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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper investigates the relationship that existed between the French and the native peoples of North America. An emphasis is placed on the negative influence of the fur trade. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPnaNwFrncFurTrd.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
They quickly capitalized on that opportunity in the land that would eventually become known as Canada by establishing what effectively was a new version of their homeland. Indeed, the
society that became ingrained in New France was essentially the same as that found in France. The same status quo of landlord and clergy dominating the commoner was quickly
established in this so-called New World. The commoner, of course, provided the fuel for this new society. It was them that provided the revenues that kept the status
quo in full form. Some, however, quickly became dissatisfied with their new lives. They turned to the only option that they had available to them. That option
was the fur trade. The fur trade had a diversity of impacts, however. Some of those impacts were more negative than they were positive.
The fur trade in New France was in many ways a escape for those that no longer fit in the society that had been established in this new
land. The fur trade offered them the opportunity of entrepreneurial profit outside the reach of the ruling elites of the old country and outside the reach of those that
sought to keep control over them in New France. Unfortunately, however, in some ways the fur trade imposed the same set of circumstances on the indigenous peoples of
Canada as the fur traders themselves had so desperately tried to escape. At the time of the so-called discovery of the
lands we now know as Canada there were numerous aboriginal groups already well established here. These peoples were not one people but they were a diversity of different cultural
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