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Bruce Trigger
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===Ethnohistory=== In Canada, he was arguably best known for ''The Children of Aataentsic'', his two-volume study of the [[Hurons|Huron peoples]], a work which remains the definitive study on the history and ethnography of that people. ''The Children of Aataentsic'' earned Trigger numerous accolades, including adoption by the [[Huron-Wendat Nation]] as an honorary member. Trigger would later reiterate some of the key arguments of the book in ''Natives and Newcomers'', a [[polemical]] work aimed at educating laypeople. In ''Natives and Newcomers'' Trigger, writing in the tradition of [[Franz Boas]], argued that the [[Colonialism|colonial]] and Aboriginal societies of early [[Canada]] all possessed rich and complex social and cultural systems, and that there are no grounds to argue that any society of early [[Canada]] was superior to the others.
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