Like all stories, the ones that were told about Bute Inlet [massacre] were cultural artifacts that embodied the central suppositions underlying the teller's and the audience's understanding of the world in which they lived and ultimately who they considered themselves to be. For in discussing what happened at Bute Inlet, why it happened, and what they should do about it, European British Columbians revealed as much about who they thought they were as they did of the event and its perpetrators. There was, as sociologist Robert Miles put it, 'a dialectic between Self and Other in which the attributed characteristics of Other refract contrasting characteristic of Self, and vice versa.'
Loo, Making Law, Order, and Authority, 135.












