210 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2020
    1. Figure 5.6 Algonquian couple, 18th century (artistunknown).AboriginalpeoplesfromtheMi’kmaqthroughtheGaspéIroquoistotheLaurentianIroquoiswereeagertotradewithCartierwhenhearrived.

      mi'kmaq wanted to trade with cartier when he first arrived

    2. asCanadiens.UntiltheConquestthereare,technicallyspeaking,noCanadians(withan“a”insteadofan“e”).Thereaftertherearebothkinds.Forthepurposesofconsistencyandrespectforhistoricaldistinctions,“Canadiens”isusedinthistexttodescribethepeopleoftheSt.LawrenceValleywhoseancestryisFrench;“Canadians”willbeusedlaterinthetexttoidentifypeoplelivinginUpperCanada(a.k.aCanadaWest,Ontario) and those anglophones in Montreal after the Conquest.Establishing CanadaAfterspendingsometimeinAcadia,ChamplainbegantheprocessofestablishingaforwardpostatQuebecin1609.Withacomplementofbarely50men,ChamplainwasabletoachievemuchtosustaintheFrenchpresence.Afortifiedsettlement—ahabitation—wasconstructedandanallianceestablishedamongtheAlgonquin,theWendat(Huron),andtheFrench

      champlain helps create french presence and settlement

    3. hatdistinguishesAcadiaasanadministrativeunitisthatsomuchofitwaswater:theGulfofSt.Lawrence,theBayofFundy,theGulfofMaine,CabotStrait,andalongstretchoftheAtlanticOcean.TheGulfofSt.Lawrenceisroughlycircularandmanyofthekeysettlementswerealongitsedge.

      so much of acadia was water

    4. butaviablepresencewasonlyestablishedinJuly1605,whenPort-RoyalwasfoundedontheBayofFundyinwhatisnowNovaScotia.Port-RoyalwastobecomethehubofaFrenchcolonialterritoryinwhat16thcenturyEuropeanmapsdescribedas“Arcadia.”

      port royal became hub for french colonial territory

    5. andthearrivalofFrenchdelegationsdeterminedtobuildasustainedpresence.Notsurprisinglytheywoulddosofirstinthelandsclosestto Europe and near the riches of the Grand Banks fisheries. This territory would become known asAcadia

      beginning of Acadia

    6. Asweshallseeinsubsequentchapters,theEnglishreliedonemigrationto(re)populatetheterritoriestheyclaimed.FrancewasreluctanttodothesameanditlackedtheresourcesandthewilltobuildmuchmorethanareplacementsocietyalongtheSt.LawrenceandafewoutpostsinAcadiaandLouisiana.

      .

    7. Relativelypoor,oftenpummelledbywars,andrivenbyreligiousdifferences,westernEuropewasbothhighlymotivatedbytheprospectofpotentialrichesintheAmericasand,atthesametime,accustomedto competing bitterly with rivals from other polities.

      .

    8. Cartier’srelationshipwiththeSt.LawrenceIroquois,andespeciallywithDonnacona,wasnotespeciallycivil

      shitty things cartier did to the stratacona people

    9. nglandandFrancedescendedintotheHundredYears’War(1337-1453)overthequestionofwhowouldsucceedtothethroneofFrance.Thelengthyconflicthadasignificantpoliticalimpactforbothsides

      first mention of 100 years war between france and england

    10. ApartfromthetracesleftbehindatL’AnseauxMeadowsandthepossibilitythatsomegeneticmaterialmighthavefounditswayintotheAboriginalcommunitiesofthe region, the Viking legacy evaporated with their departure. Vinland was a dead end

      still do not know why vinland got abandoned

    11. Morethan500identifiablegroupsemergedinNorthAmericaduringthepre-contactera(thatis,from1000to1492CE).Althoughtremendouslydiverse,thegroupswithineachregionofthecontinentsharedmanycommonfeatures,includingsubsistencestrategies,kinshiprelations,politicalstructure,andelementsofmaterialculture.AndalthoughtherewerecommoneconomicandculturalfeaturesacrossNorthAmericaandsomethatweresharedinMeso-AmericaandSouthAmericaaswell,thisdoesnotinanywayindicateasinglemonolithicAboriginalculture.InthenorthernhalfofNorthAmericaalonethenumberoftonguesspoken,artistictechniquesperfected,songsanddancestyles,architectural and engineering experiments, and systems of government can barely be calculate

      summary of pre-contact era

    Annotators

    1. p, prototypical bullshit has to do with a purposeful misrepre sentation of self, has the quality of gamesmanship, and-contrary to what Frankfurt says-is at least potent

      key term

    2. , there are prototypical and nonprototypical instances of bullshit. So in defining bullshit, one task at hand is not to say what is bullshit and what is not but to distinguish what is prototypical bullshit from

      key term

    3. : "He's a total fraud-a complete bullshitter." Barry is just as dead-on in his parody of sociologists, who "spend most of their time translat ing simple, obvious observations into scientific-sound

      example

    4. 2-3). This article proposes to take up where Frank furt left off and to address the question of bullshit in a way that is especially pertinent to academics, even more pertinent to people in the humanities and social sciences, and most pertinent of all to those who specialize in rhetoric and writing.

      thesis

    5. instance, "chicken shit" connotes unmanliness, weakness, and pettiness. InJohnson's eyes, if Nixon had been a bullshitter, he would have been a far better ma

      theme of paragraph

    6. s incumbent on us, the writing teachers, to be ever aware of the grades within the category and to move within and around those benign forms that are inescapable and even helpful, while resisting the gravitational pull of the prototypical. In doing

      future enquiries

    7. T

      need more sophisticated understanding of what bullshit is; productive sort of bullshit; bullshit is inevitable when people are attempting to write well

    8. self. Just as bullshit is a greater threat to the truth than a lie, this docile form of bullshit is a greater threat to student writing than the cynical work of the bu

      theme

    9. 5). Combine disregard for the truth with the inevitable classroom pre tense that the writer truly cares about his or her academic development, and an insidious variety of bullshit is f

      key point

    10. bullshit, Marxist-feminist bullshit, deconstructionist bullshit, statistical bullshit, and the list goes on-and on. These epithets signify a final judgment of unintelligibility or bad faith leveled at the practitioners of one theory or discipline by practitioners of another, who not only disagree with the other theory or discipline but who, in some ulti mate way, deny that it yields knowledge and assert that the whole discipline or theory qualifies as a prototypical case

      example

    11. thers. While the academy constitutes a kind of specialized group, it is a group with subgroups and subspecialties organized according to a myriad of criteria: disciplines, historical periods, theoretical frameworks, e

      main point

    12. eir experiments, participants in the United States consistently saw Mexico as more similar to the United States than the United States to Mexico. O

      example

    13. criptor. That turns successful academic writing into a complex game indeed-an art or craft in which arguments are forwarded, but more than just argumentative imperatives must

      theme

    14. least to some degree, the reward system encourages the academic writer to misrepresent him- or herself by emphasizing if not exag gerating the influence of what he or she has written. Yet

      theme

    15. ather, they worry that even good academic writing, especially in the humanities and social sciences, is something like bullshit

      summary of paragraph

    16. gleefully in

      the goal of this page was to present why the public has an issue with jargon-filled, academic writing, as well as providing explanations as to why it is necessary.

    17. ords: The absence of agents in sentences and a corresponding abundance of abstract nominalizations characteristic of stylis tic opaqueness figure prominently in Williams and Lanham's

      example

    18. non-academics call academic writing bullshit, they mean that it uses jargon, words whose meanings are so abstract and vague as to seem unre lated to anyone's exper

      topic

    19. han others. Because of that, we have to investigate not whether academic writing is considered to be bullshit but whether or not prototypical academic writing is considered to be proto typical bullshit-and in whose esti

      theme

    20. t out, the prototypical case of lie includes not just actual falsehoods but also statements made when there is an insufficient basis for knowing the truth.

      summing of paragraph

    21. sbelief. Part of the game is to speak so convincingly that the auditors believe the bullshit and thus not only enhance the speaker's reputation as a fisherman or ladies' man, but also enhance his reputation as a skilled bulls

      theme of example

    22. The former usually concerns the one that got away; the latter the one that didn't. This bullshit aims to enhance the speaker's reputation as a sports man or a lover and in the process entertain the

      example

    23. mple: the client knows that the sales representa tive has his own agenda, that the salesman may be exaggerating the product's advantages and minimizing its sho

      example

    24. se. The complexities described above indicate one of the serious limitations of Frankfurt's definition; namely, bullshit may be a defining aspect of rhetorical situation

      theme of paragraph

    25. tatives. Their goal is to sell the product, yet they are required to present themselves as benefactors of their potential cus tomers, as persons with only the good of the cli

      example

    26. n terms: Is it deceptive to represent oneself as one actually aspires to be; to create an ethos one doesn't have yet but wants to have? Is such representation really misrepr

      inquiries

    27. hat says (1) that category members do not necessarily share a single set of distinguishing features and may exhibit features to greater or lesser degrees and (2) that some category members are more typical-that is, cognitively salien

      definition

    28. an others. In prototypical instances of lie, someone makes a false statement that he or she believes to be false for the purpose of deceiving anoth

      example

    29. . Academic bullshit may bear no relationship to what is true or false, correct or incorrect. But no one is offended by academic irrelev

      summing sentence of paragraph

    30. cademic texts. Third, one major consequence of studying disciplinary writing has been the aban donment of the abstract ideal once called "g

      example

    31. , the writing style of composition research risks being called bullshit because it often has the timbre of abstruse literary criti cism or of social science. Second, composition has taken up disciplinary writ ing as an important area of study and thus implicitly

      examples

    32. 2-3). This article proposes to take up where Frank furt left off and to address the question of bullshit in a way that is especially pertinent to academics, even more pertinent to people in the humanities and social sciences, and most pertinent of all to those who specialize in rhetoric and writing

      summary and topic of the paragraph