral category, whereas other cultures are specifically marked \"cultural\"\" (1993:197). Here, whiteness operates as the seemingly \"un-raced centre of a racialized world\" (Rasmussen, Klinenberg, Nexica & Wray 2001:10). The consequences of such a positioning of whiteness, argues Frankenberg, is the simultaneous eclipsing and marginalization of others (1993:196-197). Importantly, the invisibility of whiteness is dependent on the social context. For, while whiteness may appear to function invisibly from the centre of social relations, it is always visible from the margins of society. As bell hooks contends, In white supremacist society, white people can \"safely\" imagine that they are invisible to black people since the power they have historically asserted, and even now collectively assert over black people accorded them the right to control the black gaze. As fantastic as it may seem, racist white people find it easy to imagine that black people cannot see them if within their desire they do not want to be seen by the dark Other...Some white people may even imagine there is no representation of whiteness in the black imagination, especially one that is based on concrete observation or mythic conjecture; they think they are seen by black folks only as they want to appear (1997:168-169). In fact, hooks observes that, usually, \"white students respond with naive amazement that black people critically assess white people from a standpoint where \"whiteness\" is a privileged signifier\" (1997:167). However, as articulated by Frankenberg, \"hooks points out [that] communities of colour frequently see and name whiteness clearly and critically, in periods when white folks have asserted their own \"color blindness\" as well as in times of self-conscious white claims of superiority\" (1997:4). As such, it is important to recognize 29 that whiteness functions invisibly within the dominant, hegemonic elements of society, but is clearly visible for those existing within society's margins2. For Grace Elizabeth Hale, however, the ability for whiteness to function as a norm in society is absolutely dependent on its ability to remain unmarked and invisible. By denying the existence of a distinct white racial category, whiteness is able to function in a variety of capacities (Hale 1998rxi). Thus, whiteness is not only capable of functioning as a racial norm, but it can also be fused with national identity (as, for example, Jacobson (1998) argues that whiteness is equated with Americanness or as Hage (1998) argues that whiteness is equated with Australianness (Hale 1998:xi)). Thus, not only does invisibility place whiteness in a position of power in terms of racial identities, it allows whiteness to dominate in other social relations. Finally, the invisibility of whiteness removes white people from the realm of race and race relations, including acts of racism. Jacobson, for example, argues that whites tend to make whiteness invisible be explaining it away: for example, \"I'm not white because I have Italian blood\" (1998:7). However, this move towards reclaimed otherness, which has become popular in recent years, is highly problematic: it allows one to disavow one's whiteness even while living lives predicated upon its privilege (Jacobson 1998:7). Again, whiteness is made invisible, through distancing one's self from the \"white race,\" while all the time such people benefit from the privilege of their visibly white skin. A s these authors have made clear, whiteness is made invisible in a variety ways. As such, a key for many critical whiteness scholars is the making visible of whiteness, especially its roles and positions in society. Therefore, as Ruth Frankenberg argues, the key to 2 For a very passionate and personal account of contending with whiteness while existing within the margins of society, please see Himani Bannerji's essay (1995), \"But Who Speaks For Us? Experience and Agency in Conventional Feminist Paradigms.\" 30 confronting this power position is the examination of whiteness as a racial and social category: \"naming \"whiteness\" displaces it from the unmarked, unnamed status that is itself an effect of its dominance\" (1993:6). A s such, speaking of whiteness is to assign everyone a place in the relations of race and racism (Frankenberg 1993:6). As Frankenberg argues, such an approach \"emphasizes that dealing with racism is not merely an option for white people -that, rather, racism shapes white people's lives and identities in a way that is inseparable from other facets of daily life\" (1993:6). Before departing from this thematic of whiteness, I feel it necessary to raise some serious criticism that I and others have had with the notion of invisible whiteness. Such notions rely on three basic presuppositions: Firstly, notions of invisibility are predicated on the existence of an unknowing and unseeing white racial group (Rasmussen, et al. 2001:10). Secondly, invisible whiteness \"posits a clear distinction between a group of white insiders who cannot recognize themselves for who they \"really are\" and non-white outsiders whose point of view affords them authentic insight\" (Rasmussen, et al. 2001:10). Finally, notions of invisible whiteness are predicated on a seemingly universal and monolithic white racial identity. None of these presuppositions accurately represents the reality of whiteness. Firstly, the notion of whiteness as a universal experience - a monolithic white racial identity experienced by all \"white\" people in the same fashion - is absurd. Whiteness as a racial identity is not an identity that is experienced separately from other social identities, such as gender, class, or sexuality (McClintock 1995; Stoler 1995) - whiteness, as such, is experienced intersectionally with other social identities. A s gender, class, and sexuality carry with each of them certain levels of visibility, power, and value in society, whiteness is 31 impacted by these other identities. As such, the experiences of a white, heterosexual male will be much different than a white homosexual male, as homosexuality may be viewed as a \"deviant\" identity, and as such, will result in different social experiences for these white men. In the same manner, the experiences of white men and white women, the white middle class and the white working class, as well as any other arrangement of the myriad social identities, will differ from one another. As such, there is no such monolithic whiteness, but instead, a multiplicity of white racial identities. Furthermore, for whiteness to operate invisibly, it is necessary for there to be in existence a white racial group that is unknowing and unseeing, as well as a clear demarcation between the ignorant \"white\" race, and other non-white groups, who see the \"white\" group for whom they really are. Both of these presuppositions, however, are highly problematic. The presupposition of an unknowing and unseeing white racial group is problematic on two counts. Firstly, while many people racialized as white may ignore or be oblivious to their whiteness and white privilege, there are many others who are aware. In fact, the majority of critical whiteness research - that is, research aimed at dissecting whiteness and white privilege - is being undertaken by scholars who would be racialized as white. More and more \"white\" academics and citizens are taking up white privilege through involvement in anti-racist work. As such, the claim to an unknowing and unseeing white racial group is questionable. In terms of the clear demarcation between white and non-white racial groups, the recent literature on whiteness demonstrates that there has been variability in the ethnic groups included in whiteness. This lack of consensus draws into question the clear demarcation of whiteness, and as a consequence, the clear demarcation of non-whiteness. 32 Though I don't believe we should completely dispose of the notion of invisible whiteness, I do believe that it is important, considering such problematic elements, that we need to reassess and rearticulate our understandings of invisible whiteness. Side Note- Whiteness as a Coping Mechanism This literature review would not be complete without a discussion of the notion of \"whiteness as a coping mechanism\" put forth by Grace Elizabeth Hale in her book Making Whiteness-The Culture of Segregation in the South. 1890-1940 (1998). For, although this theme is only represented in this single text, its uniqueness and creativity as a notion of the nature of whiteness earns its inclusion in this discussion. W . E . B . D u Bois once argued that \"[t]he problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the Color Line\" (1995:42). While DuBois was very much referring to white versus black, the Colour Line can also be viewed as white versus non-white, wherein white depends on those that are not white for their very definition. This is the approach taken by Hale in Making Whiteness (1998). According to Hale, the consequences of the civil war, including the abolishment of slavery and the inclusion of the South into America's expansive and modernizing capitalism, as well as the rise of a black middle class, created a sort of \"identity crisis\" for Southern Whites (1998:284). Without the seeming clear guidelines of slavery to delimit racial, and thus social, identities, southern white society was thrown into chaos. Thus, [fjhese threats made the ritualistic enactment of racial difference [through the culture of post-bellum segregation] vital to the maintenance of white supremacy in the twentieth century... Southern whites commanded this performance of segr-egation for both a local and a national audience, to maintain both white privilege at home and a sense of Southern distinctiveness within the nation. Segregation, in turn, helped middle-class white southerners at least mediate these effects (Hale 1998:284). 33 As such, [s]ince southern black inferiority could not, despite whites' desires, be assumed, southern whites created a modern social order in which the difference would instead be continually performed. For whites, this performance, in turn, made reality conform to the script. African Americans were inferior because they were excluded from the white spaces of the franchise, the jury, and political officeholding. They were inferior because they attended inferior schools and held inferior jobs. As the right to consume became central to changing conceptions of American citizenship and as some African Americans became professionals despite discrimination and oppression, African Americans were also and perhaps most publicly inferior because they sat in the inferior waiting rooms, used inferior bathrooms, sat in inferior cars or seats, or just stood. African Americans were inferior because they entered through inferior doors marked \"Colored\", relieved their needs in inferior restrooms marked \"Colored,\" and watched movies from inferior balconies marked \"Colored\" (Hale 1998:84). Thus, to clearly delimit white as a social category, as well as to reassert white supremacy, Southern whites created and employed the culture of racial segregation. From geographical separation, as was the case with \"Colored\" sections, to the use of stereotyped black slave images in advertising and entertainment (most notably in the Hollywood classic film Gone with the Wind), non-whites were constructed as separate and inferior to whites. This separation between white and non-white, however, escalated to include violence and death, as the act of spectacle lynching (the public and publicized murder of black and other non-white (Jewish/Italian) persons) became a popular means to reasserting racial separation (see Hale, 1998:199-239). Therefore, the clear definition of whiteness created by the culture of segregation in the South, which clearly delimited non-whites, on whom whites were dependent for their very definition, served as a coping mechanism against social change and upheaval for Southerners in the post-bellum period. The literature discussed in this review has made very important contributions to the field of critical whiteness studies; however, there are many absences in the literature that need to be remedied by future research. Firstly, most of the research undertaken in Canada has explored whiteness as a supplement to larger discussions of race, ethnicity, colonialism and national identity - whiteness, as such, has not been the central focus of much Canadian 34 research. Much like the work done by Frankenberg (1993; 1997), Jacobson (1998) and Hale (1998) in the United States, critical work focusing centrally on whiteness is necessary to develop a strong understanding of Canadian whiteness. Furthermore, much of the literature contends with understandings of whiteness on a national or provincial level. With the exception of Furniss' investigation on Williams Lake, there is very little micro-level, case study research. In addition, much of the research is focused on large urban settings. Thus, not only are we in need of micro-level investigation, but also research on rural and small-town whiteness. It is the paucity of such research that my thesis will attempt to remedy. Tools of the Trade - Research Methodology A s noted in the introduction, the purpose of this thesis is to explore the social construction of white racial identities of the small, rural community of Armstrong, British Columbia, during the time period 1890-1930. Using newspapers and city council documents, I will explore the discursive construction of whiteness within the realm of public discourse. While an investigation of whiteness implies an analysis centred on race, my research will incorporate an intersectional analysis of white racial identities. As such, I will not only explore the racial constructions of whiteness, but I will also include analyses of the gendered, classed, and sexualized constructions of white racial identities in Armstrong. While I have alluded to them in previous sections, this section will make explicit the underlying theoretical frameworks and research methodology employed in this study. As well, this section will provide clarification and justification of some of the central elements of the project. 35 While, in the introduction, I addressed the impetus for selecting the community of Armstrong as the focus of my research, it is equally important to justify my emphasis on an historical time period for the project. As a former history student, my sociological work has long been drawn towards historical epochs. The oft-stated possibility of history repeating itself has encouraged me to view historic times, places, and people as important fields for critical contemporary social analysis. Philip Abrams (1982), in fact, contends that history and sociology are intrinsically linked. Claiming that serious questions about the contemporary world are most frequently answered with historical answers, Abrams argues . . .the social world is essentially historical...What we chose to do and what we have to do are shaped by the historically given possibilities among which we find ourselves...We can construct new worlds but only on the basis and within the framework of what our predecessors have constructed for us. On that basis and within that framework the content of our activity may re-make or un-make the institutions that surround us. This shaping of action by structure and trans-forming of structure by action both occur as processes in time. It's by seizing on that idea that history and sociology merge and that sociology becomes capable of answering our urgent questions why the world is at it is (1982:3). Because \"any relationship that persists in time has a history,\" it is important to include historical analysis within contemporary sociology (Abrams 1982:6; emphasis added). As such, in order to fully understand contemporary constructions o f whiteness, it is essential to have an understanding of the historical constructions which serve as its basis. To access Armstrong's past, my research focused on what I refer to as \"public discourse.\" Public discourse refers to any document produced by or for the public. For this study, I focused on two particular types of documents - community newspapers and city council records. I have emphasized public documents, for as a sociologist, I am particularly interested in broad social discursive constructions of white racial identities. As such, I am not as interested in the private thoughts of society members, but in the discourse produced and disseminated for public consumption in Armstrong society. Both newspapers and council 36 documents were good sources of pubic discourse. In a time period lacking in telecommunications and internet technology, newspapers were the main mode of transmission for social discourse. Newspapers, after all, are aimed at reporting social events and transmitting thoughts and ideas to the community at large. Council documents were equally important, for as records of the public governance of the community at large, they provide important insight into the public discourse of the time. To explore the social constructions of whiteness in newspapers and city council legislation, I undertook a process known as critical discourse analysis (Reinharz 1992:145-163; Currie 1999; Henry & Tator 2002). This process entails a \"double reading\" of a document - one reading that focuses on the direct meanings constructed by the author, and a second reading that focuses on the indirect, and perhaps unintentional, meanings that emerge as a result of the document's discursive construction. Such a method enables a highly nuanced and intensive reading of a document. Furthermore, a double reading facilitates a counter-hegemonic and subversive reading of a dominant-produced/hegemonic document, a reading which is invaluable to the work challenging hegemonic structures of domination. There are several steps one takes in the process of critical discourse analysis. With the support of an excellent discussion of the process in Henry and Tatar's Discourses of Domination (2002), my method o f analysis included the following steps: 1) a general description of the text 2) an interpretation, guided by my theoretical frameworks, of the racial constructions in the text (i.e.: how is whiteness constructed?) 3) an interpretation of the interaction of racial identities (i.e.: how is whiteness constructed in relation to other racial identities? How do non-white racial identities contribute to our understanding o f whiteness?) 37 4) an interpretation of the relationship of these racial identities to the text (i.e.: what purpose do such constructions serve for the specific text)? 5) an interpretation of the consequences of the discursive constructions (i.e.: what impact does this understanding o f whiteness have on life in the community?) By undertaking the multiple steps of critical discourse analysis, I am able to capture the variety of meaning produced as a consequence of the discursive production of a document. This enables a highly nuanced and in-depth understanding of white racial identities. M y research is focused on social constructions of whiteness, so one might wonder why I have included non-white racial identities within the process of my critical discourse analysis. A s whiteness is a relational social identity/location - that is, since whiteness is dependent on the existence of non-whiteness for its dominance - it is extremely useful to explore dominant constructions of non-white racial identities to folly understand white racial identities. Based on the work of Gayatri Spivak, Jennifer Terry contends, Because the subaltern subject is in this textual sense produced by the dominant historical account, it cannot be understood independent of the documentary evidence of the elite. Conversely, in this strictly textual sense, the elite within traditional historical accounts is itself a textual effect, the residue of the subaltern upon which it is reliant for its very definition (1991:58; emphasis added). As such, one can explore the meaning of whiteness by examining the constructed meanings of non-whiteness. It is, therefore, tremendously important to include non-white racial identities within the process of critical discourse analysis. Underlying this emphasis on discourse is the work of Michel Foucault. According to Foucault, \"it is in discourse that power and knowledge are joined together\"- \"discourse transmits and produces power; it reinforces it\" (1990:100-101). Equally important, however, discourse also 'Hindermines and exposes power, renders it fragile and makes it possible to thwart\" (Foucault 1990:101). To be precise, 38 we must not imagine a world of discourse divided between accepted discourse and excluded discourse, or between the dominant discourse and the dominated one; but as a multiplicity of discursive elements that can come into play in various strategies...Discourses are not once and for all subservient to power or raised up against it, any more than silences are. We must make allowances for the complex and unstable process whereby discourse can be both an instrument and an effect of power, but also a hindrance, a stumbling-block, a point of resistance and a starting point for an opposing strategy...There is not, on the one side, a discourse of power, and opposite to, another discourse that runs counter to it. Discourses are tactical elements or blocks operating in the field of force relations; there can exist different and even contradictory discourses within the same strategy (Foucault 1990:100-102). A s such, it becomes important that we deconstruct discourse to explore the relations of knowledge and power. Foucault argues that We must not expect the discourses...to tell us, above all, what strategy they derive from, or what moral divisions they accompany, or what ideology - dominant or dominated - they represent; rather we must question them on the two levels of their tactical productivity (what reciprocal effects of power and knowledge they ensure) and their strategical integration (what conjunction and what force relationship make their utilization necessary in a given episode of the various confrontations that occur) (Foucault 1990: 102). Equally important to my research is Foucault's work on power. As whiteness is intimately linked to relations of power in society, it was essential to incorporate a theoretical framework that took into consideration elements of power. As such, Foucault's History of Sexuality (1990) provided this important groundwork. Challenging the notion of Victorian prudery, Foucault (1990) argues that there has been a veritable explosion of discourse surrounding human sexuality since the seventeenth century. Yet, as mentioned in the previous paragraph, Foucault sees discourse as the site where knowledge and power come together, and as such, he sees power and power relations implicit within the discourse of sexuality. Foucault's understanding of power surrounds the \"multiplicity of force relations immanent in the [social] sphere\" - that is, \"Power is everywhere; not because it embraces everything, but because it comes from everywhere\" (1990:92-93). Furthermore, \"power is exercised from innumerable points, in the interplay of non-egalitarian and mobile relations\" 39 (Foucault 1990:94). Importantly, however, \"power is not an institution, and not a structure; neither is it a certain strength we are endowed with; it is the name one attributes to a complex strategical situation in a particular society\" (Foucault 1990:93). Nonetheless, \"there is no power exercised without a series o f aims and objectives\" (Foucault 1990:95). Foucault's understandings of power, knowledge and discourse provides an important framework for the analysis of discursive constructions of white racial identities in Armstrong. In terms of textual analysis, Foucault's emphasis on the multiple nodes of power and the production of discourse provides an impetus for social scientists to undertake multiple readings o f textual documents, as well as to question the power relations implicit within such documents. By questioning the intents and purposes of the producers of textual records, researchers can enhance their understanding of such documents, as well as better prepare themselves for dealing with both hegemonic and counter-hegemonic texts. Foucault's analysis challenges notions of benign discourse, encouraging, instead, the critical analysis of the discursive constructs of the social world. While Foucault's work provides an important framework for my research, I am equally influenced by those that challenge his theoretical conceptions. For anthropologist A n n Laura Stoler (1995), while Foucault's History of Sexuality (1990) provides important insight into Victorian social relations, his failure to address issues of race and colonialism are highly problematic. According to Stoler, ...Europe's eighteenth- and nineteenth-century discourses on sexuality, like other cultural, political, or economic assertions, cannot be charted in Europe alone. In short-circuiting empire, Foucault's history of European sexuality misses key sites in the production of that discourse, discounts the practices that racialized bodies, and thus elides a field of knowledge that provided the contrasts for what a \"healthy, vigorous, bourgeois body\" was all about. Europe's eighteenth-century discourses on sexuality can - indeed must - be traced along a more circuitous imperial route that leads to nineteenth-century technologies of sex. They were refracted through the discourses of empire and its exigencies, by men and women whose affirmations of a bourgeois self, and the racialized contexts in which those confidences were 40 built, could not be disentangled (1995:7; emphasis in original). Separating the discourses of sexuality from their imperial - and thus racial- context is highly problematic as it elides the racial component in the formation of the bourgeois self. For as Stoler makes clear, By bringing the discursive anxieties and practical struggles over citizenship and national identities in the nineteenth-century back more squarely within Foucault's frame, bourgeois identities in both metropole and colony emerge tacitly and emphatically coded by race. Discourses of sexuality do more than define the distinctions of the bourgeois self; in identifying marginal members of the body politic, they have mapped the moral parameters of European nations. These deeply sedimented discourses on sexual morality could redraw the \"interior frontiers\" of national communities, frontiers that were secured through - and sometimes in collision with - the boundaries of race. These nationalist discourses were predicated on exclusionary cultural principles that did more than divide the middle class from the poor. They marked out those whose claims to property rights, citizenship, and public relief were worthy of recognition and whose were not (1995:7-8). Born out of the movement of white settlers into the British Columbia Interior, Armstrong-Spallumcheen is clearly the product of colonialism. After all, it was colonialism that brought white settlers into the province, and colonialism that relegated the local First Nations to reserve lands, thus freeing up the majority of land in the Spallumcheen valley for pre-emption and settlement by these white \"pioneers.\" Colonialism was a central element of the social milieu from which Armstrong-Spallumcheen emerged and from which its citizens drew meaning about the world around them. To ignore the community's connection to the colonial project and exclude colonialism from my analysis would be highly problematic. Influenced by the work of Stoler (1995; 2002), McClintock (1995), and Razack (2002), my study situates analyses of whiteness within the context of colonialism. Finally, while I have alluded to it in the introduction of this thesis, it is important to understand that my approach to studying whiteness is not based solely on race, but incorporates the construction of white racial identities along the lines of gender, class, and sexuality. As Adele Perry argues, 41 the processes of colonization cannot be understood without attention to gender, and that gender, similarly, cannot be adequately comprehended outside of the politics of race and colonization. In British Columbia, white and First Nations did not meet as ungendered, undifferentiated racial subjects, but as men and women, and to fail to recognize this is to fundamentally misunderstand the processes of cultural contact and colonial development. Similarly, to analyse gender as an independent and autonomous force is to misunderstand its character (2001:8). Quite simply, Race, gender, and class are not distinct realms of experience, existing in splendid isolation from each other; nor can they be simply yoked together retrospectively like armatures of Lego. Rather, they come into existences in and through relation to each other - i f in contradictory and conflictual ways (McClintock 1995:5). Social subjects aren't simply racialized, but are also gendered, classed, and sexualized - none of these social identities/locations exists in isolation from the others. To focus solely on the racialized construction on whiteness not only elides the entwined and intersectional nature of social markers, but also fails to produce multidimensional understandings of the construction of white racial identities. Aligned with this emphasis on the intersectional nature of race, class, gender and sexuality, is my theoretical framework rooted in critical anti-racist, feminist, materialist, anti-colonial 3, and queer theory. As I am interested in the intersections of race, class, gender, and sexuality in the production of white racial identities in Armstrong, it is necessary to 3 While I refer to this theoretical framework as anti-colonialism, it is more commonly referred to as post-colonialism. I have serious theoretical issues with the term \"post-colonialism\". \"Post\", for the most part, connotes \"past\" and the notion that something has ended. With the repeated physical invasions on other nations by the United States, particularly in the Middle East, Latin America, and Africa, as well as the cultural invasion of the world, I question the \"post\" position on colonialism. Furthermore, by implying that colonialism is \"past\" we run the risk of neglecting and ignoring such \"colonial\" situations in the contemporary world. Furthermore, as Anne McClintock (1998) argues, the prefix \"post\" has some problematic consequences in terms of time and history. According to McClintock, the term confers on colonialism the prestige of history proper; colonialism is the marker of history. Other cultures share only a chronological, prepositional relation to a Eurocentred epoch that is over (post-), or not yet begun (pre-). In other words, the world's multitudinous cultures are marked not positively by what distinguishes them but by a subordinate, retrospective relation to linear, European time (1998:11). As such, I am uncomfortable with the term \"post-colonialism\", and instead advocate use of the term \"anti-colonialism\", which I will make use of throughout this thesis. 42 incorporate a theoretical framework which includes all of these social identities and locations. This is achieved through the framework I have mentioned above. More importantly, however, this framework aligns itself with my political and theoretical commitment to contend with social inequality and challenge the subordination of peoples on the basis of their social location. This intersectional framework encompasses a commitment to end social inequality based on race, class, gender, and sexuality, lending itself nicely to my research. As such, this intersectional framework contributes to the theoretical framework which informs this study. A Note on Primary Sources One of the seductions of historical sociology, for me at least, is the prospect of working with primary historical documents. In fact, nothing pleases me more than spending time in archival centers leafing through documents covered with the residue of time in my white cotton archival gloves. There is something so magical about seeing and touching and smelling these documents of history, and I would wish the experience of archival research on everyone. Fortunately for me, my job during the summer prior to arriving at the University of British Columbia for graduate studies (2002) was as the assistant to the curator at the Armstrong Spallumcheen Museum and Art Gallery. I spent a great deal of time working in the archives - from undertaking research for visitors to preparing and storing archival documents - and became familiar with the wealth of documents existing within the museum's collection. M y work in the archives not only made me aware of this vast untapped archival resource in the community, but also exposed me to the historical discourse which 43 inspired this research. Many times over that summer, the curator and I shared gasps of incredulity, dismay, and anger over the racist and demeaning constructions encountered in these historical documents, and it was these experiences that inspired my current research. As such, the summer of 2003 was spent in the archives of the Armstrong Spallumcheen museum. With the vast amount of archival material available to me, it was necessary to narrow my research focus in order to make the material accessible. As a sociologist interested in studying the broader societal environment, it became important for me to select documents that represented society at large. As mentioned previously, both community newspapers and city council documents emerged as the prominent sources of public discourse. Fortunately, the museum archives held complete collections of the newspapers and city council documents on microfilm, as well as nearly complete hardcopy collections. As the archives lacked a microfilm printer-reader, I had the good fortune of reading the actual editions of the newspapers and using a photocopier to make copies for my personal records. As such, all o f the newspapers and council documents included in this research project are available at the Armstrong Spallumcheen Museum archives. For this study, there are four community newspapers included in the analysis: Armstrong Advertiser, Armstrong Advance and Spallumcheen Advocate, Okanagan Advance, and Okanagan Commoner. The Armstrong Advertiser is the oldest and most established newspaper in the community- beginning its publishing in May 1902 and continuing into the present day (Campbell 1948:144; Armstrong Advertiser 2002). Though passing through the hands of several owners, the Advertiser has remained a cornerstone of the community. The Armstrong Advance and Spallumcheen Advocate emerged as an alternative to the Advertiser in 1905, but was eventually sold to the Advertiser in 1906. Finally the Okanagan Advance 44 and the Okanagan Commoner, while separate papers, were both products of the union of the Armstrong Advertiser and the newspaper of the nearby community of Enderby. Due to paper shortages during the First World War, the two newspapers joined forces to cut costs, as well as to do their part for the war effort. These two hybrid newspapers ran during 1911 (Okanagan Advance) and 1918/1919 (Okanagan Commoner). As for city council documents, I relied heavily on the minute books from both the Spallumcheen Municipal Council and the Armstrong City Council. As noted in the introduction, the Spallumcheen Municipal Council was established in 1892 to oversee the settlements in the Spallumcheen Valley. In 1913, Armstrong was formally incorporated as a city and was granted a city council of its own. However, since the city and the surrounding municipality of Spallumcheen were intimately linked through economics, common governance (from the pre-1913 council), and social affairs, the two councils functioned in tandem, and continue to do so to this day. As such, I included the documents of both councils in this study. I referred to the minutes books of the councils as this is the only living record of the discussions undertaken during meetings, and as such, provides the only textual evidence of the debate and discussion undertaken in council on public issues. Such a record is important because council meetings provided the opportunity for the public to debate and rule on issues of public concern, and as such, provide a wealth o f information on public perceptions and social constructions. Importantly, since these councils were dominated by white, middle class men, city council minutes provide important insight into the hegemonic structures of community, as well as the power relations involved in such a council. Since whiteness is the emphasis of this research, and since the councils were very much white seats of power, it was 45 important for me to include these textual records within my analysis. As well, these records of debate provide important insight into, as well as provide a context for, formal council legislation (such as by-laws). In fact, without city council minutes, the formal legal statutes of the councils would provide limited information about the public discourse of the time. It is only in understanding the impetus for and the debate surrounding council legislation that we can truly grasp the social impact of community statutes. Conclusion \"The master's tools will never dismantle the master's house\" -Audre Lorde (2001) When I first encountered Audre Lorde's message quoted above, I took it to mean that tools of the master - that is, the academic research frameworks I was being indoctrinated with in my undergraduate classes - would never achieve the political and social change I so desperately sought, and as such, should be thrown away. However, as I have gotten older, and hopefully wiser, I have come to realize an alternative meaning to this assertion. Rereading Lorde, it becomes clear that this message is not so much about abandoning academic research techniques, but about acknowledging our differences and the real conditions of our existence and drawing strength from these realities, while at the same time, undertaking steps to cross these boundaries and divisions, and to challenge the way that the \"master\" has constructed and defends these divisions for the master's own purposes. Thus, with the words of Lorde imprinted in my mind, I am employing the frameworks and methods learned through my education in an attempt to dissect the \"master's house.\" Like the scholars within the field of critical whiteness studies, my goal is to recognize the 46 differences amongst white racial identities and to understand the realities of existence that these varied identities face. This occurs concurrently with my goal to challenge social inequality (or the way the master(s) would like the world to stay - a state which privileges their existences and their way of life) and thwart the variety of \"isms\" that plague contemporary society, including racism, sexism, classism, and heterosexism. I have employed counter-hegemonic frameworks and methods, tools I hope Lorde would approve of, to undertake this task. It is my hope that this research, much like the other work within critical whiteness studies, will contribute to the dismantling of the master's house. 47 Chapter III \"Landless Men and Manless Land\" Whiteness, Land, and Immigration The official history of Armstrong begins in the year 1866. In this year, Alexander Leslie (A.L) Fortune, after a lengthy overland expedition from Fort Garry (now Winnipeg) in the company of the famed Overlander1 group, arrived at the bluffs overlooking the Spallumcheen Valley. A s he recounted to the community newspaper in 1911, [t]he party arrived on June 15 t h, 1866, at the season when God has completed a finishing touch of glorious beauty to His own flower gardens. The whole was a country of parks and charm... [We] were soon seated on a bench of bare rocks near Lansdown2 [sic]. Here [we] rested awhile and greatly admired the panoramic view of the park-like country stretching farther than the eye could see...Much of the country was timbered and a great portion ready for the plow. We ventured to prophecy, and saw with the mental vision, many cabins with prize chickens and eggs everywhere. On every hundred and sixty acres, we had a family of six or thirteen in a band... We could also see the overland railway so much needed to carry cheap tea, and provide easy travel for immigrants to come into the wheat fields of the prairie town we saw, with a happy rural life in all directions (Okanagan Advertiser April 29, 1911:6). Little did Fortune know that his \"imagined community\"3 would soon become a reality - by 1890, not quite twenty-five years after his arrival, nearly sixty families were calling the area home, 4 and a central business district, as well as a school and church, were established. With the corning of white settlers and the establishment of this \"pioneer society,\" land became a central issue. To facilitate the pre-emption of land and the establishment of ' There have been a number of works published on the Overlanders, including Metcalf 1970 & 1978; McMicking 1981; Merritt 1995; Wright 2000; and Gallaher 2002. As well, artist William Hind's Overlanders Sketchbook '62 is available on line as part of the digital collection of the National Archives of Canada (see www.archives.ca/05/0536 e.htm). Finally, for music fans, please see Mackerras and Ireland's The Overlanders. Suite for Orchestra (1971). 2 Lansdowne was the original settlement in Spallumcheen. It served as the central business district for the area until 1892, when the S & O Railway (part of the Canadian National Railway (CNR)) was built to the south of this settlement on the current townsite of Armstrong. With the realization that it had been passed over by the railway, the majority of the Lansdowne settlement was relocated to the new townsite. 3 1 am borrowing this notion of imagined communities from Benedict Anderson (1991). 4 A . L . Fortune includes a complete listing of these families, including dates of arrival, in his 1911 newspaper series (see Okanagan Advertiser April 29, 1911:6). 48 communities by white settlers, it was necessary to have access to large tracts of land. Yet, while many constructed the colony of British Columbia as a \"manless land\", ready for the taking (see, for example, Tennant 1990; Harris 2002), the lands were, in fact, inhabited by Canada's original citizenry - the First Nations. In the case of Spallumcheen, for example, both the Okanagan and Spallumcheen peoples had historically made their homes in the valley. However, with the establishment of reserves in the area in 1861 (Harris 2002:37), these nations were dispossessed of their land, and the geography of Spallumcheen was cleared for white settlement. The focus of this chapter is the relationship between whiteness, land, and immigration. This chapter begins with an examination of the Overlander Expedition. Employing Furniss' (1999) concept of the frontier myth, this section will examine the major themes within this tale - themes that are perpetuated throughout the discourse of the community of Armstrong. Furthermore, this section will examine the colonial discourse of whiteness that enabled white settlement, such as the Overlanders, in the Spallumcheen Valley. In the second section, I will explore conceptions of land use in the community discourse and demonstrate how such discourse falls along racial lines (i.e.: white and non-white). Examining the cases of the First Nations and of the Chinese, this section will show how discourses of appropriate, white land use, and inferior, non-white land-use, were employed as a means of legally dispossessing and disallowing non-white land use and ownership. Finally, the third section will examine the community discourse surrounding immigration. Again, this section will demonstrate how conceptions of whiteness and non-whiteness were employed as a means of controlling immigration into the community. This 49 chapter will make clear that, in terms of land use, constructions of whiteness and non-whiteness facilitated and maintained white dominance in this settler society. The Coming of Civilization - Settlement and the Myth of the Overlanders Figure 3.1- Augustus and Catherine Schubert, Circa 1890 (ASM AS # 3874) In 1862, a group of 150 men left Fort Garry (now the city of Winnipeg) with ox-drawn carts. With the severe climate of Fort Garry, as well as threats from Indians and their savage warfare, the \"Overlanders \", as the group would be called, were eager to try their luck in the goldfield of British Columbia. Unbeknownst to the party, also making the trip was Mrs. Catherine Schubert and her three small children. Catherine was eager to accompany her husband, despite his insistence that she remain in Fort Garry. In fact, she was so eager to make the overland trip to B. C. that she withheld the fact that she was pregnant with the couple's fourth child. In defiance of her husband's wishes, Catherine piled herself and her three small children into a cart, and followed the group of men at a distance. It was several days into the excursion before she was discovered. Plagued by summer heat and insects, as well as living in constant fear of Indian attacks, the Overlanders made there way across the Canadian prairies. Trapped in boggy swamps, many of their oxen and other animals perished. Furthermore, once they reached the Rocky Mountains, the group faced extreme climbs in a \"dangerous and precipitous \" environment. When they reached the North Thompson River, the group splintered, with the Schubert Family heading down the river towards Kamloops, British Columbia, as this was thought a safer route for the family. 50 \"After several weeks of hard walking, working, canoeing or rafting, as the nature of the country compelled them to act or shift, they gradually got nearer to Kamloops \". However, the family was running extremely low on food- they were living on dried meat, mountain berries, and wild rose buds, and Mrs. Schubert had preserved a little flour in her hankerchieffor her children. Further complicating the situation was the fact that Catherine was ready to give birth any day. The family continued towards Kamloops and soon discovered an Indian village. Thinking they could barter for food and supplies, and perhaps could remain in the village until their baby was delivered, the Schubert's went into the settlement. However, there was no help to be found- the entire Indian population was dead, victims of small pox. Without help or supplies, the Schubert's then headed by raft towards Kamloops, which they reached on the 13th of October, 1862, and before daylight, Rosa Kamloops Schubert was born. The little girl was named Rosa after the rose hips that had sustained the family during the trek (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). The tale of Catherine Schubert and the Overlander expedition of 1862 is Armstrong's most important historic tale.5 For not only is it the heroic tale of the amazing feats of a pregnant mother, it also details the adventure that brought A . L . Fortune to the Spallumcheen Valley and established the settlements which would lead to the founding of Armstrong. As a child, I had memorized the Overlander story by third grade and had many times visited the Catherine Schubert memorial, located in none other than Armstrong's city park. To this day, groups of elementary school children are brought to the memorial, the tale of the Overlander expedition recounted by teachers or museum tour guides. Aside from the minds of 5 Because the retelling of the Schubert Overlander story ends in Kamloops, there may be some confusion about how this story is \"Armstrong's most important historic tale\". Firstly, apart from the Schubert family, the Overlander expedition brought A . L . Fortune into the Spallumcheen Valley, where he decided to settle and establish his homestead. This marks, at least in official histories, the birth of the community of Armstrong. Thus the Overlander story is intimately tied to the genesis of the community. Furthermore, while the Overlander expedition initially led them to Kamloops, the Schubert story does not end here. For nearly two decades after their arrival in B.C., while Augustus searched unsuccessfully for gold, Catherine ran a boarding house and taught school in the Caribou (Brown, Lowry & Schultz 1986:109). Towards the end of the 1870s, Augustus homesteaded land in the Spallumcheen Valley, and in 1883, Catherine came to Spallumcheen, where she would spend the rest of her days (she passed away in 1918) (Brown, et al. 1986:109-110). The Schubert's were very involved in the community - Catherine regularly provided \"welcome baskets\" for new settlers and taught the young women of Spallumcheen to make candles and soap, and Augustus donated land for a local school (Merritt 1995:47; Serra 1968:9).Therefore, because the Schuberts were part of the famed Overlander expedition that brought A . L . Fortune to Spallumcheen, and because they eventually settled in and made important contributions to the development of Armstrong, their story has become a part of the historical landscape of the community. 51 elementary children and the concrete memorial, the Overlander story lives on in a variety of ways - from The Overlander 1862 restaurant I worked in as a teenager, and the immense presence of Rose (nee: Schubert) Swanson mountain, to displays at the local museum, and the street that bears the Schubert family name. Armstrong has long embraced the Overlander tale and has strived to maintain its importance in the minds of its citizens. Although the Overlander expedition occurred outside of the time boundaries of this research project (1890-1930), it, nonetheless, permeates much of the history of the area. The Overlander story is continually told and retold within the public discourse of the community. The tale is regaled and recounted innumerable times within the community newspapers, and serves as the basis for many a discussion of the area. Furthermore, as I hope to make clear in this chapter, the themes and constructions that emerge from the Overlander myth will weave their way throughout much of the discourse of the proceeding decades. For this reason, I feel it is essential to include a discussion of the Overlanders within this thesis. Much like Furniss' \"frontier myth\" (1999), the Overlander tale tells a tale of good, moral whiteness and its conflict with, and eventual triumph over, hostile environments and savage peoples, in this case, Indians. At the heart of this tale lies an essential binary between white and non-white - for it is constructions of superior whiteness and inferior non-whiteness that not only created the conflict at the centre of the Overlander tale, but also enabled the trip and the grand finale of settlement to occur. More importantly, however, these racial constructions, which provided the basis for this foray into the \"wilds\" of British Columbia, and which allowed for A . L . Fortune and others to settle in Armstrong, permeate the discourse of future generations, as will be demonstrated in the sections dealing with land use and immigration. 52 In her examination of the meaning of whiteness and Indianness in a small rural British Columbia community, Elizabeth Furniss (1999) argues that Williams Lake society functions around a \"Frontier Myth.\" The frontier myth begins with the story of the settlers' journey to the wilderness and their cultural and moral regression to the more \"primitive\" conditions encountered there. The frontier experience involves a series of encounters with morally opposed forces, the most important being civilization and wilderness, humans and nature, and whites and Indians... These tensions are ultimately resolved through the settlers' separation from the conditions of the frontier, typically with the establishment of homesteads and settlements, and by implication, their \"conquest\" of the wilderness and Aboriginal peoples (Furniss 1999:17-18). This myth, she argues, is a dominant account of history that shapes our historical consciousness - it is \"a way of knowing about history that provides a certain set of rules and assumptions that guide how \"truths\" about the past, and by extension the present, are to be created and understood\" (Furniss 1999:17). For the community of Armstrong, the Overlander tale is its \"frontier myth\" Its formulation is nearly identical to Furniss' deconstruction of the myth of Williams Lake. At its essence, the story is one of white pioneers and their journey into the wilderness - in this case, the young colony of British Columbia. While small white settlements, mostly related to the Hudson's Bay Company, had been established on Vancouver Island during the 1840's, the British colony only began to see a major influx of white settlers in 1858, when \"this tiny, isolated oasis of Europeans was inundated, almost overnight it seemed, by would-be gold miners and entrepreneurs in search of sudden wealth\" (Barman 1996:61). However, while the gold rush had brought white settlers into the colony, none had settled in the Spallumcheen Valley. It was, of course, not until A . L . Fortune's leg of the Overland expedition brought him to the bluffs overlooking the future site of Armstrong, that white settlement would make its 53 mark on the valley. Seen in this light, the Overlander expedition was truly an expedition into the \"wilds\" of British Columbia. Furthermore, like the frontier myth, the Overlander tale puts its white settlers in conflict with formidable opponents - namely, nature and Indians. In the absence of the railway, the Overlanders relied on horses and oxen to make their way through the untouched wilderness of British Columbia. However, such a method of transportation failed to protect the group from nature and its elements. They faced extreme heat while crossing the prairies, although \"the fatigue and exposure were well borne by the family...they suffered no loss or injury\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Yet, crossing the mountainous terrain that brought them into the interior created many problems for the party. Not only were they forced to ford rivers, \"the country was found very difficult to travel on account of boggy swamps where the animals were often unloaded and reloaded, and the men had to make many trips with their stuff on their backs to relieve the animals\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Furthermore, at one point, \"the travellers had to make a climb of about 200 feet...there were dangerous and precipitous places passed\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). However, \"through the passes they pressed on as steadily as they had done over the prairie trails, though the danger and difficulties were many, and mountain storms often soaked them to the skin . . . For two weeks they struggled through the pathless forests, up and down steep mountain sides and valleys\" (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1926:2). In addition to the formidable obstacles put forth by the wilderness, a variety of Indian peoples also posed a serious threat to the Overlanders. It was, in fact, problems with Indians that had propelled the Schubert family, A . L . Fortune, and the other members of the Overlander expedition to flee St. Paul, Minnesota for Fort Garry. In a 1926 retelling of the 54 tale, for example, it is detailed how young James Schubert, the son of Catherine, was nearly kidnapped when a \"redskin\" broke into the Schubert home (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1926:1). Yet once they reached Fort Garry, conflict with Indians was still a pressing danger. According to A . L . Fortune, [It] took all the travellers eight days to Fort Garry. A few weeks after our travel over the region the Sioux Indians rose in rebellion against the government and the white settlers. They murdered most of the whites along our route of travel, besides many in other frontier settlements (Okanagan Advertiserr June 1, 1911:6). For the Schuberts, \"[i]n Fort Garry they found the winds and climate very severe, but difficulties more serious were the threatening dangers from Indians and savage warfare\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). As such, both parties were easily swayed to continue with the Overlander expedition into British Columbia. 6 During their travels, the Overlanders were in constant fear of Indian attacks. When Augustus Schubert discovered his wife and children following the party, his central concern was that the children would be stolen by Indians (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Furthermore, when the party arrived at Fort Ellis, \"Mr. McKay, who was in charge of the station, advised Mr. Schubert not to go any further with his wife and family, for they would surely suffer by Indians\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Furthermore, \"this dread of Indians was greatly increasing in the whole party after their [Indian] guide left them and absconded with articles he borrowed to kill Buffalo\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Fortunately for the expedition, \"the Indians did not molest them, but a hornets' nest in a narrow pass was a fearful torment\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). 6 While there is a great deal of documentation indicating \"Indian hostilities\" as a major impetus for the Overlander expedition, there is no discussion of why the group believed, or how they were led to believe, that there would be no hostile encounters with Indians in British Columbia. It would be interesting to know the preconceptions about British Columbia that made it seem an ideal destination for the group. Perhaps the attraction of the gold fields overrode concerns of Indian hostitilies. However, this is only conjecture, and a study of the documents pertaining to the Overlander expedition, beyond the scope undertaken in this study, is necessary to ascertain such perceptions. 55 Yet, within the face of such adversity, the Overlanders held strong and succeeded in reaching their goal. Through \"conquest\" over hostile nature, and even more hostile Indians, this group of white pioneers found their way into British Columbia's gold fields, and eventually into the Spallumcheen Valley to establish homesteads and settlements. This establishment of community, as Furniss argues, would ultimately resolve the conflict by separating the settlers from the frontier, and by implication, achieve the \"conquest\" of the wilderness and Aboriginal peoples (1999:17-18). While the Overlander myth tells of the coming of white settlers to the Spallumcheen Valley, it also, and more importantly, lays the groundwork for some of the central assumptions of this white settler society. One of the central elements of the myth is the creation of conflict - that is, the construction of morally opposed forces that challenge white settlement, and in the end, substantiate the heroic claims of the tale. As such, the creation of the \"Other\" - or the categories of \"us\" and them\" - was central to the story. As Simone de Beauvoir argues, the category of the Other is as primordial as consciousness itself. In the most primitive societies, in the most ancient mythologies, one finds the expression of duality - that of the Self and the Other... Otherness is a fundamental category of human thought. Thus it is that no group ever sets itself up as the One without at once setting up the Other against itself. If three travelers chance to occupy the same compartments, that is enough to make vaguely hostile \"others\" out of all the rest of the passengers. In small-town eyes all persons not belonging to the village are \"strangers' and suspect; the native of a country all who inhabit other countries are \"foreigners\"; Jews are \"different\" for the Anti-Semite, Negroes are \"inferior\" for American racists; aborigines are \"natives\" for colonists (de Beauvior [1949] 1989:xxii-xxiii) This construction of the Other, as de Beauvoir's statement implies, creates not only the duality o f \"us\" and \"them,\" but also positions these two mutually exclusive categories in direct opposition to one another. 56 Constructions of otherness are central to the Overlander tale. The duality within the Overlander story, as previously depicted, posits the settler in opposition to both nature and the First Nations people. Particularly important to this thesis is the duality of settler and Indian, as this binary is substantiated and perpetuated along racial lines - for it is a dualism of the \"white\" settler and the \"non-white\" Indian. The discourse surrounding the Overlander expedition is replete with constructions of this oppositional pairing. Within this discourse, the \"red\" Indian is referred to as \"savage\" (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2), the stealer of white children (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2; Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1926:1), and murderer (Okanagan Advertiser June 1, 1911:6). Describing Indians as murderous, wild, filthy, depraved, and tainted by drunkenness, A . L . Fortune claimed that these \"foregoing observations did not help me form a very hopeful estimate of the Shuswap Indians, nor the Okanagan, when we were preparing to make our home among them\" (Okanagan Advertiser June 1, 1911:6). Within the retelling of the Overlander story that commences this chapter, the Indians are constructed as \"savage\" and \"brutal\" beings whose murder of white settlers serves as the driving force behind the commencement of the expedition (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). The Indians prove a constant threat to the Overlanders, a threat that increases with the \"treachery\" of the one Indian they trusted to lead them into British Columbia (Armstrong Advertiser March 17, 1904:2). Thus, within this discourse, Indianness is constructed as morally degenerate and as a threat to the pioneers. Whiteness, on the other hand, is constructed in a very different fashion - as a sort of positive counterpart to the negative construction of Indianness. There is, for example, no discussion of murder by white settlers, nor any discussion of the possible \"threat\" against the Indians being posed by white settlement. Instead, A . L . Fortune refers to the settlers as heroes: 57 hardworking and diligent people who faced all difficulties \"in a cheerful, a hopeful and prophetic spirit\" (Okanagan Advertiser April 29, 1911:6). The white Overlanders are constructed as \"brave,\" \"noble,\" and of a superior moral stature by carrying out the work of God- good Christian gentlemen (Armstrong Advertiser June 7, 1923:2).7 Furthermore, the men are described as possessing a \"sturdy manhood,\" while Catherine Schubert is described as courageous and brave for her part in the expedition, which the newspaper claims, \"pioneered for her race and sex the way through the passes o f the Rocky Mountains\" (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1926:1). Finally in a speech to the Native Sons of British Columbia, James Schubert, who was a small child when his parents made the Overland trek, proclaimed that the coming of the Overlanders marked \"the very genesis of civilization and settlement in the country\" (Armstrong Advertiser December 27, 1923:1). Quite clearly, this white/Indian duality favoured whiteness, constructing it in a positive fashion. However, it is important to remember that this dualism was constructed by members of the white race. It becomes essential, then, to seriously consider the reasons for such constructions, as well as the perceived, if not realized, benefit from employing them. This creation of otherness, especially within the colonial context, is intimately connected to power. Edward Said makes this explicitly clear in his text Orientalism (1978). According to Said, Orientalism was \"a way of corning to terms with the Orient that is based on the Orient's special place in European Western experience\" (1978:1). It was \"not an airy European fantasy about the Orient, but a created body of theory and practice in which, for many generations, there has been a considerable material investment\" (Said 1978:6). For 7 It is interesting to note that the Overlanders are referred to as \"gentlemen,\" considering that both a woman and children were also a part of the expedition. In this sense, it appears that white settler society is masculinized-that is, equated with men only. This is an important observation and shall be discussed in the next chapter on gender and sexuality (Chapter 5). 58 Said, \"Orientalism was ultimately a political vision of reality whose structure promoted the difference between the familiar (Europe, the West, \"us\") and the strange (the Orient, the East, \"them\") (1978:43). Importantly, Said makes clear that Orientalism centered on relations of power: Orientalism can be discussed and analyzed as the corporate institution for dealing with the Orient - dealing with it by making statements about it, authorizing views of it, describing it, by teaching it, settling it, ruling over it: in short, Orientalism as a Western style for dominating, restructuring, and having authority over the Orient (1978:3). Furthermore, . . . what gave the Oriental's world its intelligibility and identity was not the result of his own efforts but rather the whole complex series of knowledgeable manipulations by which the Orient was identified by the West... Knowledge of the Orient, because generated out of strength, in a sense creates the Orient, the Oriental, and his world... The Oriental is contained and represented by dominating frameworks (Said 1978:40; emphasis in original). In fact, \"Orientalism depends for its strategy on [the] flexible positional superiority, which puts the Westerner in a whole series of possible relations with the Orient without ever losing him [sic] the upper hand\" (Said 1978:7; emphasis in orginal). It \"expressfes] the strength of the West and the Orient's weakness - as seen by the West\" (Said 1978:45). Issues of power are implicit in the Overlander myth. The Overlanders were settlers, searching for both wealth and land in what would be the province of British Columbia. Yet, the Overlanders were part of a much larger project aimed at colonization and nation-building. With the establishment of the Vancouver Island colony in 1849, and the Crown colony of British Columbia in 1858, the would-be province became a colonial enterprise o f the British government (Harris 2002:3). However, there was an important obstacle in the way of British colonization - the First Nations people. As Eva Mackey points out, \"nation-building is a dual process, entailing the management of populations and the creation of national identity\" (2003:23). In this case, it became essential to manage the First Nations people. 59 According to Sherene Razack, a white settler society is one established by Europeans on non-European soil. Its origins lie in the dispossession and near extermination of Indigenous populations by the conquering Europeans. As it evolves, a white settler society continues to be structured by a racial hierarchy. In the national mythologies of such societies, it is believed that white people came first and that it is they who principally developed the land; Aboriginal peoples are presumed to be mostly dead or assimilated. European settlers thus become the original inhabitants and the group most entitled to the fruits of citizenship (2002: 1-2). A two prong legal approach succeeded in dispossessing the First Nations of their land. The first involved the European legal doctrine of terra nullius, which stipulated that already inhabited nations could be deemed 'uninhabited' if the people were not Christian, not agricultural, and not 'sufficiently' evolved (Razack 2002:3; Harris 2002:xxi). Declaring the land uninhabited made way for legal possession by white settler society. However, this left the First Nations populations living on the land to be dealt with. The second approach, as such, involved the development of the Indian reserves, which assigned the First Nations to fixed geographical points in the colony (Harris 2002). Not only did this legally and geographically define mutually exclusive white settler and First Nations spaces, but it allowed white settler society to police and manage the Indian population. As Harris argues, In various ways in different parts of the province, Native [sic] life came to be lived in, around, and well beyond these reserves, but wherever one went, if one were a Native person, the reserves bore on what one could and could not do. They were fixed geographical points of reference, surrounded by clusters of permissions and inhibitions that affected most Native opportunities and movements (2002:xxi). Buttressed against white settler society, the reserves and their Indian populations could be monitored and regulated by the dominant settler population. This process of dispossession, however, hinged on constructions of superior whiteness and inferior Indianness. The doctrine of terra nullius, for example, depended on constructions of inferior Indianness - non-Christian, non-agricultural, and most importantly, underdeveloped and insufficiently evolved - to declare British Columbia lands as 60 uninhabited. Furthermore, the rationalizations for Indian reserves surrounded similar constructions. The reservation system was viewed as a means of protecting the First Nations people, which was \"a prime duty of the colonial administrators\" (Harris 2002:6). According to these administrators, \"Native people had to be transformed from a savage to a civilized state,\" and this included their physical circumstances (Harris 2002:7). Again, the First Nations were constructed as inferior 'savages', while whiteness was equated with civilization, and by extension, the superior civilizers of others. Colonial British Columbia, as such, was dependent on constructions of superior whiteness and inferior Indianness for its very existence. As an extension of the broader colonial project, the Overlanders were dependent on these same constructions. As white settlers, the Overlanders existed in a colonial setting that privileged their whiteness, and allowed them the rights and privileges of their white citizenship - including the right to claim ownership to the colony's lands. This privilege, however, hinged on constructions of inferior Indianness. Thus, to obtain, as well as maintain, white settler dominance, the Overlanders needed to perpetuate such constructions. That this occurred is evident within the discourse surrounding the Overlanders, where Indians are consistently constructed as the 'savage' opponent of the glorified white settlers. While the Overlander expedition, and the broader colonial project, depended on the superior whiteness and inferior Indianness for their existence and survival in the precarious early years of white settlement, as a myth, the Overlander tale provides an important framework for the historical consciousness of the community of Armstrong. As Furniss contends, such myths are a dominant account of history that shapes our historical consciousness - \"a way of knowing about history that provides a certain set of rules and 61 assumptions that guide how \"truths\" about the past, and by extension the present, are to be created and understood\" (Furniss 1999:17). In the next section, I will demonstrate, as in the case of the Overlanders, that dichotomies of superior whiteness and inferior non-whiteness8 (in this case, both Indianness and Chineseness) continue to pervade the discourse of the community. Making Use of Manless Land- Whiteness and the Regulation of Land Use in Armstrong At its most basic level, the Overlander myth is about pioneering and settling. The ultimate goal of the expedition was to reach the gold fields and make money so that these newcomers could establish homesteads in British Columbia. To facilitate this goal, it was essential that land be readily available for the settlers to pre-empt and homestead. Yet, despite certain constructions of British Columbia as a \"manless\" land, there was a substantial population that made its home on these lands - that is, of course, the First Nations peoples. Colonization, as such, brought white settlers into conflict with the Indian population. For if white settlement was to make a path for itself in this young colony, it was essential that British Columbia's lands be made available to them. Constructions of land use and misuse were central to the process of obtaining land for settlement. In his examination of the colonization of British Columbia and the construction of 8 Like whiteness, it is important to recognize that non-whiteness is also a fractured and conflicted category. While Indianness and Chineseness are both included within the realm of non-whiteness, there are important differences between the constructions of the two that make them separate from one another. Indeed, interracial marriage and procreation challenged the neatness and discreteness of whiteness and non-whiteness (see Perry 2001; Mawani 2002). Thus, while at times it seems that I conflate non-whiteness with Chineseness or Indianness, I want to be clear that both, with their commonalities and conflictions, are part of the fractured terrain of non-whiteness. This will be made explicitly clear within this discussion of conceptions of land use, where Indian land uses is equated with \"laziness\" and \"wasteful, and Chinese land use is constructed as \"bleeding the land\". 62 \"native\" spaces (namely, reserves), Cole Harris (2002) explores the important role that conceptions of land use played in dispossessing the First Nations of their land. Harris argues at its most basic level, the settler discourse surrounding the Native land question was simple and pervasive. White immigrants and settlers in British Columbia in the 1860s took it for granted that the land awaited them. There were protracted arguments about the terms by which the government should make land available but, with rare exceptions, the proposition that almost all provincial land was unsettled and unused - or used slightly in ways that deserved to be replaced by more intensive, modern land uses - was not debated. Natives were wanderers, primitive people who did not know how to use land effectively. They had legitimate claims to their principal settlement sites, also to their burial grounds and small cultivated patches, but not to much more. Their more extensive land use, such as they were, should give way -were bound to give way - to the intensive land uses associated with settlers and civilization. The displacement of the one by the other was inevitable, as the worldwide reach of Europe had shown. In British Columbia, therefore, settlers considered either that they were occupying a wilderness or, where there was some evidence of Native land use, that the superiority of their own uses justified their possession of land (2002:46-47) While the Indians made basic use of agricultural practices (many, for example, had potato gardens (Harris 2002)), their basic means of subsistence consisted of hunting and gathering. Such a means was not only migratory in nature, but also relied on a relativity uncultivated \"nature\"- hunting depends on animals, which in turn, depend on a stable and healthy habitat, and gathering involves simply removing things readily available in nature. However, in the eyes of white settlers, who had long moved passed the \"primitive\" hunting and gathering subsistence (and moved into agricultural-based subsistence), such land use was considered inappropriate and \"savage.\" As wilderness was seen as an opposing force that needed to be tamed (a theme within the Frontier Myth), \"progress\", as seen by white settlers, depended on the cultivation o f land and the harvesting of natural resources, including such things as agriculture, forestry, mining and fishing. Thus, within the colonial discourse, \"white\" land use was constructed as \"progress\" and \"civilization,\" while Indian uses were considered \"primitive\" and \"savage.\" Again, whiteness was discursively constructed as superior to Indianness. Yet this power would not 63 remain solely in a discursive sense - this discourse would serve as the basis for advancement of the colonial project, but more importantly, as the means for dispossessing the First Nations of their land. The colonists argued that since the Indians did not cultivate the land, save for dwelling sites, potato gardens, and burial grounds, and since their existence was of a migratory nature, they did not, in legal or moral terms, own any of the lands they had not cultivated (see Harris 2002:47-56). As such, various governmental groups established reserves that \"protected\" Indian lands and provided \"bonus\" acreages for their use. More importantly, however, this process freed up the remaining lands in British Columbia for white colonial settlers. This is the discourse under which the Overlanders, as well as the other settlers who would soon make their homes in the area, came into the Spallumcheen Valley. Through the process of pre-emption (the legal means of claiming these manless lands), these settlers made use of and enacted the conception of appropriate white land use. In fact, this settlement was dependent on these racially charged conceptions for their very ability to settle in the valley. For without these definitions that privileged whiteness over non-whiteness, Armstrong's early citizenry may not have been able to take up homestead and establish their community. Despite the fact the settlers now had in their possession the lands they so desired, the colonial and racialized discourse of land use did not disappear. With the original Indian reserves established at the head o f Okanagan Lake by 1861 and in the Salmon River Valley (Spallumcheen) by 1870 (figure 3.2), and a supposedly more amicable reserve settlement 64 Columbia-Shuswap D Deep Enderby Legend Census Subdivision Type H | I Munnripwlffy ( j HasKjnul Distnd Electoral Arn.i Designated Place Locality Highway Stiver Cre«k Salmon River 1 Spallumcheen Indian Reserve I Okanaga' L-» Indian Reserve Kiiomelers Figure 3.2- Armstrong-Spallumcheen and the Indian Reserves established by the Okanagan Indians and the Joint Indian Reserve Commission in 1877 (Harris 2002:120-129), it seemed possible that both settlers and the Indians could live peacefully, side by side. However, this would not be the case. Throughout the time period 1890 to 1930, white settlers continued to assert their dominance over the lands of Armstrong-Spallumcheen, including the reserves. Through the same racially based discursive constructions employed in the original settlement of the valley, which appear throughout the community newspapers, and the very real enactments of these constructions through municipal legislation, Armstrong's white citizens strove to achieve and maintain white dominance over land use. In 1892, the year that marked the coming of the Shuswap and Okanagan branch of the Canadian National Railway, Armstrong established its first municipal council. Composed of 65 Armstrong's most prominent, white, middle class male citizens, one of the first orders of business for the council was to establish a system of taxation for the community's lands (Mintues of the Spallumcheen Municipal Council September 24, 1892:3). According to this taxation scheme, uncultivated land would be charged a high tax of thirty-five dollar per acre, while range and cultivated land was to be assessed at a much lower taxation rate of two to ten dollars per acre (Minutes of the Spallumcheen Municipal Council September 24, 1892:3). Furthermore, in December of that year, the council divided all lands in the valley, excluding only the governmentally legislated reserves of the Indians, into wards, which were to be overseen and managed by the municipal council (Minutes of the Spallumcheen Municipal Council December 17, 1892: 22). In doing so, the white municipal council asserted their control over the majority of land in the valley - they placed themselves as the gatekeepers and guardians of Spallumcheen lands. Furthermore, with such legislation as the taxation scheme that privileged white conceptions of land use (and monetarily penalized unacceptable forms), these gatekeepers were able to maintain the community as per their white standards. Yet while the initial construction of the valley into wards recognized the governmentally legislated reserves, the municipal council, as well as the community, would soon challenge these \"native spaces\" (Harris 2002). In 1907, when the Coyote Creek Irrigation system was being established to divert water from the reserve to serve the white settlers, the Indians sabotaged the irrigation trenches (Armstrong Advertiser May 10, 1907:1). According to Mr. Irwin, the Indian Agent for the area, the events were a result of a misunderstanding between the chief and would-be chief of the tribe (and not the white appropriation of reserve lands), and as such, the constabulary was sent in to prevent disruption (Armstrong Advertiser May 10, 2907:1). Similarly, in 1910, White Valley 66 Irrigation wanted to cross a piece of the Indian reserve (Armstrong Advertiser February 19, 1910:1). Instead of speaking with the Indians, the company spoke to the municipal council and had them gazette a road on the reserve (which would then become the property of the municipal council) to be used for the irrigation system. Within the community, the Indian reserves were attacked in the press. In April of 1911, when Wilfred Laurier's government introduced legislation to amend the Indian Reserves Act, which would alter reserves that encroached on the growth of cities, the Armstrong Advertiser vehemently challenged the reserve system. According to the newspaper, \"progress [was] barred by the fact that large reserves encroached upon towns, taking up some of the most valuable lands and retarding that development and progress which should mark every section of communities with claims to progressiveness\" (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1911:4). About the Indians, \"it is a recognized fact that the Indian is lazy, content with three meagre meals a day and an occasional \"blowout\"\" (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1911:4). In the opinion of the newspaper, In each case the Indians simply are a bar to progress, and while we recognize that as wards of the government the Indians are entitled to much consideration, we recognize the said fact that civilization simply leads the red man to copy the vices of the white race; add them to his already large catalogue. The Indian is apparently the happiest when he has nature in the rough all around them. He can hunt and loaf, and since he will hunt and loaf, he might just as well do it a few miles back from the footprints of civilization rather than acting after the fashion of barnacles on the hull of the ship. While we wish the [Indian] brother no harm, we certainly trust that the enactment will pass through the house and soon become law (Armstrong Advertiser April 29, 1911:4). Similarly in 1919, when efforts were being made in the Okanagan city of Penticton to obtain reserve lands for settlers, the Okanagan Commoner made similar arguments against the Indians. According to the newspaper There are many extensive tracts of valuable land on Indian reserves, particularly in the Okanagan, which hitherto have lain idle. A policy is needed to lease such lands for farming or grazing purposes, or to cultivate them, with or without the 67 consent of the Indians. In many cases where the reserves are too large to be cultivated by the number of Indians located in them, or where for other reasons the Indians neglect or refuse to use their land, the surplus area has been leased to white farmers and ranchers, and thus much good land that would otherwise be neglected is now being made productive (Okanagan Commoner July 31, 1919:2). Furthermore, the paper argued that it was essential to obtain such land for the soldiers who were now returning from the Great War (Okanagan Commoner July 31, 1919:2; also Okanagan Commoner February 20, 1919:4). In dealing with the valley's Aboriginal population, white settler society made use of racially aligned conceptions to demonstrate inappropriate land use, which they argued put the Indians in a position of default in regards to land use duties, and as such, defaulted their ownership over such lands. While the irrigation project in 1907 is, in fact, an attempt by white settlers to divert valuable resources from lands within Indian possession, the sabotage by the Indians is constructed, not as a response to a conflict created by whites, but as the by-product of conflict within the tribe. As such, it is the Indians that are constructed as a threat to white progress. Within the discourse of the 1911 and 1919 attempts to obtain reserve lands for white use, the newspapers employed racialized constructions as a means of demonstrating inappropriate ( and non-white) land use, and thus, the forfeiture of Indian ownership rights. The Indians are racially constructed as \"lazy,\" \"backwards,\" and as \"a barrier to civilization.\" In addition, their method of survival is referred to as \"hunting and loafing,\" reasserting the lazy and primitive nature of the Indian peoples. Finally, in a coup de grace of sorts, the Indians are compared to a barnacle on a ship - a life form that attaches itself and makes use of the ship, but provides no benefit in return. In contradistinction, whiteness is constructed in terms of \"progress\" and \"civilization.\" As with the Overlander myth, in a society where whiteness holds a position of dominance - such as Armstrong's white municipal council, for example - the white citizenry are able to define and deploy their own conceptions of society: 68 the traits assigned to whiteness are viewed as superior. Inferior traits are then assigned to the Indian population as a discursive means of providing evidence for very real actions against these people - namely the reduction o f the reserves and the loss of their land. The \"Yellow Peril\"9 - The Chinese and White Racism However, it was not only the First Nations who experienced discursive degradation and legal land use sanctions. Similar conceptions were employed in arguments directed at the Chinese. These arguments would form a body of discourse that would, in the end, provide the basis for municipal legislation prohibiting use of the land by the \"yellow\" Chinese. Yet while the Indians were constructed as lazy and negligent in terms of land use, the Chinese, with their industrious agricultural techniques and lower standards of living (which in turn, resulted in lower prices for their produce than that of the white agriculturalists), were perceived as aggressive in their land use, and as such, a threat to white lands. While there is no way of pinpointing the exact date that the Chinese first arrived in Armstrong, the major influx of Chinese migrants occurred during the first two decades of the twentieth century. While the recruitment of Chinese workers to build the railway was responsible for much of their movement into the interior of the province (Avery 1995:46-47), the evidence suggests that it was the readily available work in the agricultural industries of the Okanagan Valley that brought many of Chinese migrants to the community (Critchley 1999:10-11; Avery 1995:43) Attracted by agricultural work and market gardening, the permanent Chinese population in Armstrong rose to approximately 500 during this period, reaching a high of about 900 during the First World War (Critchley 1999:11). The population 9 The term \"Yellow Peril\" was a hegemonic white phrase used to describe the perceived invasion of, as well as the danger posed by, Chinese migrants in Canada (see Ward 1990:6). 69 was made up solely of men until 1920, when worker Lee Bak Bong had saved sufficient funds to bring his wife to Canada (Critchely 1999:14). The maleness of the Chinese community was not uncommon, for as Patricia Roy points out, traditional concerns for the well-being of the family and the lineage, as well as Canadian immigration laws and the generally hostile treatment of the Chinese in Canada, discouraged female emigration (1989:xi). While the majority of the Chinese grew celery and other vegetables on a large scale on land leased from white owners (Roy 1989:250), some were able to purchase small tracts of land to establish their own market gardens or other business, including restaurants and laundries (Critchley 1999). By the 1920s, a small Chinatown had been established on property purchased by Chinese countryman (Critchley 1999:11). Located near the centre of town, the small Chinatown provided homes for the male workers, who lived communally, as well as provided an opportunity to socialize (Critchley 1999:11-12). Most importantly, however, \"the Chinatown communities offered protection from the discriminatory society and provided the Chinese with security and company\" (Critchely 1999:11).10 However, Armstrong's Chinatown was razed by fire in 1922, and the men were forced to find other living arrangements. Some established another Chinese settlement near the previous Chinatown, while others lived in shacks on the rented fields or took up residence in one of the boarding houses in Armstrong (Critchley 1999:14). During the first decades of the 1900s, the work of the Chinese gardeners succeeded in elevating Armstrong to the status of \"celery capital of Canada\" (Critchely 1999:9) Yet despite the proclamation in 1908 that the Chinese were among the best gardeners (Armstrong i 0 It is important to note that, while this statement implies the Chinatowns were the product of the Chinese community, these enclaves are equally the product of white communities. In her analysis of Vancouver's Chinatown, Kay Anderson (1991) demonstrates the role of white society in the production of racial discourses and material conditions that also contributed to the shaping of Chinatown. 70 Advertiser August 1, 1908:1), the \"yellow\" agriculturalist, although engaging in agricultural practices [cultivation] constructed in relation to the Aboriginal issue as appropriate, were soon perceived as a threat to white settlers and their use of the land. The Chinese, many of whom were willing to work for lower wages, posed a serious threat for white labour (The Armstrong Advertiser Apri l 21, 1904; The Armstrong Advance and Spallumcheen Advocate March 30, 1906:2). In 1913, the Armstrong Advertiser reported that the Chinese had purchased a large block of land within the city limits (October 30, 1913:1). The newspaper argued Until recently the growing of vegetables, especially celery and cabbage has been entirely in the hands of the whitemen, but i f the Oriental is to be allowed to acquire control of such large holdings, we fail to see how the white man can hope to successfully compete. It will either be a case of the white man lowering his standards of living to the level of the Oriental or the white man will have to go out of business. We all know that the Oriental will not raise his living standards and customs to the level of the whiteman (Armstrong Advertiser October 30,1913:1). However, instead of banning Chinese labour altogether, which white industrialists could and would use for their own benefit, Armstrong City Council passed a resolution aimed at preventing Chinese ownership of any lands in the community, and thus dissuading Chinese immigration to Armstrong (Minutes of Armstrong City Council November 10, 1913:l-2 n). This resolution, in fact, was the only legal recourse that white Armstrong could take against Chinese migrants - in 1884, when the legislature of British Columbia attempted to pass into law a prohibition against Chinese land ownership, the Canadian federal government had ruled that such a law was discriminatory and that land rights were under their jurisdiction (Roy 1989:55). As such, Armstrong's city council could not legally prohibit land ownership by the Chinese, but they could pass a resolution discouraging Armstrong's white citizens from selling land to the Chinese. 1 1 A full copy of the Armstrong City Council resolution is included in the Appendix. 71 According to the declaration, Be it resolved: 1. That the council desires to see legislation enacted, whether local or provincial in its scope, whereby the area referred to [the city of Armstrong] would be prevented from further passing into the permanent possession of the Chinese: 2. That this Council strongly deprecate the further disposals of lands in sale to Chinamen by proprietors within the city: (Minutes of Armstrong City Council November 10, 1913:2). Two weeks later, Armstrong's Board of Trade issued a resolution of its own: Whereas, the citizens of Armstrong and the farmers of the municipality of Spallumcheen in open meeting assembled passed an unanimous resolution that they would not during the period of five years sell any of their lands to Chinese or Orientals, neither would they after the present leases expire lease their lands to Chinese or Orientals (Armstrong Advertiser November 27, 1913:5). A copy of this resolution was forwarded to the B . C . legislature, along with a request that the provincial government take immediate steps towards passing an exclusion act, as well as pass legislation prohibiting the ownership of British Columbia farm lands by the Chinese and Japanese (Armstrong Advertiser November 27, 1913:5). This anti-Chinese discourse surrounding land was, in fact, an extension of the general anti-Chinese environment existing in Armstrong at the time. Literally from the Armstrong Advertiser's inception in 1902, the community newspapers were the site of contestation about the Chinese. Letters to the editor hotly debated the \"Chinese problem.\" These debates surrounded issues such as Chinese cleanliness (Armstrong Advertiser October 2, 1909:4); Chinese immorality (including gambling and the use of illicit substances) (Armstrong Advertiser December 18, 1909:5); Chinese land use and ownership (Armstrong Advertiser November 27, 1913:5); the use of Chinese labour (Okanagan Commoner February 27, 1919:1); and Chinese immigration (Armstrong Advertiser January 29, 1920:2). However, the vast majority o f these letters supported a white Canada. This same opinion was voiced in editorials and columns. Such articles decried the use of Chinese labour (Armstrong 72 Advertiser July 26, 1907:1) and the renting of lands to the Chinese (Okanagan Commoner June 20, 1918:3). Articles entitled \"Keeping B . C . for the White Man\" (Okanagan Commoner April 11, 1918:2) and \"Awakening to the Danger\" (Okanagan Commoner March 20, 1919:1) called on white Armstrong to \" A C T - N O W ! \" to prevent the community from falling into the hands of the Chinese. Anti-Chinese sentiment wasn't limited to the pages of the newspapers. Chinese homes and businesses were regularly raided, the police searching for evidence of illicit activity, including gambling and opium use (Critchely 1999:12; see for example Armstrong Advertiser December 20, 1923:1). Similar raids were performed to ensure the cleanliness of Chinese homes and businesses (Serra 1968).As Critchely makes clear, such activities were never carried out against the white citizens of Armstrong (1999:11). In addition, the Chinese were plagued with mysterious deaths, and their small Chinatown was suspiciously burned to the ground (Critchely 1999: 12). As one Chinese man recounted, The old Chinatown used to be on the corner. But the funny thing was a building stuck out partly on the road. It was a big wooden building. Lo and behold, not much longer after the city said 'cut it back,' they had a big fire. It might just be coincidence... (in Critchley 1999:12). Such anti-Chinese sentiment was not uncommon for the time. The province of British Columbia was extremely hostile towards the Chinese. Claiming that they were a threat to Canadian [white] workers and that \"their habits [were] subversive of the comfort and well-being of the community\", the provincial government passed three anti-Chinese bills in 1884: one preventing Chinese immigration, one aimed at regulating the Chinese population in Canada, and one preventing Chinese acquisition of crown lands (Roy 1989:54-55). While the federal government disallowed the acts on the basis of discrimination (that the acts discriminated against the Chinese and individuals who aided the Chinese) and jurisdiction (it 73 was argued that immigration was a federal matter) (Roy 1989:55), the province continued to petition the federal government for a solution to the 'Chinese problem'. In 1885, the federal government enacted the first of a series of immigration acts aimed at curtailing Chinese immigration to Canada. The 1885 Immigration Act imposed a fifty-dollar head tax on Chinese immigrants entering the country. While initially stemming the flow of Chinese into Canada, the head tax was a poor deterrent in the long run (Roy 1989:66-67). In 1901, the head tax was raised to one-hundred dollars, and to five-hundred dollars in 1904. While briefly interrupted by the First World War, anti-Chinese sentiment in British Columbia, including a flurry of agitation in the Okanagan, reached a peak post-War and into the 1920s (see Ward 1990:118-129). In response to extreme pressure from British Columbia, an immigration act was introduced in 1923 that limited the entry of Chinese nationals to diplomats, children born in Canada who were returning after having been educated in China, merchants, and students (Roy 2003:73). The Exclusion Act, which took effect on July 1, 1924, also legislated the registration of all Chinese in Canada, including those who were Canadians by birth or naturalization (Roy 2003:76). The anti-Chinese sentiment and legislation in Armstrong, as such, is endemic of the racially charged atmosphere existing in British Columbia during the time period. The Armstrong-Spallumcheen anti-Chinese movement was, in fact, similar to other municipal level actions (Roy 1989), and contributed to the much larger anti-Chinese movement existing in the province and the country at the time. To pass this resolution against Chinese land ownership, city council relied on social constructions of whiteness and non-whiteness. In the preamble to the resolution, it is stated that \"the wide difference between those Orientals and the rest of our Canadian population in 74 language, tradition and customs of life make difficult, if not possible, the appreciation by the Oriental of our social, political, and national ideals, and the assimilation of the Oriental into our national body\" (Minutes of the Armstrong City Council November 10, 1913:1). In this simple statement, the white settler society separates itself from the Oriental population. In fact, this document goes as far as saying, \"they are not like us and never will be.\" Because of the vast differences in language and culture that exist between \"those Orientals\" (yellows) and \"the rest of our Canadian population\" (white settlers) - because this non-whiteness can never be transformed into our whiteness - it was argued by white 'city fathers' that the Chinese should be excluded from land ownership. Furthermore, these discourses construct the non-white Chinese as the threat - as the aggressor against whiteness. For it is the Chinese and their lower standard of living that will hurt white business. It is the Chinese practice of \"bleeding the lands held to the last remnant of productive power\" (Okanagan Commoner June 23, 1921:2) that will harm white Canadian lands. It is the Chinese which are the threat - threatening both the economic well-being and the future of land for white Armstrong. In positioning the Chinese as the aggressor - which in turn, requires swift and decisive action by the bureaucracy to protect its citizenry -Armstrong City Council and the Armstrong Board of Trade were able to pass legislation against Chinese ownership of land. What is perhaps most startling about the discourse surrounding the Chinese is how quickly and quietly whiteness became equated with Canadianness and citizenship. Within the discourse of the Armstrong City Council resolution, the parties are simply referred to as \"Orientals\" and \"the rest of our Canadian population.\" Similarly, the parties within the resolution of the Board of Trade are referred to as \"Chinese/Oriental\" and \"citizens of 75 Armstrong.\" Yet at the very basis of these arguments is racial rhetoric - the construction of white and non-white. However, in the process of labelling, whiteness is equated with \"Canadian\" and \"citizen\" of Armstrong - thus, whiteness is placed in a position of dominance within Canadian and Armstrong society. As such, citizenship, and the rights, responsibilities, and privileges that come with it, aren't based solely on residence within a country or a community - in this case, citizenship is also constructed along a colour line, where whiteness (and perhaps the ability to pass as white, which is indicated by the assessment of assimilation noted within the City Council legislation) is a criterion for citizenship. In such a way, the Chinese could be prevented from land ownership (a right guaranteed by provincial legislation for settlers) because they were not \"citizens.\" In the case of land use, it is clear that white settler society made use of conceptions of whiteness and non-whiteness to protect their interests in the lands of the Spallumcheen Valley. By racially separating themselves from the Indians and the Chinese, and constructing both groups as inferior and threatening to the white population and its settlement goals, Armstrong's white citizenry was able to establish itself as the gatekeepers and guardians of the community. Such discursive constructions of white and non-white, in turn, provided the legitimation for very real legal sanctions - specifically the dispossessing of land and the prohibition of non-white land ownership. However, land use was only one area of the land issue that needed to be regulated - equally important to achieving and maintaining white-dominant settlement was the regulation of immigration. 76 Landless Men- Whiteness and the Regulation of Immigration A n integral part of the colonial project and the settlement of British Columbia was the movement of settlers into the province. Canada - as a vast country with acres of \"free\" land and myriad natural resources - was seen as the land of opportunity. It was a chance for many to make a fresh start in a new world. Armstrong was very much a product of this \"dream.\" A . L . Fortune and the other white settlers present at the \"genesis\" of the community were immigrants to Canada who just happened to stumble into the Spallumcheen Valley and decide to make their homes there. Yet, despite the fact that it was the process of immigration that had brought them to the valley, Armstrong settlers would soon see immigration as an issue of concern for the community. For while it was necessary to populate the area for the \"advancement of civilization,\" it was equally necessary to regulate the types of immigrants coming into the community. As this section shall make clear, this regulation of immigration -and thus, the access to land - was influenced and shaped by dominant conceptions of whiteness and non-whiteness. In the previous section, it was demonstrated how Armstrong City Council and the Board of Trade went about regulating Chinese land use. Yet, this was only one part of the approach to dealing with the \"Chinese Problem.\" To ensure a 'white' Armstrong, it was equally necessary to stem the flow of Chinese immigration into the area. In terms of land use, the Chinese were constructed as non-white, and as such, lacking in the rights of citizenship. In this light, the Chinese could be barred from possessing land. In addition, the Chinese were constructed as a threat to white settlement - a parasite that needed to be removed from Armstrong before its \"citizens\" were affected. It is these same arguments- arguments made 77 throughout the early decades of Armstrong's history - which were employed to regulate Chinese immigration to the area. From the turn of the century, Chinese immigration was perceived as a serious problem. A 1904 edition of the Armstrong Advertiser carried a lead story entitled, \"Chinese E n Route - Over One Hundred Came to Canada Yesterday\" (April 24, 1904:1). According to the article, Just as Canada in general and British Columbia in particular were beginning to indulge in self-congratulation that the augmentation of the capitation tax on Chinese immigrants has effectually solved this great industrial problem which has long perplexed this province, news is received which bursts the alluring bubble... The R.M.S. Empress of China is due tomorrow evening from Hongkong [sic] and Yokohama...There are according to the steamship company's advices, no fewer than 112 bequed passengers in the white liner's steerage, each and all of whom fall within the definition of the objectionable class against which the so-called excessive poll tax is directed (Armstrong Advertiser April 21, 1904:1). While an explanation for the sudden spurt of Chinese immigration is difficult to uncover, it is believed that \"the Chinese have come to the conclusion that it is better to pay the price than forgo the pleasure of earning Canadian money in unequal competition with Canadian workingmen\" (Armstrong Advertiser Apri l 21, 1904:1). In closing, the newspaper laments The one unwelcome fact remains that the Empress of China brings 112 Chinese, each of whom has already deposited his $500 for the right to enter and make his home in the Canadian Dominion (Armstrong Advertiser April 21, 1904:1). While the exact threat posed by the Chinese was not outlined in the 1904 article, the problem was explicitly detailed in a 1914 report on the meeting of the Armstrong Farmers' Institute. Importantly, whereas the 1904 argument presented the threat at a provincial level, the report of the Institute brought the threat much closer to home. According to the report, Whereas a few years ago there were only some half dozen resident Chinamen in Armstrong, last year there were over 250. This so-called cheaper labour was erroneous as wages ranged from $40 per month to as high as $3 per day and even more in extreme cases. The danger lay, not so much, in the number of Orientals as in their gaining control of the farm lands. Rents had risen for best bottom lands from $30 per acre to $60 per acre. The Chinese had also 78 purchased considerable lands here (Armstrong Advertiser February 26, 1914: 1). Furthermore, There was also a grave danger of unfairness of competition through practically slave labour among them and also because they are content to live in a condition such as even the poorest of whites would not be satisfied with, or as Mr. Patten put it, \"we should have to reduce our standard of living to a rice and chopstick basis and heard [sic] together like swine in a pen.\" Under these conditions the Chinamen can undersell us in the open markets, They are here to make money, not to share our ideals. They break our laws, especially those relating to Sabbath observances'2 (Armstrong Advertiser February 26, 1914:1). Within the discourse of the Institute, the Chinese are explicitly excluded from whiteness and positioned in direct opposition to white Armstrong. Within the discussion of the living conditions, it is made clear that the Chinese are \"not white,\" as they live in conditions within which even the poorest of whites would not be satisfied. It is not so much the difference in living conditions that mark their exclusion from whiteness, as it is the comparison between \"us\" and \"them\". For within the statement, \"they are content to live in a condition such as even the poorest whites would not be satisfied,\" the Chinese were not only compared to poor whites, but to all whites. By implication, no whites would be willing to live in such conditions. References to poor whites makes explicit the point that even the most extreme case of disadvantaged whites would not degrade themselves further by existing within the living conditions of the Chinese. In such a way, the Chinese are clearly separate from white Armstrong. In addition, the Chinese are constructed as posing a threat to Armstrong and its white citizens. The article makes clear that the lower standard of living and the willingness to employ \"slave labour\" allows the Chinese to undercut white prices. In essence, the Chinese 1 2 The mention of the Chinese breaking \"our laws, especially those relating to Sabbath observances\" is particularly poignant, as in the case of Armstrong, Christianity emerged as an important criterion for separating white from non-white, as well as good whites from problematic whites. An in-depth discussion of Christianity and whiteness will be undertaken in Chapter Four. 79 pose not only a threat to white economic wealth, but to white power - if the Chinese are able to take control of farming in Armstrong, the white citizenry will be removed from its position of power in terms of agriculture and land use. By constructing the Chinese in such a fashion, by making clear that it is really the Chinese who pose the threat, the bureaucratic structures of Armstrong (also controlled by whites) can \"justly\" take action to ban Chinese land use and immigration into the community. Yet while municipal legislation may have been one way to stem the flow of Chinese (and non-white) immigration into Armstrong, author Rudyard Kipling posed another option, one actively taken up by the community. According to Kipling, the remedy for the Asiatic problem was '\"to pour in immigrants'\" from the mother country: men and women of our own race and blood, thus preserving Canada as a white man's country\" (Armstrong Advertiser November 1, 1907:2). As a means of obtaining the settlers needed for the colonial project, as well as contending with the threat posed by Asiatic labour, white Armstrong launched an aggressive campaign to obtain their ideal immigrants. Making clear who was included within the white racial category deemed desirable, Armstrong continued to regulate immigration to the community. Within the public discourse of Armstrong, the ideal type of immigrant was constructed. At the most basic level, the ideal immigrant was a member of the white race. Citing a speech by the Canadian National Railway president to the citizens of Armstrong, for example, the Armstrong Advertiser reported that \"our prospective settlers should be of the white race, because we want no colour problem here\" (August 13, 1925:1). But who exactly, according to the discourse, was the \"white race\"? 80 The New Immigration in Canada Figure 3.3- The \"Ideal\" Immigrants (Armstrong Advertiser December 30,1926:3) To begin with, certain countries and nationalities were indicated as being included as white. England 1 3 , Scotland, and Ireland 1 4 were quickly identified as nations who could supply these ideal white immigrants. Starting with Kipling's assertion that it was essential to bring in immigrants from \"the mother country\" (England), it was made clear the immigrants from these nations were welcome in Armstrong. In relation to the Kipling quote, the Advertiser asserted that 1 3 For an excellent discussion of the historic privileging of English whites, see Jones 2001. 1 4 It is somewhat ironic that the Irish are included within the category of \"white\", as the Irish have been, on occasion, excluded from whiteness. As discussed in my literature review in Chapter Two, while once welcome immigrants to the U.S., the influx of Irish settlers during the 1840s resulted in a change of discourse which questioned their poor stock and challenged their inclusion in the white race (Jacobson 1998: 48-49). However, by the 1920s, the Irish were firmly back in the white race, the problem of their questionable stock superseded by the 'negro' problem in the US (Jacobson 1998). 81 Great Britain is the most successful colonizers of all nations. English, Irish and Scotch have for centuries opened up new countries and have literally hewed their way through every difficulty and commenced the foundation of the grandest heritage ever known on earth. Does it not follow that what these pioneers have begun can be successfully continued and finished by others of the same kith and kin? (Armstrong Advertiser November 1, 1907: 2). Furthermore, it is immigrants from these countries that were celebrated within the press. In extended newspaper columns, immigrants from Dorset-Blandford (Armstrong Advertiser April 23, 1925:1) and Devonshire (Armstrong Advertiser April 1, 1926), communities in England, were introduced and given a hearty welcome to the community. Similarly, Scottish immigrants were celebrated in a short article, which included two pictures of these \"sturdy\" and \"excellent type\" of settlers (Figure 3.3). These photos, showing light-skinned individuals, make clear that these immigrants are members of the \"white race.\" Importantly, it is towards members of these nations that immigration schemes for the area were explicitly aimed (Armstrong Advertiser October 25, 1907:2; January 24, 1924:2; March 19, 1925:1). Other nationalities that bore consideration for membership in the white race were Scandinavians and Poles. Emphasizing their ability to assimilate, \"Polish Flappers 1 5\" were celebrated for \"at once adopt[ing] Canadian styles\" (Armstrong Advertiser May 6, 1926:3), and the newspaper ran a short article celebrating the arrival of such settlers in Canada. Within the same article, Scandinavians - Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes - were celebrated as being the \"best agricultural type\" (Armstrong Advertiser May 6, 1926:2). In regard to the mass 1 5 1 find the use of the term 'flapper' in the title of this piece interesting. The Canadian Oxford Dictionary defines a flapper as \"a fashionable and unconventional young woman of the 1920s\" (1998:527). The etymology of the word corroborates this usage - its root flap, sixteenth century origin, refers to \"a young woman with loose character\" (Harper 2001: www.etymonline.com). Well I cannot be sure of the intended meaning of this statement, the attaching of the Poles to the term flapper seems to signify their status as \"marginal\" whites. Morality , as shall be demonstrated in Chapter Four, emerged as an important criterion for establishing good whites from bad whites. Thus, to connect the Poles to the loose morality of the term 'flapper' is to imply that their status as whites is questionable. Indeed, as Jacobson makes clear, the whiteness of the Polish has been called into question at various times in the history of American society (1998:68) 82 influx of immigrants of this type into the country, the newspaper commented about \"the outstanding feature.. .therewith is the vastly superior type which is coming to this country\" (Armstrong Advertiser May 6, 1926:2). Along with the article were two pictures (figure 3.4), which the newspaper claimed \"speaks for itself as to the standard of the settler.\" As with the Scottish settlers featured in figure 3.3, the photograph makes clear the whiteness of these immigrants. SETTLERS SUCH AS THESE COMING BY H U N D R E D S -POLISH FLAPPERS A T ONCE A D O P T CANADIAN STYLES SrTATtfnrNAVTANS of tha agricultural typo, many them bringing money to buy land, are arriving in Winnipeg these days literally by the hundreds. Th© above photograph, taken a fow ,!,.;-„ ago M tho Union oiatlon. is a fair uatnplc of the type of immigrant that Canada is getting from Europe this seiiaon, and the picture speaks for itself as to the standard di settler. During the post ecTcral tlnfa niiny oui.li Nor-wegians, Swedes and Danes have been Included in the large parties transported from the seaboard by special Canadian National train*. They are placed by the C^.R. Col-onization 1 i i • In posit Ions on farms throughout the prairie in the Dominion. . Large aa tola party was, it formed but a part of the British group which crossed the Atlantic in charge of the Canadian National Railways, there being in addition 280 single men, 70 boys ami 10 a l l e l e wvmKO. Jill Uicae people, numbering 689 souls, trav-elled to Canada under the special supervision of Mr. J. S. McGowan, director in London of the C.N.R. lecture course in Canadian farm-ing.; Hie insert night be entitled \"Canadians by Conviction.\" It shows a couple of charming young Polish girls, Aniela and Anna Kud-rel. who visited the ahineJo bobber in Montreal between trains. When mfrrvipwerl nt. W i n n i r w e en rniifft Figure 3.4 - The \"Assimilable\" Poles (Armstrong Advertiser May 6,1926:3) The connection of specific nationalities to whiteness is quite interesting. Within the community immigration discourse, both the Polish and Irish are counted as white. Both, 1 6 1 find the use of the term 'flapper' in the title of this piece interesting. The Canadian Oxford Dictionary defines a flapper as \"a fashionable and unconventional young woman of the 1920s\" (1998:527). The etymology of the word corroborates this usage - its wot flap, sixteenth century origin, refers to \"a young woman with loose character\" (Harper 2001. www.etvmonline.com). Well I cannot be sure of the intended meaning of tins statement, the attaching of the Poles to the term flapper seems to signify their status as \"marginal\" whites. Morality, as shall be demonstrated in Chapter Four, emerged as an important criterion for establishing good whites from bad whites. Thus, to connect the Poles to the loose morality of the term 'flapper' is to imply the problematic status of the Poles within the white race. Indeed, as Jacobson makes clear, 83 however, have also been excluded from whiteness. As Jacobson demonstrates, the massive influx of Irish immigrants to the United States during the Potato Famine resulted in an interpretation of whiteness that excluded the Irish (1998:7). However, by the 1920s, with a new racial alchemy generated by African-American migrations to the North and West, whiteness was reconsolidated to include the Irish (Jacobson 1998:8). Similarly, in the beginning years of the twentieth century, Americans challenged the whiteness of Poles. Producing a sort of whiteness scale, it was argued by the Senate Commission on Immigration in 1911 that \"Poles are \"darker than the Lithuanians\" and \"lighter than the average Russian\" (in Jacobson 1998:69 & 79). Along with Greeks and Italians, the Poles were considered \"ethnic\" (Jacobson 1998:68). Yet while neither Greeks nor Italians1 7 are included within the whiteness of Armstrong's immigration discourse, the Poles and Irish are explicitly included. Perhaps by the 1920s, like their American counterparts, white Armstrong readily accepted the Irish and Polish as white. Or perhaps Armstrong's status as a white colonial settlement created issues which overshadowed internal fracturings of whiteness. Colonial settlement, in the first instance, put white settlers in conflict with clearly non-white Indians. With the added conflict created by the immigration of the non-white Chinese into Armstrong, perhaps, like their American counterparts, the new racial alchemy, which put whites in direct conflict with those whose dark skin colour and non-European cultural traditions clearly made them not white, resulted in a reconsolidation of whiteness, which included the incorporation of \"provisional\" whites like the Irish and Poles (Jacobson 1998:7). Perhaps the precarious nature of white 1 7 In fact, both Greeks and Italians are absent from the discourse of the community. This silence implies a sort of ambivalence on the part of white Armstrong on the status of these two groups as white. Jacobson (1998) has outlined that both the Greeks and Italians have been excluded from whiteness in the United States. In Canada, lacovetta, Perin, & Principe (2000) have addressed the precarious status of Italians in Canada. 84 settler society - being surrounded by literally hundreds of non-whites, who at any moment could challenge white authority - and the need to maintain white dominance in Canada encouraged the inclusion of provisional whites, such as the Irish and Polish, which would increase the size of the white racial pool from which settler society could draw from to boost its own numbers, and thus safeguard their society. Importantly, many of the early settlers in the Spallumcheen Valley were Irish. The 1901 Census of Canada lists the racial origins of several of the founding families - including the O'Keefes, Greenhows, Coughlans, and Hardings - as Irish. Catherine Schubert was born and raised in Ireland (Merritt 1995:37). Thus, to question the whiteness of the Irish, or to exclude them from immigration, would call into question the status of many of the founding families of the community. Yet, even members of one of these 'white nations' could be excluded from the desirable immigrant category. For example, white agriculturalists were the preferred class of immigrant, as \"the country has been crying out loudly for farmers\" (Armstrong Advertiser August 16, 1907:2)18. In an immigration scheme presented in the Armstrong Advertiser, the four classes of immigrants being sought included: 1. Young men inexperienced in farm work, wishing to learn practical farm work and horticulture. 2. Experienced farm hands, unmarried. 3. Experienced farm hands, married (with families or otherwise) whose wives are willing to take service with their husbands. 4. Women domestics (October 25, 1907:2). Furthermore, criminal behaviour most certainly excluded one from the desirable white immigrant category. In an editorial note in the Armstrong Advertiser, the community was cautioned about the criminal, and it was made clear that such people were \"undesirable\" and that they would \"get all that is coming to him\" (February 4, 1902). Furthermore, in a 1906 The national emphasis on obtaining white, English agriculturalists is also noted in Parr 1990:18. 85 column, it was expressed that \"what Canada has to guard against more than anything, is allowing a class of criminals to enter the country\" (Armstrong Advertiser May 4, 1906:2). Interestingly, both the call for agriculturalists and exclusion of criminals emphasizes masculinity. The first three definitions of desirable agricultural immigrants explicitly target men, while the discussion of criminality only mentions men (notice the \"get all that is coming to him\" comment above). Women appear only within the context of being married to the ideal male immigrant or there proclivity towards performing tasks within the realm o f the home (female domestics). These constructions of the ideal agricultural immigrant deny women a subject position of their own, regarding them only within the context of then-re lationships with men. Furthermore, these constructions serve to reaffirm that a woman's place is in the home. For even if they chose to work, the ideal female worker will remain in the home as a domestic. These definitions of the ideal white immigrant, as such, emphasize the dominance of men and reaffirm the subordination of white womanhood. Furthermore, these constructions emphasize heterosexual marriage. Marriage is an important defining element of two of the four points. The reference to the term 'wife' in point three, clearly establishes marriage as heterosexual. While there is no discussion of homosexuality, its absence, in conjunction with the explicit emphasis on marriage and heterosexuality, makes it clear that the ideal white agricultural immigrant is also heterosexual. While it may be clear how defining those undesirable as an immigrant is a means o f regulating immigration, it is equally important to understand how the defining of who is desirable - in this case, who is included within the bounds of whiteness - is also an act of regulation. Making clear who is included within desirable immigration, like defining the 86 undesirable, establishes criteria - guidelines and rules - for immigration into the community. In the case of the public discourse of Armstrong, the criteria for immigration were established along racial lines. In this case, whiteness is constructed as desirable, and non-white (or yellow, in this case) is constructed as undesirable, through constructions that demonstrate the superior qualities of the white race and the threat posed by non-white immigration. In such a way, white Armstrong made a tangible case against undesirable non-white, immigration, which in turn, enabled the community to take very real action to discourage such immigration (such as the resolutions to prevent Chinese land ownership or support for Chinese exclusion). Conclusion Perhaps the overriding theme within the discourse surrounding land and land use is the construction and maintenance of white power. Within the discourse of the Overlanders, dominant, white-produced constructions of whiteness and its superior nature (which effectively erased the Indians from the colony's landscape by proving their inferiority, and as such, legally defaulted their claims to land ownership) provided the basis for the arrival of white settlers in a \"manless land\" where they were free to pre-empt and establish a white settler community. To protect this new community and the dominance of whiteness within it, the settlers relied on these same constructions of superior whiteness and inferior non-whiteness to control access to land. In this case, such constructions were deployed to regulate both land use (particularly by the Indians and Chinese) and immigration into the community. To frame it within the vocabulary of Foucault (1990), whiteness became a deployment of power for white settlers within Armstrong - it became a tool, constructed and maintained by 87 themselves, and for their own benefit. Constructions of whiteness became the means through which white settler society was able to obtain ownership of the lands of the Spallumcheen Valley, and through which they were able to maintain their control over these lands. 88 Chapter IV \"Good White Folk\": Whiteness and the Moral Realm On March 18, 1893, the Spallumcheen Municipal Council signed into law their fifth by-law. Titled \" A By-Law for preventing offences against Public Morals; and to regulate driving and riding on Highways and Public Bridges,\" the by-law enacted That no person shall utter or make use of any profane, swearing, obscene, blasphemous or grossly insulting language, or be guilty of any other immorality, or indecency, in any street, highway, public building, or other place within the said municipality (Minutes of the Spallumcheen Municipal Council March 18, 1893:39). For a council that had only ever passed by-laws relating to land and taxation, this by-law protecting the morality of the community was new territory. Nonetheless, Council felt it was necessary to take a stand on the issue of public morals and ensure that the moral fibre of the community was protected1. However, this was only the beginning - the issue of public morality, in fact, would become a central issue for Armstrong's white citizenry. Throughout the public discourse produced between 1890 and 1930, issues relating to morality - such as religion, temperance, and crime - would appear on a regular basis. Concerns over the moral fibre of the community were expressed in relation to such issues as alcohol and drug use, the sexuality of 1 While Council records revealed further discussion of moral issues, such as drunkenness (January 18, 1904; December 14, 1907), gambling (August 25, 1906), and a curfew for the town's youth (November 30, 1912) to name a few, there is no record of anyone being charged/fined/jailed in relation to By-Law Five. Furthermore, there was no mention within the nearly thirty years of newspaper (1902-1930) I covered for this study of anyone being charged in relation to the by-law. Though local court records may have proven otherwise, these records were not readily available for this study. In fact, neither the Armstrong Museum nor the Armstrong or Spallumcheen Councils knew where the records of the community's magistrates were stored. I contacted the court house in nearby Vernon, B .C. (which served as the central provincial court house for the North Okanagan Regional District) and they also had no information pertaining to such records. Finally, I performed searches of the holdings of both the British Columbia Provincial Archives and the National Archives of Canada for court records pertaining to Armstrong, and neither had such records in their possession. Thus, while court records would have been extremely beneficial to this analysis of morality, their status as 'missing' precluded their presence in this study. 89 young white girls, and the moral training of white children. A variety of experts - more times than not, members of Christian organizations - came forth to offer the means and actions necessary to protect the morality of the community. For many, morality became a cause celebre. The purpose of this chapter is to explore the relationship between whiteness and morality as constructed in the public discourse of the community of Armstrong. Through the analysis of discourses surrounding such issues as religion, sexuality, education, alcohol consumption, and the family, this chapter will demonstrate how issues of morality came to separate white from non-white and reaffirm the dominate position of whiteness in the community. Furthermore, this chapter will demonstrate how these same discourses delineated appropriate and inappropriate morality within whiteness itself. Indeed, the policing and regulating of white morality became an important means of maintaining the boundaries between white and non-white populations in Armstrong, as well as maintaining white dominance in the community. As this chapter will demonstrate, many white residents of Armstrong believed, in fact, that the survival o f their white settler society depended heavily on moral regulation and reform. \"God Bless Us Everyone\"- Whiteness and the Church Within sociology, there seems to be very little consensus about the role of religion in society. Karl Marx, for example, referred to religion as \"the opium of the people\"— a veil employed as a means of distracting human beings from their very real suffering within capitalist society (1978 [1844]:54). In contradistinction, Emile Durkheim saw religion as an essential element of social cohesion, as \"the individuals which compose [a religion] feel 90 themselves united to each other by the simple fact that they have a common faith\" (1997 [1912]:234). Finally, in a rejection of Marxian materialism, Max Weber (2002 [1904-05]) saw religion as the basis for capitalist development - that the Protestant belief in the moral value of hard work (which served as proof of salvation) was the real driving force behind the capitalist economy. Nonetheless, while there is a lack of consensus about the role of religion in society, it seems clear that sociologists have seen religion as an important social institution worthy of their critical assessment. In the case of Armstrong, it can be argued that religion was a central element of white society. As an anecdote in the Armstrong Advertiser regaled: \"Armstrong is quite a church-going town,\" remarks a newcomer. The fact was demonstrated, we are told, last Sunday morning when the services of worship in the Anglican, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches concluded within a few minutes of each other, and the three congregations made a united stream. By a little analysis, it may be stated there were three hundred people on the sidewalks or in vehicles homeward bound. Three hundred is an average attendance in these three churches on a Sunday morning (March 29,1923:2) The Baptist Church's Sunday evening services added another 175 people, and the five churches serving rural Spallumcheen each added 80 people to the overall community total for regular church attendance (Armstrong Advertiser March 29, 1923). Thus, according to the Advertiser, 875 of the citizens of Armstrong-Spallumcheen attended church on a regular basis in 1923 - and this did not include the services of the Seventh Day Adventist or Roman Catholic churches, who did not report attendance numbers (Armstrong Advertiser March 29, 1923:2). With a combined population of around 1500 (as enumerated in the 1921 Canadian Census 2), regular church attendance in Armstrong-Spallumcheen was a reality for over fifty percent of the community's population. 2 Population values of Armstrong and Spallumcheen for the 1921 Canadian Census are available from the government of British Columbia. The document, entitled \"British Columbia Municipal Census Population, 1912-1971\" is available online at www.bcstats. gov.bc.ca. Census data for 1921 is also available as part of the 91 Official Directory Postoffice MAIL Ainsivitf— Northdaily cxeept Sunday South \" M A I L L I M E ? — K o r l h daily eswpt Sunday South \" \" Glenemma and Falkland every Monday - - - »:00 p. m, Spallumcheen and H u l l Car on Mondays • . 5:00 p . m . Fridays . . 9:10:1. re. J . M . WRIGHT,Postmaster. R a i l w a y T i m e T a b l e (SHUSWAI' 4 OKAJAIIAK EA IUVAT) Arrives from North dully except Sunday . . &:2jia. m. Arrives from South daily exeunt . ' . . -M5p.it p O U R T ABJISTKONG. No. y w. I. o. r. _ _ Meet ing at their hall last Saturday in each month. Visit ing Brethren cordially invited. H . Hawkins, K . S . 9 :30a .ml • , — 1 3:30 p.m.! ASMSTteG C i r c l e , No. Sil •Q- H O M E C I R C L E . 3:4f> p. m. j Order of Canadian Home Circles, meets „ , . ; in the l .O .P . hall, st Mondav in each 9 : 1 3 ^\"'l month, ' F. X. DAMELLS\". leader Mrs. FKASEK, Secretary. Professional JAS. MURPHY, Barrister ami Solicitor. WOOD, C A R G I L L B L O C K . MVJSItJlI'AL COUNCIL. B e e v e - A . Schuhert. Q e r i and assessor—L W.Pat ton Treasurer arid c u l k c t o r - J . M . Wright Councillors— \"Geo. Murray, Chas. Crosier. -W B . Burnett, E . .1. CfTcrhaiis. Iff F. FRASER,D.M.]) j ;! DENTIST. | I Wood Cargill ijioefc. i j Cffic* HD are: D30 to l i and 1 ^ 0 to a > iATMSTEQNtr,. - '- . . B.C.I Churches jyjETHOMST CHURCH. . Divine Service wil l be held cverv Sun. F r a t e r n a l Soc ie t i e s . ! ™>- as follows: Armrtran,., l l ' u . m . , ; Krwb H i l l , 3 p.m.: Enderbv. 7.30 p.m L A T T,. , „ „ . ' : ? \" f d a y School at 2.30 p.m.-l tev. A . N O.L., No. 180i„ meets.irt the /MiUcr , Pastor. • I .O.F. Lodge. .Room, the s e c o n d ! _ Saturday evening of each\" month at g L * w o . Vi3iKnjhn;threnconliailyinvitixl'prESBYTERIAN CHURCH P . N . D A N I E L S . A . S C H U B E R T , M ' Secnitarv. OKANAGAN B l a c k Prcreptory.:bel1' p \"stor . Meetsin the Foresters'Hall. Aniti-1 Irong. on the Thursday, on or lirlorc the foil moon, at 8 p.m. Visiting brethren cordiallv inviied. W. T. HOLTKV, ,1.1IAMILL. Preceptor Bfgfeirar. ,. W.M. | Surra* in S. Andrew's. EniierliV, u| ' H Zion Church, Anustiini,' at ' 1 1 3 0 p.m. every Sunday.-Kov. D . Camp-QHURCH OF ENGLAND James' Church. Sunday. Nov. St. „_ „ . „ ( J Moraintr Prayer nod Ho)yXtann.i.ni«n. H : W . Sunday ECJHW). '}%\\ p. r n . -V. Vt-nahlcc, Vicar.\" i V I. 0.0. F . rMcol? «\\(-ry llursrfnv {•ratine in the • ^ c ^ 1 * ' ' ' ^ ' t i v t ' r ^ r ^ 1 ' ii^SiSmxln^^^ U> offer to tho people of this dis-i 11. PRAKCrS.WiSec. AdvertiaiK, have voti means of reaching the people. Figure 4.1- The Official Directory (Armstrong Advertiser November 10,1905:1) T H E C H U R C H E S ; ! S T . J A M E S * C H U R C H O F E N G L A N D Bettor, Rev.Leonard-A. Morrant, L.Th. Wnetecnth Sandiiy after Trinity— Congregational Oommuraon Sunday. October 6th. \\ 9:00 &jn.—Holy Communion. -A 10:00 sun.—CbJdren's Service. 11:00 a.m.—Holy Communion,VSer-mon and Hymns.' ' 7:30 p.m.—Evensong and Sermon. . . S T V A N D R E W ' S P R E S B Y T E R I A N C H U R C H A R M S T R O N G 10.00 a-m.—Sabbath School. 11:00 a.m.—MornlnR Worship!!; Z I O N U N I T E D C H U R C H O F C A N A D A Ser. W. Btott, BJL, Minister Sunday,* Oct Ufa,'19K>. • H ajn.—Public Worship and Sac-' rament of the Lord'fl Supper/ Ser-mon subject: \"Wist ye not that 1 .ohould be to toy Fathor'a house.\" '_ 12:15r-Ohurch Bchpol and /Bible Class. 3 . p.m.—Worship at Lansdowur;.' \"7:30 pjn.—Evening Worship.-:Ber-mon by Rev. Kelson A. Hartoiesg; To-nmrrw Bventn;, Friday, Od.':'4th. Perparatoxy Service. . Sunday, October 27th,—Antunm Festi-val Berrlces, conducted by Bar. A. K. McMIrm, B. Rdowna, Presi-dent ol Conference. B A P T I S T C H U R C H Bev. J. C. Hardy. Faster-or' Lorrfs l»ay, oet.-6tn,. 1829 , .:\\7 10:00 ajn>T-8unday School'and1 Bi-Class. : 11:00 a.m>-^ornlt«r'' Worshlp^Ser-i-mbh subje 650 0 t a Land use t z British Columbia t z Armstrong t x History. 650 0 t a Minorities t z British Columbia t z Armstrong t x History. 650 0 t a Weddings t z British Columbia t z Armstrong t x History. 650 0 t a Moral conditions t z British Columbia t z Armstrong t x History. 650 0 t a Social classes t z British Columbia t z Armstrong t x History. 651 0 t a Armstrong (B.C.) t x History. 651 0 t a Armstrong (B.C.) t x Race relations. 651 0 t a Armstrong (B.C.) t x Social conditions. Bibliographic Record #31853 73 8/13/2008 9:29:17 AM "@en ; edm:hasType "Thesis/Dissertation"@en ; vivo:dateIssued "2004-11"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0091538"@en ; dcterms:language "eng"@en ; ns0:degreeDiscipline "Anthropology"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "University of British Columbia"@en ; dcterms:rights "For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use."@en ; ns0:scholarLevel "Graduate"@en ; dcterms:title "Whitewashing history : social constructions of whiteness in Armstrong, B.C., 1890-1930"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en ; ns0:identifierURI "http://hdl.handle.net/2429/15508"@en .