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Rivers and Trails of North America: Gateways of Trade, Imperialism, and Cultural Encounters
Rivers and trails have shaped the history of North America long before the emergence of modern nation-states. Flowing across diverse landscapes, river systems such as the Mississippi, St. Lawrence, Columbia, and Mackenzie served as dynamic corridors of mobility, exchange, and encounter. Likewise, overland trails—including Indigenous trade routes, portage networks, and later colonial roads and wagon trails—connected communities across vast distances.
This course explores how these waterways and pathways functioned as vital arteries of trade, communication, and imperial expansion from pre-contact eras through the nineteenth century.
Centering Indigenous knowledge and presence, we begin by examining how Native nations developed sophisticated transportation networks that facilitated economic exchange, diplomacy, and cultural transmission. We then analyze how European empires entered and transformed these systems, using rivers and trails to advance commercial ambitions, missionary efforts, and territorial claims. The fur trade, settler colonial expansion, and the displacement of Indigenous communities reveal the deep entanglements of environment, power, and mobility.
The course also extends into the twentieth century and the present day, examining how rivers became sites of industrial development, hydroelectric power, border-making, and environmental regulation. Trails evolved into railways, highways, and heritage routes, while many Indigenous nations have revitalized traditional waterways and land routes as part of cultural resurgence and environmental stewardship. By studying rivers and trails as enduring and contested spaces, students will gain a deeper understanding of how geography has shaped economic systems, political power, and cross-cultural relationships—and why these routes remain central to debates about sovereignty, sustainability, and justice today.
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