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ll’inter’inter disciplinaritédisciplinarité enen histoirehistoire

Canadian Société Historical historique Association du Canada New from Press

More than Just Games Tending the Student Body Canada and the 1936 Olympics Youth, Health, and the Modern by Richard Menkis and University Harold Troper by Catherine Gidney

A Great Rural Sisterhood The World is Our Parish Madge Robertson Watt and the John King Gordon, 1900-1989: ACWW An Intellectual Biography by Linda M. Ambrose by Keith R. Fleming o Press New from University of Toronto Press

Body Reclaiming the Don In the Power of the Government dern An Environmental History of The Rise and Fall of Newsprint in Ontario, Toronto’s Don River Valley 1894-1932 by Jennifer L. Bonnell by Mark Kuhlberg

ish 989: The Modern Girl The Dignity of Every Human Being Feminine Modernities, the Body, New Brunswick Artists and Canadian Culture and Commodities in the 1920s between the Great Depression and the Cold War by Jane Nicholas by Kirk Niergarth HISHISTTOORY IN THE MAKING

LUNCH-BUCKET LIVESVES Remaking the Workers’s’ CityCit Craig HeronH

“Expansive in reach, engagengaging in style,yle, anda filled with fascinating local details,etails, Lunch-Bucket Lives is ‘total history’ at its beest.” – Steve Penfold, University of Toronto

WORTH FIGHTING FOR Canada’s Tradition of War RResistancece fromfrom 1812 to thehW War on Terror Edited by Lara Campbell, Michaelhae Dawsonn and Catherine Gidney

“Finally, alongside the numerousus books on Canada ‘at war’, we have an outstandingouts volume that chronicles Canadiansdia who actively ‘resisted war’.“ – Marlene Epp, University of WaWaterloo

Winnnnerer of thehe 20122 Wilsoson Prize for Publishing Canadian History www.b.btlbbooks.cs.com The Canadian Historical Association / La Société historique du Canada

Canadian Historical Association – 94th Annual Meeting Société historique du Canada - 94e réunion annuelle Université d’Ottawa,

TABLE OF CONTENTS / TABLE DES MATIÈRES

CHA Council Members / page 1 Membres du Conseil d’administration de la SHC Acknowledgements / Remerciements page 2 Program Committee / Comité de programmation page 3 CHA Presidents / Présidents de la SHC page 4 Daily Programming / Programmation quotidienne page 8 Program / Programme page 26 CHA Keynote Address / session #12 Discours liminaire de la SHC CHA Presidential Address / Discours de la présidente session #76 Annual General Meeting / Assemblée générale annuelle session #77

Awards Ceremonies / Remise des prix session #78 Cliopalooza session #79 CHA Affiliated Committees Business Meetings / Réunions d’affaires des comités associés de la SHC #13-18, 36-41, 61-65 Index of Participants / Répertoire des auteurs page 115

Cover image / L’image de la couverture : Dr. Raymond U. Lemieux, chairman of Ottawa University’s Department of Chemistry and an authority on sugar synthesis, studies a graph from the nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer. Technician on hand is Liz Westland. Circa 1960. Credit: Canada Department of Manpower and Immigration / Library and Archives Canada; Copyright: Expired.

Dr Raymond U. Lemieux, président du département de chimie de l’Université d’Ottawa et autorité en matière de synthèse du sucre, étudiant un graphique provenant du spectromètre à résonance magnétique nucléaire. Technicienne sur place : Liz Westland. c. 1960. Crédit : Ministère de la Main- d’œuvre et de l’immigration du Canada / Bibliothèque et archives Canada ; Droit d’auteur : Périmé. The Canadian Historical Association / La Société historique du Canada

The Canadian Historical Association / La Société historique du Canada

NEW FOR UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

“Canada was and is, despite appearances, sometimes a very violent country...” —From the Introduction

DEATH IN THE PEACEABLE KINGDOM CANADIAN HISTORY SINCE 1867 THROUGH MURDER, EXECUTION, ASSASSINATION, AND SUICIDE Dimitry Anastakis Paperback 336 pp I $39.95 ISBN: 9781442606364

Death in the Peaceable Kingdom is an intelligent, innovative response to the incorrect assumption that Canadian history is dry and uninspiring. Using the “hooks” of murder, execution, assassination, and suicide, Dimitry Anastakis introduces readers to the full scope of post-Confederation Canadian history.

Beginning with the assassination of Thomas D’Arcy McGee, Anastakis recounts the deaths of famous Canadians such as Louis Riel, Tom Thomson, and Pierre Laporte. He also introduces lesser-known events such as the execution of shell- shocked deserter Pte. Harold Carter during the First World War and the suicide of suspected communist Herbert Norman in Cairo during the Cold War.

Complementing the chapters are short vignettes—“Murderous Moments” and “Tragic Tales”—that point to broader themes and issues.

utppublishing.com La Société historique du Canada 1

CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION SOCIÉTÉ HISTORIQUE DU CANADA

2014 – 2015 CHA EXECUTIVE AND COUNCIL / EXÉCUTIF ET CONSEIL D’ADMINISTRATION DE LA SHC

EXECUTIVE / EXÉCUTIF

President / Présidente Dominique Marshall

Vice-President / Vice-Présidente Joan Sangster

Treasurer / Trésorière Jo-Anne McCutcheon

Assistant Treasurer / Assistante au trésorier Marielle Campeau

Secrétaire de langue française Martin Laberge

English-Language Secretary Robert Talbot

Executive Director / Directeur général Michel Duquet

COUNCIL / CONSEIL D’ADMINISTRATION

2012-2015 2013-2016 2014-2017 Michael Dawson Michel Ducharme Lara Campbell Erika Dyck Bonny Ibhawoh Lisa Todd Yves Frenette Nicole Neatby Tarah Brookfield

GRADUATE STUDENT COMMITTEE REPRESENTATIVE / REPRÉSENTANTE DU COMITÉ DES ÉTUDIANTS DIPLÔMÉS Marc-André Gagnon

2 The Historical Association of Canada

Chers collègues et amis,

C'est avec beaucoup de joie que je vous accueille à la réunion annuelle de la Société historique du Canada. L'événement a été préparé de longue date et a été placé sous un thème particulièrement porteur dans le contexte qui est le nôtre aujourd'hui: l'interdisciplinarité en histoire. Vous aurez le choix au cours de ces trois jours entre plus de 130 activités, panels et table rondes qui reflètent fidèlement les préoccupations de notre milieu et les tendances émergentes de la profession. Je tiens à porter à votre attention la conférence inaugurale lundi matin de Dean Oliver, directeur de la recherche au Musée canadien de l'histoire à Ottawa, et les nombreuses sessions conjointes que nous avons préparées avec nos collègues d'autres disciplines. Ne manquez pas non plus le discours présidentiel de Dominique Marshall et la réunion annuelle des membres de la SHC le mardi après-midi. Je tiens à remercier les membres dévoués de notre comité de programme, dont vous trouverez la liste plus bas et tout particulièrement Benoit Longval qui a assuré un suivi sans faille au cours des mois qui ont précédé notre rencontre.

Pierre Anctil Président du comité de programme Ottawa 2015

Dear colleagues and friends,

It is with great joy that I welcome you to the annual meeting of the Canadian Historical Association. The event was organised long ago with a particularly promising theme in the context in which we live today: interdisciplinarity in history. You will be able, over three days, to choose from more than 130 activities, panels and roundtables that accurately reflect the concerns of our community and emerging trends in the industry. I would like to bring to your attention the inaugural conference of Dean Oliver, Director of Research at the Canadian Museum of history in Ottawa on Monday morning and the many joint sessions that we have prepared with our colleagues from other disciplines. Do not miss Dominique Marshall’s presidential address and the AGM of the SHC on Tuesday afternoon. I would like to thank the dedicated members of our program committee (see below) and especially Benoit Longval who followed up impeccably on the tasks at hand in the months leading up to our meeting.

Pierre Anctil Chair of the Ottawa 2015 Program Committee

La Société historique du Canada 3

Canadian Historical Association – 94th Annual Meeting Société historique du Canada - 94e réunion annuelle

Ottawa 2015 Program Committee Chair / Président du comité de programme Ottawa 2015 Pierre Anctil Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2015 PROGRAM COMMITTEE / COMITÉ DU PROGRAMME 2015

Jean-François Lozier – Musée canadien de l’histoire / Canadian Museum of History, Ottawa Jo-Anne McCutcheon – Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Robert Talbot – Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Alexandra Mosquin – Parcs Canada Stéphane Lévesque – Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Georges Sioui – Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Michel Filion – Université du Québec en Outaouais Geoffrey Ewen – Glendon College, York University Alberto Florez-Malagon – Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Don Wright – University of New Brunswick / Université du Nouveau-Brunswick Audra Diptee – Benoit Longval – Étudiant gradué de l’Université d’Ottawa / Graduate Student at the University of Ottawa Nancy Janovicek – Paul Nelles – Carleton University

4 The Historical Association of Canada

CHA Presidents / Président(e)s de la SHC 1922-2015

2013-2014 Dominique Marshall 1965-1966 Margaret A. Ormsby 2011-2013 Lyle Dick 1964-1965 Mason Wade 2009-2011 Mary Lynn Stewart 1963-1964 Marcel Trudel 2007-2009 Craig Heron 1962-1963 Hilda Neatby 2005-2007 Margaret Conrad 1961-1962 R. A. Preston 2003-2005 Gerald Friesen 1960-1961 W. K. Ferguson 2001-2003 Mary Vipond 1959-1960 W. L. Morton 2000-2001 Chad Gaffield 1958-1959 L’abbé A. D’Eschambault 1999-2000 Irving Abella 1957-1958 W. Kaye Lamb 1998-1999 Gregory S. Kealey 1956-1957 D. G. Creighton 1997-1998 Judith Fingard 1955-1956 G. F. G. Stanley 1996-1997 James R. Miller 1954-1955 J. J. Talman 1995-1996 Nadia Fahmy-Eid 1953-1954 M. H. Long 1994-1995 James A. Leith 1952-1953 C. P. Stacey 1993-1994 Veronica Strong-Boag 1951-1952 Jean Bruchési 1992-1993 Philip Buckner 1950-1951 George E.Wilson 1991-1992 Gail Cuthbert Brandt 1949-1950 A. L. Burt 1990-1991 J. E. Rea 1948-1949 L’abbé Arthur Maheux 1989-1990 Jean-Claude Robert 1947-1948 Fred H. Soward 1988-1989 Cornelius J. Jaenen 1946-1947 H. N. Fieldhouse 1987-1988 H. Blair Neatby 1945-1946 Frank H. Underhill 1986-1987 René Durocher 1944-1945 W. N. Sage 1985-1986 William Acheson 1943-1944 George W. Brown 1984-1985 Susan M. Trofimenkoff 1942-1943 A. R. M. Lower 1983-1984 Ramsay Cook 1941-1942 Fred Landon 1982-1983 Jean-Pierre Wallot 1940-1941 Gustave Lanctôt 1981-1982 John Kendle 1939-1940 J. B. Brebner 1980-1981 Pierre Savard 1938-1939 R. G. Trotter 1979-1980 Robert C. Brown 1937-1938 D. C. Harvey 1978-1979 Desmond P. Morton 1936-1937 Chester W. New 1977-1978 David M.L. Farr 1935-1936 E. R. Adair 1976-1977 Margaret E. Prang 1934-1935 F. J. Audet 1975-1976 Jacques Monet, s.j. 1933-1934 Duncan McArthur 1974-1975 J. B. Conacher 1932-1933 J. C. Webster 1973-1974 S. F. Wise 1931-1932 F. W. Howay 1972-1973 Lewis G. Thomas 1930-1931 Sir Robert L. Borden 1971-1972 Ivo N. Lambi 1929-1930 Hon. Rodolphe Lemieux 1970-1971 W. R. Graham 1928-1929 Chester Martin 1969-1970 Fernand Ouellet 1927-1928 A. G. Doughty 1968-1969 Peter B. Waite 1926-1927 George M. Wrong 1967-1968 J. M. S. Careless 1925-1926 Hon. Thomas Chapais 1966-1967 R. M. Saunders 1922-1925 L. J. Burpee La Société historique du Canada 5

CHA Annual Meetings / Réunions annuelles de la SHC

2017 – Toronto, Ontario 1983 – Victoria, British Columbia / 2016 – Calgary, Alberta Colombie-Britannique 2015 – Ottawa, Ontario 1982 – Ottawa, Ontario 2014 – St. Catharines, Ontario 1981 – Hamilton, Ontario 2013 – Victoria, British Columbia / 1980 – Montréal, Québec Colombie-Britannique 1979 – Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 2012 – Waterloo, Ontario 1978 – London, Ontario 2011 – Fredericton, New Brunswick / 1977 – Fredericton, New Brunswick / Nouveau-Brunswick Nouveau-Brunswick 2010 – Montreal, Québec 1976 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 2009 – Ottawa, Ontario 1975 – Edmonton, Alberta 2008 – Vancouver, British Columbia / 1974 – Toronto, Ontario Colombie-Britannique 1973 – Kingston, Ontario 2007 – Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 1972 – Montréal, Québec 2006 – Toronto, Ontario 1971 – St-John's, Newfoundland / Terre- 2005 – London, Ontario Neuve 2004 – Winnipeg, Manitoba 1970 – Winnipeg, Manitoba 2003 – Halifax, Nova Scotia / Nouvelle- 1969 – Toronto, Ontario Écosse 1968 – Calgary, Alberta 2002 – Toronto - Ontario 1967 – Ottawa, Ontario 2001 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1966 – Sherbrooke, Québec 2000 – Edmonton, Alberta 1965 – Vancouver, British Columbia / 1999 – Sherbrooke, Québec Colombie-Britannique 1998 – Ottawa, Ontario 1964 – Charlottetown, Prince Edward 1997 – St-John’s, Newfoundland / Terre- Island / Île-du-Prince-Édouard Neuve 1963 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1996 – St-Catharines, Ontario 1962 – Hamilton, Ontario 1995 – Montréal, Québec 1961 – Montréal, Québec 1994 – Calgary, Alberta 1960 – Kingston, Ontario 1993 – Ottawa, Ontario 1959 – Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 1992 – Charlottetown, Prince Edward 1958 – Edmonton, Alberta Island / Île-du-Prince-Édouard 1957 – Ottawa, Ontario 1991 – Kingston, Ontario 1956 – Montréal, Québec 1990 – Victoria, British Columbia / 1955 – Toronto, Ontario Colombie-Britannique 1954 – Winnipeg, Manitoba 1989 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1953 – London, Ontario 1988 – Windsor, Ontario 1952 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1987 – Hamilton, Ontario 1951 – Montréal, Québec 1986 – Winnipeg, Manitoba 1950 – Kingston, Ontario 1985 – Montréal, Québec 1949 – Halifax, Nova Scotia / Nouvelle- 1984 – Guelph, Ontario Écosse

6 The Historical Association of Canada

1948 – Victoria & Vancouver, Colombie- 1935 – Kingston, Ontario Britannique 1934 – Montréal, Québec 1947 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1933 – Ottawa, Ontario 1946 – Toronto, Ontario 1932 – Ottawa, Ontario 1945 – Kingston, Ontario 1931 – Ottawa, Ontario 1944 – Montréal, Québec 1930 – Montréal, Québec 1943 – Hamilton, Ontario 1929 – Ottawa, Ontario 1942 – Toronto, Ontario 1928 – Winnipeg, Manitoba 1941 – Kingston, Ontario 1927 – Toronto, Ontario 1940 – London, Ontario 1926 – Ottawa, Ontario 1939 – Montréal, Québec 1925 – Montréal, Québec 1938 – Ottawa, Ontario 1924 – Quebec City / Québec, Québec 1937 – Hamilton, Ontario 1923 – Ottawa, Ontario 1936 – Ottawa, Ontario 1922 – Ottawa, Ontario AnnualAnnu Meeting 2015 Réunion annuelle

BIENVENUE ! À la fine pointe de la discipline, RetInterdisciplinarityInterdishc in History le Département d’histoire de l’Université d’Ottawa : Excellence en recherche, en enseignement et en interdisciplinarité. WELCOME! At the cutting edge of the discipline, the Department of History of the University of Ottawa: Excellence in research, in teaching and in interdisciplinarity.

Département d’histoire Department of History 8 The Historical Association of Canada

Daily Programming Sunday 31 May 2015 8:00-9:30 pm 1. Roundtable – Commemorations in the National Capital Region : Evolution and findings 7:00-11:00 pm 2. Graduate Student Committee Social Event Monday 1 June 2015 8:30-10:00 am 3. Historicizing Indigenous Feminism: Aboriginal Women’s Politics in Recent History 4. Canadian Popular History and the Study of Music 5. Democracy and Sovereignty in Postwar Canada and Quebec 6. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Welfare State 7. Policing, Security, and Surveillance in Canada 8. Extending the Boundaries of Heaven: Religious Groups and Their Use of Mass Media in History 9. Koalatative Analysis: The Scholarly Benefits of Interdisciplinary Comparative Canadian and Australian Research 10. Historians and the philosophy of historiography 11. Recordkeeping/Archives, colonizers/colonized: creating/using 19th and 20th century records about indigenous peoples 10:15-11:45 am 12. Keynote Address 12:00-1:00 pm 13. Aboriginal History Study Group Business Meeting 14. Public History Group Business Meeting 15. History of Children and Youth Group Business Meeting 16. Political History Group Business Meeting La Société historique du Canada 9

Programmation Quotidienne Le dimanche 31 mai 2015 20h-21h30 1. Table-ronde – Commémorations dans la région de la Capitale nationale : évolution et constats 19h-23h 2. Activité sociale du Comité des étudiant(e)s diplômé(e)s Le lundi 1 er juin 2015 8h30-10h 3. L’historisation du féminisme autochtone : l’histoire récente de la politique des femmes autochtones 4. L’histoire populaire du Canada et l’étude de la musique 5. La démocratie et la souveraineté dans le Canada et le Québec d’après-guerre 6. Perspectives interdisciplinaires sur l’État providence 7. Maintien de l’ordre, sécurité et surveillance au Canada 8. Repousser les limites du Paradis : groupes religieux et leur utilisation des médias sociaux dans l’histoire 9. Une analyse koalatative : avantages intellectuels d’une comparaison entre la recherche interdisciplinaire canadienne et australienne 10. Les historiens et la philosophie de l’historiographie 11. La tenue de documents / archives, colonisateurs, colonisés : création et utilisation de dossiers des XIXe et XXe siècles relatifs aux peuples autochtones 10h15-11h45 12. Discours liminaire 12h-13h 13. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone 14. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire publique 15. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire de l’enfance et de la jeunesse 16. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire politique 10 The Historical Association of Canada

17. Media and Communications History Committee Business Meeting 18. Histoire sociale/Social History Editorial Meeting 1:00-4:00 pm – Special Session When Data Meets the Soul of Culture: How Technology, Science, Social Science and Humanities Research are Changing The Way We See Ourselves 1:30-3:00 pm 19. Canadian History with an Indigenous Historical Consciousness 20. Racialized Faith: Race, Racism, Gender and Religion in 20th Century Canada 21. (Un)disciplining Human Rights History at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights 22. Anti-Militarism in Canada and the United States 23. Identity on the Margins: Explorations in Interdisciplinary Frameworks 24. Storming the Ivory Tower: Canadian Interwar Historians Challenge the Boundaries of their Craft, 1919-1939 25. Rethinking the Canada-United States Border 26. Commemorating History 3:15-4:45 pm 27. Made History: Material Culture and New Insights into Indigenous Historical Consciousness 28. Roundtable – New Ideas in Twentieth-Century Canada-US Transnational Political History 29. Borderline Obsessions: Regulating and Rejecting Immigrants at Canada’s Points of Entry 30. History of Medicine in Canada 31. Approaching Religion as a Factor in History 32. Canada and the Circumpolar World 33. Canadian Business History: Critical and Interdisciplinary 34. Decolonizing Historiography: The Necessity of Interdisciplinarity 35. Public History Speed Networking Event La Société historique du Canada 11

17. Réunion de travail du Comité de l’histoire des medias et de la communication 18. Réunion éditoriale d’Histoire sociale/Social History 13h à 16h – Session spéciale Quand l’informatique se porte à la rencontre de la culture : Comment la technologie, la science et la recherche en sciences humaines transforment la manière dont nous nous percevons 13h30-15h 19. L’histoire canadienne avec une conscience historique autochtone 20. La foi racialisée : race, racisme, genre et religion au Canada au XXe siècle 21. L’histoire (in)disciplinée des droits de la personne au Musée pour les droits de la personne 22. L’antimilitarisme au Canada et aux États-Unis 23. L’identité en marge : exploration dans les cadres conceptuels interdisciplinaires 24. La prise de la tour d’ivoire : les historiens de l’entre deux-guerres défient les limites de leur métier, 1919-1939 25. Second regard sur la frontière canado-américaine 26. Regards croisés sur la commémoration historique 15h15-16h45 27. L’histoire confectionnée : culture matérielle et nouvelles perspectives sur la conscience historique des Autochtones 28. Table ronde : nouvelles idées sur l’histoire politique transnationale canado-américaine du XXe siècle 29. À la limite de l’obsession : règlementation et refoulement des immigrants aux points d’entrée au Canada 30. Histoire de la médecine au Canada 31. Facteur religieux en histoire 32. Le Canada et le monde circumpolaire 33. L’histoire du monde des affaires au Canada : approche critique et interdisciplinaire 34. La décolonisation de l’historiographie : la nécessité d’interdisciplinarité 35. Activité de réseautage express d’histoire publique 12 The Historical Association of Canada

5:00-6:00 pm 36. Oral History Group Business Meeting 37. ActiveHistory Business Meeting 38. Canadian Committee on Military History Business Meeting 39. Business History Group Business Meeting 40. Labour/Le Travail Editorial Meeting 41. Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism Business Meeting Tuesday 2 June 2015 8:30-10:00 am 42. Contesting Indigenous Schooling: Education History, Historiography, and Interdisciplinary Methodologies 43. Equal Opportunity and the Shaping of Political Culture in 1960s New Brunswick 44. Tracking business practices in Canada 45. Defining the Great Lakes – Saint-Lawrence System : varying perspectives and scales 46. Political Activism as an Object of Historical Inquiry 47. Cover-ups, Bribes and Machine Politics: Scandal, Canadian-Style 48. Lines Across the (North) West (Coast): Transportation Geographies of Ethnography, Quarantine, and Modernization 49. Gender Studies in Historical Perspective 50. Contested Terrains: Constructions of Blackness and Racial Difference in 20th Century Canada 9:00 am -12:00 noon 51. Tour of the Archives of the University of Ottawa 10:15-11:45 am 52. Learning about People from Places: Reflections on Social Identities, Place- making and Environmental Policy in Indigenous British Columbia 53. History of Atlantic Canada

La Société historique du Canada 13

17h-18h 36. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire orale 37. Réunion de travail d’HistoireEngagée 38. Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur l’histoire militaire 39. Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire des affaires 40. Réunion éditoriale de Labour / Le Travail 41. Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur la migration, l'éthnicité et le transnationalisme Le mardi 2 juin 2015 8h30-10h 42. Contester l’éducation des Autochthones : histoire de l’éducation, historiographie et méthodologies interdisciplinaires 43. Le principe d’égalité et l’élaboration de la culture politique au Nouveau- Brunswick dans les années 1960 44. Pratiques d’affaires au Canada 45. Définir le système Grands Lacs–Saint-Laurent: perspectives et échelles croisées 46. L’activisme politique comme un objet d’étude historique 47. Opérations de camouflage, pots-de-vin et vie politique à la canadienne 48. Les diagonales qui traversent la côte (nord) Ouest : géographies de transport, ethnographie, quarantaine et modernisation 49. L’étude du genre dans la recherche historique 50. Domaines contestés : élaborations de blackness et de la différence raciale au Canada au XXe siècle 9h – 12h 51. Visite des Archives de l’Université d’Ottawa 10h15-11h45 52. Connaître les gens à travers les lieux : réflexions sur les identités sociales, disposition de l’espace et politique environnementale des Autochtones en Colombie-Britannique 53. Histoire des provinces atlantiques canadiennes 14 The Historical Association of Canada

54. Publishing Historical Research in an Era of Increasing Interdisciplinarity: Reflections and Advice from Journal Editors 55. Historiography and Intellectual History 56. Secret Lives 57. Roundtable – 100 Shades of Khaki: A Round-Table Discussion of First World War Commemoration 58. Quebec City in the 19th Century: A forgotten Site of Interethnic Contact and Conflict 59. Roundtable – Rethinking Gender and Women’s History: Reflections on Interdisciplinary Approaches 60. Rethinking Division: German State Making after 1945 10:30 am -12:00 noon (STE – H0104) Is All History Now Environmental History? The Anthropocene in Historical Context 12:00-1:00 pm 61. Graduate Student Committee Business Meeting 62. Canadian Committee on Women’s History Business Meeting 63. Canadian Committee on Labour History Business Meeting 64. Canadian Network for Economic History Business Meeting 65. Canadian International History – Canadian Foreign Relations Business Meeting 12:00-1:30 pm 66. Poster Session 1:30-3:00 pm 67. Roundtable – Future Directions for Ethnohistory in Canada: Taking Stock 60 Years After the American Indian Claims Commission Launched the Method of Ethnohistory 68. Roundtable – Public, Private, Political: Charitable Organizations and Citizen Engagement 69. Roundtable – Making Public History 70. History and Environment 71. Approaching Unusual Sources in History La Société historique du Canada 15

54. La publication de recherche historique à une ère d’interdisciplinarité croissante : réflexions et conseils de directeurs de revue 55. Historiographie et histoire intellectuelle 56. Vies clandestines 57. Table ronde – 100 teintes de kaki : discussion sur la commémoration de la Première Guerre mondiale 58. La ville de Québec au XIXe siècle : site négligé de contact et de conflit interethniques 59. Table ronde – Second regard sur le genre et l’histoire des femmes : réflexions sur les approches interdisciplinaires 60. Second regard sur la division : la formation de l’État germanique après 1945 10h30 à 12h (STE – H0104) Is All History Now Environmental History? The Anthropocene in Historical Context 12h-13h 61. Réunion de travail du Comité des étudiant(e)s diplômé(e)s 62. Réunion de travail du Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes 63. Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travail 64. Réunion de travail du Réseau canadien d’histoire économique 65. Réunion de travail Histoire internationale du Canada – Relations étrangères canadiennes 12h-13h30 66. Séance de présentation par affiche 13h30-15h 67. Table ronde – Orientations futures de l’ethnohistoire au Canada : le bilan, 60 ans après le lancement de la méthode de l’ethnohistoire par la American Indian Claims Commission 68. Table ronde – Public, privé, politique : organismes de bienfaisance et engagement des citoyens 69. Table-ronde – Faire de l’histoire publique 70. Histoire et environnement 71. Témoignages peu communs en histoire 16 The Historical Association of Canada

72. The Actress, Transatlantic Performance and Cultural Negotiation in the Long Nineteenth Century 73. What Kind of Development? Maritime Environmentalism and Regional Development Policy in the 1970s 74. Canadian Energy Histories: Kerosene, Coal, and Oil 75. Family, Patronage, Politics: Histories of Intimacy and Emotion in late 19th- and early 20th century Canada 3:30-4:30 pm 76. Presidential Address 4:45-5:45 pm 77. Annual General Meeting 6:00-8:00 pm 78. Awards presentation and reception 8:00 pm + 79. Social event (Cliopalooza) Wednesday 3 June 2015 8:30-10:00 am 80. Damage Control: The History of Sexually Transmitted Infections in Germany and Canada 1914-1975 81. Transnational Ties: North American Women’s Multifaceted Engagements with World War One 82. Resistance and Resilience in History 83. Nationalism, Land, and Territory 84. Canadian Narratives and Canadian Identity 85. Practicing the Discipline of History 86. Notions of State and International Relations in History 87. Interdisciplinary approaches to women’s history and communication: feminism, media women and their work at Radio-Canada and the Canadian Press News Agency 88. Roundtable – Landscapes of Injustice: Victim, Perpetrator and Witness Narratives of the Japanese-Canadian Dispossession during the Second World War La Société historique du Canada 17

72. La comédienne, les performances transatlantiques et la négociation culturelle durant le Long XIXe siècle 73. Quelle sorte de développement? Environnementalisme dans les Maritimes et politique de développement régional dans les années 1970 74. Histoires de l’énergie canadienne : le kérosene, le charbon et l’huile 75. Famille, favoritisme, politique : histoires d’intimité et d’émotion à la fin du XIXe et début du XXe siècle au Canada 15h30-16h30 76. Discours de la présidente 16h45-17h45 77. Réunion annuelle des membres 18h-20h 78. Remise des prix et réception / 20h 79. Activité sociale (Cliopalooza) Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 8h30-10h 80. Limiter les dommages : l’histoire des infections transmises sexuellement en Allemagne et au Canada, 1914-1975 81. Liens transnationaux : engagements à volets multiples des femmes nord- américaines envers la Première Guerre mondiale 82. Le refus d’obtempérer et la résistance en histoire 83. Le nationalisme et l’aménagement du territoire 84. Récits canadiens et identités canadiennes 85. Regards sur la profession d’historien(ne) 86. L’État et les relations internationales en histoire 87. Approches interdisciplinaires en histoire des femmes et communication : le féminisme, les femmes dans les médias et leur travail à Radio-Canada et l’Agence de presse canadienne 88. Table ronde : Landscapes of Injustice : victime, auteur et témoignages de la dépossession des Canadiens d’origine japonaise pendant la Première Guerre mondiale 18 The Historical Association of Canada

89. Histories of consequence: Indigenous-state relations and historical inheritances in British Columbia 8:30-10:00 am Canadian Catholic Historical Association Keynote Lecture 10:30 am -12:00 noon 90. Tour of the Centre de recherche en civilisation canadienne-française (CRCCF) 10:15-11:45 am 91. First Nations in Canadian Historiography 92. Exploring Family History 93. Archival Stories: Reflections from the Archives of Canada and the Canadian Museum of History 94. Why should history education research matter to historians? 95. Who killed pre-Confederation Canadian history? The place of early- Canada in an interdisciplinary and transnational historiographical environment 96. New Perspectives in Economic History 97. Not Goin’ Down the Road: The Politics of Regional Development in Eastern Canada 98. The Cold War 99. Roundtable – What does an interdisciplinary classroom look like? Teaching history within and beyond disciplinary boundaries 100. Roundtable – Thinking Outside the Box: Historians and Interdisciplinarity 12:00-1:30 am 101. First Nations in Canadian History 102. Commemoration and the State in 19th and 20th Century Canada 103. A Curious Development: Situating Canada in a Global History of Technical Assistance 104. The Exchange of Ideas in Atlantic and Local Networks: Colonial Readers and Printers 105. Remaking and Reimagining the City 106. Frontiers of Our Past: The 1920s in Canada 107. Exploration and Immigration in Canadian History La Société historique du Canada 19

89. Récits de conséquences : les relations entre les Autochtones et l’État et l’héritage historique en Colombie-Britannique 8h30 à 10h Conférence plénière de la Canadian Catholic Historical Association 10h30 – 12h 90. Visite du Centre de recherche en civilisation canadienne-française (CRCCF) 10h15-11h45 91. Les nations autochtones dans l’historiographie canadienne 92. À la recherche de l’histoire de la famille 93. Récits d’archives : réflexions des archives du Canada et du Musée canadien de l’histoire 94. La recherche sur l’enseignement de l’histoire est-elle importante pour les historiens? 95. Qui a tué l’histoire canadienne d’avant la Conféderation? La place du début du Canada dans un environnement historiographique interdisciplinaire et transnational 96. Nouvelles perspectives en histoire économique 97. Autre solution : les politiques du développement régional dans l’Est du Canada 98. La Guerre froide 99. Table ronde : en quoi consiste l’interdisciplinarité en classe? Enseigner l’histoire à l’intérieur et au-delà des limites de la discipline 100. Table ronde – Hors des sentiers battus : les historiens et l’interdisciplinarité 12h-13h30 101. Les Autochtones dans l’histoire canadienne 102. La commémoration et l’État au Canada aux XIXe et XXe siècles 103. Phénomène intéressant : la place du Canada dans l’histoire mondiale de l’aide technique 104. L’échange d’idées dans l’Atlantique et les réseaux locaux : lecteurs et imprimeurs 105. Renouvellement et réinvention de la ville 106. Les frontières de notre passé : les années 1920 au Canada 107. Exploration et immigration dans l’histoire canadienne 20 The Historical Association of Canada

108. Roundtable – Scars of Class: Oral Histories of Workers’ Health and Environmental Justice 109. Roundtable on James Daschuk’s Clearing the Plains, winner of the 2014 Sir John A. Macdonald Prize from the Canadian Historical Association 1:45-3:15 pm 110. Roundtable – Longitudinal Research from Historical Sources 111. Roundtable on Mark Salber Phillips’ On Historical Distance, winner of the 2014 Wallace K. Ferguson Prize from the Canadian Historical Association 112. History in the Classroom 113. Approaches to Collaborative Research 114. Sensory Encounters and Embodied Histories in the Fur Trade and Nineteenth-Century Northwest 115. New Perspectives on Canadian Foreign Policy in the Diefenbaker Era, 1957-1963 (Part 1) 116. Literary Translation and Reinterpretation of History 117. Roundtable – Critical Reflections on Bryan D. Palmer’s Contribution to the Writing of Labour and Working-Class History 118. Roundtable: Reading History, Reading Sociology 119. St.Anne’s Market and the Parliament of Montreal : an interdisciplinary dialogue 3:30-5:30 pm 120. Capitals and Peripheries: Historical Perspectives on International Development 121. Witchcraft in Canada: from Early Modern Demonology to Colonial Clash of Cultures 122. Indigenous Peoples, Labour, and Industrial Development in Canada 123. New Perspectives on Canadian Foreign Policy in the Diefenbaker Era, 1957-1963 (Part 2) 124. Man and his Environment 125. The Greeks – Agamemnon to Alexander The Great Exhibition Participants to the Annual Meeting of the CHA can attend the pre- inauguration of the exhibition The Greeks – Agamemnon to Alexander The Great at the Canadian Museum of History for free with proof of registration. La Société historique du Canada 21

108. Table ronde – Cicatrices de classes sociales : histoires orales sur la justice des travailleurs en termes de santé et d’environnement 109. Table-ronde sur le livre Clearing the Plains de James Daschuk, lauréat du prix Sir-John-A.-Macdonald 2014 de la Société historique du Canada 13h45-15h15 110. Table ronde – Recherche longitudinale dans les sources historiques 111. Table-ronde sur le livre On Historical Distance de Mark Salber Phillips, lauréat du prix Wallace K. Ferguson 2014 de la Société historique du Canada 112. L’histoire dans la salle de classe 113. Approches de recherche concertée 114. Rencontres sensorielles et histoires incarnées dans la traite des fourrures dans le Nord-Ouest au XIXe siècle 115. Nouveau regard sur la politique étrangère canadienne à l’ère Diefenbaker, 1957-1963 (1e partie) 116. Traduction littéraire et relecture de l’histoire 117. Table ronde – Réflexions critiques sur la contribution de Bryan D. Palmer dans l’historiographie de l’histoire du travail et de la classe ouvrière 118. Table ronde - Lire l’histoire, lire la sociologie 119. Le marché Sainte-Anne et le parlement de Montréal : un dialogue interdisciplinaire 15h30-17h30 120. Capitales et périphéries : perspectives historiques sur le développement international 121. La sorcellerie au Canada : de la démonologie du début des temps modernes au conflit des cultures colonial 122. Les Autochtones, le Travail et le développement industriel au Canada 123. Nouveau regard sur la politique étrangère canadienne à l’ère Diefenbaker, 1957-1963 (2e partie) 124. L’Homme et son milieu 125. L’exposition Les Grecs – d’Agamemnon à Alexandre le Grand Sur présentation d’une preuve d’inscription, les participants à la Réunion annuelle de la SHC peuvent assister gratuitement à la pré- inauguration de l’exposition Les Grecs – d’Agamemnon à Alexandre le Grand au Musée canadien de l’histoire. 22 The Historical Association of Canada

126. Law and Rights in African History 127. History, Interdisciplinarity, and the Indian Ocean World 128. Environmental History and Interdisciplinary Knowledges of the Past 129. Roundtable – Reflecting on Greg Kealey and Canadian Labour History

La Société historique du Canada 23

126. Loi et droits dans l’histoire africaine 127. L’histoire, l’interdisciplinarité et le monde de l’océan Indien 128. L’histoire environnementale et les savoirs interdisciplinaires du passé 129. Table ronde – Regard sur Greg Kealey et l’histoire du Travail au Canada

Université d’Ottawa | University of Ottawa Univer

The Institute of Canadian and Aboriginal Studies provides research visitor- L’Institut d’ét ships to scholars who wish to come to Ottawa to work on Canadian or tion de cherc Aboriginal-related projects. The visitorships are designed for sabbaticants ou les autoch and those holding research grants in Canadian or Aboriginal Studies or for particulièrem those who want to produce teaching tools on Canada. They range from 2 weeks reçu des sub to 6 months. autochtones stages duren BENEFITS: • Location-near the National Archives, the National Library and an array AVANTAG of museums • Situé près d • University affiliation and library privileges • Affiliation u • Computing facilities, technical support, Wi-Fi and work space • Équipemen

To apply please complete the online form Pour faire la (arts.uOttawa.ca/canada/en/about-the-institute/research-visitorships/ (arts.uOttaw registration) and submit it to the Institute. inscription)

Institute of Canadian and Institut d’étud Aboriginal Studies et autochton arts.uOttawa.canada arts.uOtta Ottawa Université d’Ottawa | University of Ottawa

search visitor- L’Institut d’études canadiennes et autochtones met des locaux à la disposi- Canadian or tion de chercheurs intéressés à faire un stage de recherche sur le Canada r sabbaticants ou les autochtones dans la capitale nationale. Ce programme s’adresse plus Studies or for particulièrement aux professeurs en congé sabbatique et à quiconque ayant e from 2 weeks reçu des subventions pour faire des recherches en études canadiennes ou autochtones ou encore qui prépare du matériel didactique sur le Canada. Les stages durent généralement de deux semaines à six mois.

an array AVANTAGES : • Situé près de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et de plusieurs musées • Affiliation universitaire et privilèges d’accès à la bibliothèque • Équipement informatique, soutien technique, Wi-Fi et espace de travail

Pour faire la demande, veuillez remplir le formulaire en ligne h-visitorships/ (arts.uOttawa.ca/canada/fr/au-sujet-institut/stages-recherche/ inscription) et le soumettre à l’Institut.

Institut d’études canadiennes et autochtones arts.uOttawa.canada 26 Sunday 31 May 2015 / Le dimanche 31 mai 2015

Program / Programme Sunday 31 May 2015 / Le dimanche 31 mai 2015

8:00-9:30 / 20h-21h30 (Ottawa City Hall – Festival Boardroom/Hôtel de ville d’Ottawa – Salle des festivals)

1. Roundtable – Commemorations in the National Capital Region: Evolution and findings / Table-ronde – Commémorations dans la région de la Capitale nationale : évolution et constats

In the context of a round table, the four participants will discuss com- memorative issues and processes, from international, national, regional and local vantage points through a diachronic perspective and will also reflect on the future of commemoration in the National Capital Region.

Dans le cadre d’une table-ronde, les quatre participants discuteront des enjeux et des processus commémoratifs, selon des points de vue international, national, régional et local tout en privilégiant une perspective diachronique et se questionneront aussi sur l’avenir de la commémoration dans la région de la Capitale nationale.

Facilitator / Animateur : Yves Frénette

Participants :

David Akin (Sun Media) Nadine Blumer (Concordia University) Alan Gordon (University of Guelph) Alain Roy (Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et Archives Canada)

7:00-11:00 / 19h-23h (161 Laurier E.)

2. Graduate Student Committee Social Event / Activité sociale du Comité des étudiant(e)s diplômé(e)s

L’activité aura lieu à l’étage du bas du Royal Oak Pub, 161 avenue Laurier Est / The event will be held in the lower level of the Royal Oak Pub, 161 Laurier Avenue East

Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 27

Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1110)

3. Historicizing Indigenous Feminism: Aboriginal Women’s Politics in Recent History / L’historisation du féminisme autochtone : l’histoire récente de la politique des femmes autochtones

Facilitator / Animateur : Robert Innes (University of Saskatchewan)

Amanda Fehr (University of Saskatchewan): “I am a Strong Woman:” Reconciling Narratives of Christianity, Gender, and Political Activism in Recent Aboriginal Histories

Erica Lee (University of Saskatchewan): “Indigenous Sovereignty Starts In This Body”: Idle No More, Native Feminisms, and Envisioning the Body as Territory

Sarah Nickel (Simon Fraser University): Homemakers, Activists, and Radical Mothers: Indigenous Feminism and Politicized Motherhood in the British Columbia Aboriginal Political Movement, 1950-1981

Commentator / Commentateur : Robert Innes (University of Saskatchewan)

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1130)

4. Canadian Popular History and the Study of Music / L’ histoire populaire du Canada et l’étude de la musique

Paul Aikenhead (York University): What’s that Sound?: Deciphering Canadian Rock Music Records as Historical Texts

Francesca D’Amico (York University): ‘The Mic is my Piece’: Canadian Rap, the Gendered Cool Pose, and Music Industry Racialization and Regulation 28 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Peter Grant (City University London): The First World War and Popular Myth in Canadian Music

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1120)

5. Democracy and Sovereignty in Postwar Canada and Quebec / La démocratie et la souveraineté dans le Canada et le Québec d’après- guerre

Facilitator / Animateur : Ian Milligan (University of Waterloo)

Christo Aivalis (Queen’s University): Socialism, Liberalism, and Economic democracy: Pierre Trudeau, the Labour-Left, and Canadian Economic Nationalism, 1968-1984

Nikolas Barry-Shaw (Queen’s University): A Sneak Preview of Québec? The tragedy of Allende’s Chile and its impact on economic nationalism in Québec

David Blocker (University of Western Ontario): Solidarity Forever? Canadian Left Nationalists, the Texpack Strike and the Challenge of International Unionism

Commentator / Commentateur : Ian Milligan (University of Waterloo)

Sponsored by the Political History Group / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1150)

6. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Welfare State / Perspectives interdisciplinaires sur l’État providence

Facilitator / Animatrice : Penny E. Bryden (University of Victoria)

Gregory P. Marchildon (University of Regina): Universal Medicare and Policy Agenda Setting in Saskatchewan

Lisa Pasolli (Trent University): Considering Child Care’s Historical “Frames”: Ontario Child Care Politics, 1942-2000 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 29

David Tough (Trent University): “Handmaidens of the Handmaidens:” Pressure Groups, Bureaucracy, and the Redistributive State in Canada, 1962-1972

Commentator / Commentatrice : Penny E. Bryden (University of Victoria)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1160)

7. Policing, Security, and Surveillance in Canada / Maintien de l’ordre, sécurité et surveillance au Canada

Facilitator / Animateur : Gregory S. Kealey (University of New Brunswick)

Dominique Clément (University of Alberta): International Terrorism and the Olympics: Security Planning for Montreal’s 1976 Summer Games

Steve Hewitt (University of Birmingham): Committing History: The Evolution of Canadian Counter-Terrorism, 1971-1984

Wesley Wark (University of Ottawa): It Can’t Happen Here: The Evolution of Canadian Counter-Terrorism since 9/11

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 4140)

8. Extending the Boundaries of Heaven: Religious Groups and Their Use of Mass Media in History / Repousser les limites du Paradis : groupes religieux et leur utilisation des médias sociaux dans l’histoire

Facilitator / Animateur : Mark G. McGowan (University of Toronto)

Stuart Barnard (University of Calgary): ‘The Sacred Exception’: The Bible Society and the bible trade in Canada at the turn of the twentieth century

Ruth Bradley-St-Cyr (University of Ottawa): Reception of the United Church of Canada’s New Curriculum, 1965 30 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Shandip Saha (Athabasca University): Religion and the Internet in Modern Hinduism: The Creation of a New Age Hinduism by a Female Hindu Religious Teacher

Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna (University of Toronto): The Christian Ladies Magazine and Helen Fleetwood

Commentator / Commentateur : Mark G. McGowan (University of Toronto)

Co-sponsored by the Media and Communications History Group, the Canadian Society of Church History, and the Canadian Association for the Study of Book Culture / Coparrainée par le Comité de l’histoire des médias et de la communication, la Société canadienne d’histoire de l’église et l'Association canadienne pour l'étude de l'histoire du livre

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 10161)

9. Koalatative Analysis: The Scholarly Benefits of Interdisciplinary Comparative Canadian and Australian Research / Une analyse koalatative : avantages intellectuels d’une comparaison entre la recherche interdisciplinaire canadienne et australienne

Facilitator / Animateur : Asa McKercher (Queen's University)

Jatinder Mann (University of Alberta): “Retaining migrant cultures” and “Leavening British traditions”: A comparison of integration policies in Canada and Australia, 1950s-1970s

Steve Marti (University of Western Ontario): Unsettling Narratives: Race, Indigeneity, and Settler Colonialism in Australia and Canada, 1914-1918

Tyler Turek (University of Western Ontario): The Fetish of Sovereignty: Statehood and Status in the British World, 1919-1923

Commentator / Commentatrice : Paula Hastings (University of Toronto Scarborough)

Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 31

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 7170)

10. Historians and the philosophy of historiography / Les historiens et la philosophie de l’historiographie

Facilitators / Animateurs : Jules Racine-St-Jacques (Université Laval) & Van Troi Tran (Université Laval)

Vincent Auzas (CNRS-Institut d’histoire du temps présent) & Maryline Crivello (Aix-Marseille-Université): « Histinéraires. L’Histoire telle qu’elle se raconte », un programme de recherche ANR

Christian Delacroix (Université Paris-Est): La question de la subjectivité en histoire : la thématisation introuvable

Valérie Lapointe-Gagnon (York University) & Maria Neagu: Les historiens par eux-mêmes : considérations autour d’un projet de recherche

Doug Munro (University of Queensland): Being an Historian in Different Settlings

Patrick-Michel Noël (Université Laval): Le métier d’historien peut-il et devrait-il se dire? Les historiens sur l’épistémologie

Commentator / Commentateur : Chad Gaffield (University of Ottawa)

Co-sponsored by the Folklore Studies Association of Canada and the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science / Coparrainée par l’Association canadienne d’ethnologie et de folklore et la Société canadienne d’histoire et de philosophie des sciences

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1140)

11. Recordkeeping/Archives, colonizers/colonized: creating/using 19th and 20th century records about indigenous peoples / La tenue de documents / archives, colonisateurs, colonisés : création et utilisation de dossiers des XIXe et XXe siècles relatifs aux peuples autochtones

Facilitator / Animateur: Jonathan Lainey (Library and Archives Canada/Bibliothèque et archives Canada) 32 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Ry Moran (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation/Centre national pour la vérité et réconciliation, University of Manitoba): The Duty to Remember, the Right to be Forgotten: Records of the Independent Assessment Process

Jessica Squires (Independent Scholar/Chercheure indépendante – Library and Archives Canada/Bibliothèque et archives Canada): “A means to end Indian dependency:” colonial records and colonization

Shelley Sweeney (Archives, University of Manitoba)

Commentator / Commentateur : Jonathan Lainey (Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et archives Canada): Re:gaining Consent: Anthropologists’ Records of Indigenous Peoples

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1160)

12. Keynote Address / Discours liminaire

Chair / Animatrice : Dominique Marshall (Carleton University)

Introduced by / Présenté par : Pierre Anctil (Université d’Ottawa)

Dean F. Oliver (Director of Research, Canadian Museum of History): Isn’t all history public? Knowledge, wisdom and utility in the great age of storytelling / Dean F. Oliver (Directeur à la recherche, Musée canadien de l’histoire) : Toute histoire n’est-elle pas publique? Connaissances, discernement et sens pratique en une ère de babillage

Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 33

12:00-1:00 / 12h-13h

(Desmarais – 1140)

13. Aboriginal History Study Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

(Desmarais – 1120)

14. Public History Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire publique

(Desmarais – 1130)

15. History of Children and Youth Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire de l’enfance et de la jeunesse

(Desmarais – 7170)

16. Political History Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire politique

(Desmarais – 8161)

17. Media and Communications History Committee Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité de l’histoire des medias et de la communication

(Desmarais – 10161)

18. Histoire sociale/Social History Editorial Meeting / Réunion éditoriale d’Histoire sociale/Social History

34 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

1:00-4:00 / 13h à 16h (Desmarais – 12102)

When Data Meets the Soul of Culture: How Technology, Science, Social Science and Humanities Research are Changing The Way We See Ourselves / Quand l’informatique se porte à la rencontre de la culture : Comment la technologie, la science et la recherche en sciences humaines transforment la manière dont nous nous percevons

A discussion and debate on the changing nature of scholarly research in the context of digital humanities: producing, sharing, analyzing, and preserving knowledge in the digital age / Une discussion de l’évolution de la recherche scientifique dans le contexte des sciences humaines numériques : la production, le partage, l’analyse et la conservation des connaissances acquises à l’ère numérique

Organizers / Organisateurs : Leslie Weir (University of Ottawa) & Fabien Lengellé (Library and Archives Canada/Bibliothèque et archives Canada)

Participants :

Guy Berthiaume, Librarian and Archivist of Canada / Bibliothécaire et archiviste du Canada (Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et archives Canada)

Susan Brown (University of Guelph)

Vincent Larivière, Chaire de recherche du Canada sur les transformations de la communication savante (Université de Montréal)

Sponsored by Library and Archives Canada, the Office of the Vice- President Research and the Library of the University of Ottawa, the Canadian Historical Association, the Canadian Association for Information Science, the Canadian Society for Digital Humanities, and the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences /Parrainée par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, le Cabinet de la Vice-rectrice à la recherche et la bibliothèque de l’Université d’Ottawa, la Société historique du Canada, l’Association canadienne des sciences de l`informations, la Société canadienne des humanités numériques et la Fédération des sciences humaines Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 35

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1110)

19. Canadian History with an Indigenous Historical Consciousness / L’histoire canadienne avec une conscience historique autochtone

Facilitator / Animatrice : Susan Neylan (Wilfrid Laurier University)

Seth Adema (Wilfrid Laurier University): More than Stone and Iron: Reading Penal History as Aboriginal History

Allan Downey (McGill University): Dehorning the Creator's Game: The Lord's Day Act in Six Nations of the Grand River

Liam Haggarty (Mount Royal University): To See Our History as the Other’s Other History: The Repositioning of Canadian History within Indigenous Historiography

Commentator / Commentatrice : Susan Neylan (Wilfrid Laurier University)

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1150)

20. Racialized Faith: Race, Racism, Gender and Religion in 20th Century Canada / La foi racialisée : race, racisme, genre et religion au Canada au XXe siècle

Facilitator / Animateur : Paul Bramadat (University of Victoria)

Nadia Jones-Gailani (University of South Florida): Beyond the Veil: Uncovering a New Political Feminism in the Narratives of Iraqi Women in Diaspora

Lynne Marks (University of Victoria): Settler Feminism, Racism and the Churches in a Godless Province, 1890-1920

Alison Marshall (Brandon University): Raced expectations and religion in pre-1950s Canada 36 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Commentator / Commentateur : Royden Loewen (University of Winnipeg)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1160)

21. (Un)disciplining Human Rights History at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights / L’histoire (in)disciplinée des droits de la personne au Musée pour les droits de la personne

Facilitator / Animatrice : Sharon Reilly (Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Musée canadien pour les droits de la personne)

Jodi Giesbrecht (Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Musée canadien pour les droits de la personne): The Politics of Recognition and Canada’s Human Rights History

Emily K. Grafton (Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Musée canadien pour les droits de la personne): Using Indigenous Knowledge to Reshape Representation in Museums

Isabelle Masson (Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Musée canadien pour les droits de la personne): Human Rights Today: (re)presenting lived experiences of struggles against historical and contemporary forms of oppression and dispossession

Commentator / Commentatrice : Sharon Reilly (Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Musée canadien pour les droits de la personne)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 7170)

22. Anti-Militarism in Canada and the United States / L’antimilitarisme au Canada et aux États-Unis

Facilitator / Animatrice : Nancy Janovicek (University of Calgary)

Tarah Brookfield (Wilfrid Laurier University): 31 Hours on Grindstone Isle: A Fraught Experiment in Non-Violence

Lara Campbell (Simon Fraser University): “I’d just as soon go back to the U.S. shooting”: Gender and the Politics of Amnesty in the Vietnam War Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 37

Eryk Martin (Simon Fraser University): “Refuse the Cruise”: Anarchism, Non-Violence, and the Unexpected Politics of Anti- Militarism in Canada

Commentator / Commentatrice : Nancy Janovicek (University of Calgary)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 10161)

23. Identity on the Margins: Explorations in Interdisciplinary Frameworks / L’identité en marge : exploration dans les cadres conceptuels interdisciplinaires

Facilitator / Animatrice : Stephanie Bangarth (King's University College/ University of Western Ontario)

Alyshea Cummins (University of Ottawa): Accounting for Islamic Diversity: An investigation of how Islam is socially constructed using historical discourses

Mabel Ho (University of British Columbia): Identity Formation and Maintenance in Canada: Examining the Role of Organizations

Jon G. Malek (University of Western Ontario): Little Pearl on the Prairies: A historical sketch of the development of the Winnipeg Filipino community, 1959-2010

Shezan Muhammedi (University of Western Ontario): Exploring the Utility of an Interdisciplinary Framework on the Life Histories of Ugandan Asian Refugees in Canada

Commentator / Commentatrice : Stephanie Bangarth (King's University College/ University of Western Ontario)

Sponsored by the Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism / Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l’éthnicité et le transnationalisme

HISTORY TITLES FROM UTP JOURNALS

The Champlain Society

CANADIAN HISTORICAL REVIEW THE CHAMPLAIN SOCIETY

ffering a comprehensive analysis on the events that This is your history — experience it through the words and have shaped Canada into its current state, The Canadian images of those who were there. OHistorical Review is a benchmark in the exploration of Canadian society and its institutions. Each issue contains a series or more than 106 years, The Champlain Society has been of insightful articles that examine Canadian history from both increasing the public’s awareness of, and accessibility a multicultural and multidisciplinary perspective, along with to, Canada’s rich store of historical records. Explore four in-depth reviews of books that are of importance to all those F centuries of adventure, travel, social change, economic growth, interested in Canadian history. and nation building through the Society’s publications and Digital Collection. http://bit.ly/ChampDIG With works dating back to 1897, Canadian Historical Review Online is a comprehensive, fully searchable archive of Canadian history, including thousands of articles, reviews, Findings/Trouvailles and commentaries written by some of Canada’s most Findings/Trouvailles is a regular online feature of the Champlain influential historians. Society that presents an intriguing piece of the Canadian past. Every posting offers a new surprise: an archival document, a piece Recently added to CHR Online of correspondence, a baptismal record, an old newspaper report, Raymond Blake, Politics and the Federal Principle in Canada: film footage, a work of art, a sound recording, an object of Newfoundland Offshore Oil Development and the Quest for material culture—even an entire building. Each “finding” or Political Stability and Economic Justice “trouvaille” is the subject of a learned discussion that, in the typical style of Champlain Society publications, illuminates the Lisa Pasolli , “I ask you, Mr. Mitchell, is the emergency over?”: content and context of the “find.” Through Findings/Trouvailles, Debating Day Nurseries in the Second World War the Champlain Society provides everyone with a passion for Canadian history to share their interest in the people and events of the past and to explain how these artifacts speak to them.

ATTENTION CHA MEMBERS The items need not be in a Canadian collection, but they should Special CHR Online subscription just for you! enhance our understanding of Canadian history. View all of the Subscribe to CHR Online now and receive a full 12 months past Findings/Trouvailles contributions here: http://bit.ly/Find- of online access to the comprehensive archive of ings_Trouvailles. Canadian history from 1897 to present – 9500+ articles and reviews – for only $40. http://bit.ly/chronline For more information on how to submit your historical finding to Findings/Trouvailles, please visit: http://bit.ly/Submit_Findings.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF HISTORY The Canadian Journal of Historyy (CJH) is a peer-reviewed journal of general history publishing in both English and French. Geared to all professional historians, as well as to anyone interested in historical scholarship, it features articles and reviews by experts, and invites contributions from all geographical, temporal, and thematic subfields. The journal has resisted the trend toward increased specialization and off- fers an excellent way to keep up with developments across the discipline. The journal is available in print and online at http://bit.ly/CJHOnline or on Project MUSE - http://bit.ly/CJH_PM

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES The International Journal of Canadian Studies is a bilingual, multidisciplinary, and peer-reviewed journal publishing the latest research in Canadian Studies from around the world. IJCS prides itself in being the only scholarly journal to bring together academic research conducted both by Canadians and academics studying Canada from abroad. The International Journal of Canadian Studies provides Canadianists from across the globe a space to share a common pursuit of scholarly questions pertaining to Canada. Issues feature articles and review essays, off- fering a comprehensive study of the work being done globally in Canadian Studies. The journal is available in print and online at http://bit.ly/ ijcs_utp or on Project MUSE - http://bit.ly/IJCS_PM

JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES

The Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d’études canadiennes was the first scholarly journal of Canadian Studies. JCS/REC strives to publish the best scholarship about Canadian history, culture and society, and serve as a vehicle for disseminating solid, original research about Can- ada that falls between the cracks of more narrowly defined journals. The journal is available in print at http://bit.ly/JCSonline or on Project MUSE - http://bit.ly/JCS_PM

www.utpjournals.com HISTORICAL STUDIES IN EDUCATION REVUE D’HISTOIRE DE L’ÉDUCATION Open Access! Fully Online! Spring 2015 Issue Now Available!

NWT Archives/G-1979-023:2031 SPECIAL ISSUE (Vol. 27, no. 1): EDUCATION NORTH OF 60 Listening for More (Hi)Stories from the Arctic’s Dispersed and Diverse Educational Past – H.E. McGregor Creating Able Human Beings: Social Studies Education in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, 1973–2013 – C.A. McGregor Creating Citizens, Building Societies? Adult Education as if Community Mattered – S. Kennedy Dalseg “An Exceedingly Complex Institution:” Sir John Franklin High School, Yellowknife, NWT – W.P.J. Millar The University Project in the Canadian North, 1964–2014 – A. Graham For access to the current and all previous issues, and for additional information, go to http://historicalstudiesineducation.ca/index.php/edu_hse-rhe Historical Studies in Education/Revue d’histoire de l’Éducation, Canada’s only peer reviewed, bilingual, history of education journal is a fully on-line, open-access periodical. Accessible at no cost worldwide, the journal publishes original articles and reviews in the history of schooling, childhood, post-secondary education, and related subjects. Submissions are welcomed. Direct all correspondence to Paul Axelrod, editor, Historical Studies in Education Faculty of Education, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada – [email protected] 40 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1130)

24. Storming the Ivory Tower: Canadian Interwar Historians Challenge the Boundaries of their Craft, 1919-1939 / La prise de la tour d’ivoire : les historiens de l’entre deux-guerres défient les limites de leur métier, 1919-1939

Facilitator / Animateur : Robert J. Talbot (University of New Brunswick)

Ross Cameron (Independent Scholar/Chercheur indépendant): J. Bartlet Brebner and Liberal Internationalist Historiography

Scott Fleming (Queen’s University): A Record “Of Imperishable Glory:” English Canadian Historians Confront the Memory of the Great War, 1920-1929

Ian McKay (Queen’s University): The Archivist as Activist: James Martell and the Promise of Liberal Democracy in Nova Scotia, 1935- 1946

Commentator / Commentateur : Robert J. Talbot (University of New Brunswick)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1120)

25. Rethinking the Canada-United States Border / Second regard sur la frontière canado-américaine

Facilitator / Animateur : Michel Hogue (Carleton University)

Anthony Di Mascio (Bishop's University): Borderland Schooling and the Myth of Anti-Americanism in Canadian Education: A Perspective from the Eastern Townships of Lower Canada, 1829-1867

Frédéric Lasserre (Université Laval): La gestion de la frontière Canada- États-Unis : le cas des villages-frontière du Québec

Molly Ungar (University of the Fraser Valley): The 49th Parallel as a Stargate: The Royal Visit of 1939 to the United States Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 41

John Willis (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire): Of hot and cold cycles in the history of the Canadian- American border

Commentator / Commentateur : Michel Hogue (Carleton University)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1140)

26. Commemorating History / Regards croisés sur la commémoration historique

Facilitator / Animateur : Pierre Anctil (Université d’Ottawa)

Martin Laberge (Université du Québec en Outaouais): « La France veut vivre ». La société française, le souvenir de la Grande Guerre et la limitation des armements navals, 1919-1935

Colin McMahon (York University): No Dominion over Memory: The 1875 Daniel O’Connell Centenary in Canada

Desmond Morton (Hiram Mills Emeritus Professor, McGill University): The Battle of the Plains of Abraham: A Fresh Perspective on an Old Battle

Commentator / Commentateur : Pierre Anctil (Université d’Ottawa)

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1110)

27. Made History: Material Culture and New Insights into Indigenous Historical Consciousness / L’histoire confectionnée : culture matérielle et nouvelles perspectives sur la conscience historique des Autochtones

Facilitator / Animateur : Keith Thor Carlson (University of Saskatchewan)

Christoph Laugs (Universitat Trier): Everyday Clothing and Sunday Suits: Metis Clothing and the Display of Belonging, 1869-c.1900 42 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Madeline Knickerbocker (Simon Fraser University): Out of the River and into the Museum: Material Engagements between Stó:lō and Settler Anthropologists, 1943-1970

Katya C. MacDonald (University of Saskatchewan): A Spindle, an Awl and the Construction Tools of Tla’amin Histories in the 20th Century

Commentator / Commentateur : Keith Thor Carlson (University of Saskatchewan)

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 10161)

28. Roundtable – New Ideas in Twentieth-Century Canada-US Transnational Political History / Table ronde : nouvelles idées sur l’histoire politique transnationale canado-américaine du XXe siècle

Facilitator / Animateur: Robert MacDougall (University of Western Ontario)

Participants :

Jeff Brison (Queen’s University): A “Special Relationship” Among “Special Relationships”: The Political Economy of North Atlantic Networks of Power

Tracy Neumann (Wayne State University): The Politics of Postindustrialism in the North American Rust Belt

Jacob Remes (SUNY Empire State College): Transnational Political History From Below: How Quebec and Maritimes Emigrants Did and Didn’t Craft Transnational Polities

Mark Sholdice (University of Guelph): Transnational Hydroelectric Policy Exchanges between Canada and the United States

Sponsored by the Political History Group / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 43

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 7170) 29. Borderline Obsessions: Regulating and Rejecting Immigrants at Canada’s Points of Entry / À la limite de l’obsession : règlementation et refoulement des immigrants aux points d’entrée au Canada Facilitator / Animatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University) Lisa Chilton (University of Prince Edward Island): Deportation or Repatriation? Leprosy and Canada’s Flexible Border Elizabeth A. Scott (University of Saskatchewan): “The Ill-name of the Old Country”: Assisted English Emigrants and Canadian Border Control, 1906-1910 Rachel Wolters (Southern Illinois University): Land, Liberty, and Restriction: The 49th Parallel and African American Migration, 1907-1912 Commentator / Commentatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University) Sponsored by the Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism / Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l'éthnicité et le transnationalisme

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1120) 30. History of Medicine in Canada / Histoire de la médecine au Canada Facilitator / Animatrice: Sasha Mullally (University of New Brunswick) Michael Boudreau (St. Thomas University): Social Insanity & “pathological intoxication”: Criminological Inquiry & Death Penalty Cases in New Brunswick Blake Brown (Saint Mary’s University) & Magen Hudak (Trent University): Medical Malpractice in Interwar Canada: Negotiating the Boundaries of Personal Responsibility, Medical Ethics, & Public Policy Erna Kurbegović (University of Calgary): A Survey of Psychiatric Cases in the York Factory Journals, 1787-1850 Whitney Wood (Wilfrid Laurier University): “Spreading the Gospel” of Natural Birth: Canadian Contributions to an International Medical Movement, 1940-1960 44 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Commentator / Commentatrice : Sasha Mullally (University of New Brunswick)

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 8161) 31. Approaching Religion as a Factor in History / Facteur religieux en histoire Facilitator / Animateur : Pierre Anctil (Université d’Ottawa) Lori Lee Oates (University of Exeter): Wisdom from the East: Nineteenth Century Theosophy within its Global and Imperial Context Stuart Parker (University of British Colombia/Simon Fraser University): Doing Mormon Religious History in the “Mormon Moment” and the Romney Presidential Campaign: Participant- Observer Observations Brian Titley (University of Lethbridge): ‘Spiritual Science’ and Social Science: Divine and Human Elements in Vocations to American Religious Sisterhoods, 1945-1965 Commentator / Commentateur : Pierre Anctil (Université d’Ottawa)

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1130) 32. Canada and the Circumpolar World / Le Canada et le monde circumpolaire Facilitator / Animateur : Richard Goette (Canadian Forces College/Collège des Forces canadiennes) Daniel Heidt (University of Western Ontario): “Mr. A. Taylor, a member of Operation Tabarin:” The Antarctic, Arctic, and Imperial Experiences of a Manitoban Peter Kikkert (University of Western Ontario):“Hardly what one would expect of an ‘old’ Commonwealth Government:” Canada, the Commonwealth and Antarctic Sovereignty John Woitkowitz (University of Calgary): So Happy Together?: U.S.- Canadian Defence Relations in the Arctic, 1945-1957 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 45

Commentator / Commentateur : Richard Goette (Canadian Forces College/Collège des Forces canadiennes)

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1140)

33. Canadian Business History: Critical and Interdisciplinary / L’histoire du monde des affaires au Canada : approche critique et interdisciplinaire

Facilitator / Animateur : J. Andrew Ross (University of Guelph) Jason Russell (Empire State College – SUNY): Making Managers Beyond Canada: The Canadian International Development Agency, the Western Business School, and the University of the West Indies in the 1970s M. Stephen Salmon (Steamer Consulting): “... the worst cases”: Swan, Hunter and the Canadian Great Lakes Trades, 1921-1940 Commentator / Commentateur : Herbert Emery (University of Calgary) Sponsored by the Business History Group / Parrainée par le Comité d’histoire des affaires

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1160)

34. Decolonizing Historiography: The Necessity of Interdisciplinarity / La décolonisation de l’historiographie : la nécessité d’interdisciplinarité

Facilitator / Animatrice : Eva Mackey (Carleton University) Emma Battell Lowman (University of Leicester): Changing the Terrain of Historical Research – Indigenous Research Methods for All Kelly Black (Carleton University): Localizing Settler Colonialism: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Understanding the Past as the Present Heather E. McGregor (The University of British Columbia): Reciprocity in Historiography?: When Relationships Design Our Stories Commentator / Commentatrice : Eva Mackey (Carleton University) 46 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

3:15-4:45 / 15h15-16h45 (Desmarais – 1160)

35. Public History Speed Networking Event / Activité de réseautage express d’histoire publique

Facilitators/Animateurs: Michelle A. Hamilton (University of Western Ontario) & Forrest Pass (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire) Cette session n’est offerte qu’en anglais Prior registration required Sponsored by the Public History Group and the National Council on Public History/ Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire publique et le National Council on Public History

3:30-5:30 / 15h30 à 17h30 (Arts – 033)

Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies Keynote Lecture / Conférence plénière de la Société canadienne de la Renaissance

Chair / Animatrice : Hélène Cazes (University of Victoria) Speaker / Conférencier : Randall McLeod (University of Toronto):

The Invisible Book illustrated with two Aldines: Vergil, 1501 (the first book in italics) & Aristotle in five volumes, 1495–98 (the first edition in Greek)

Hosted by the Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies and co-sponsored by the Canadian Historical Association and the Canadian Association for the Study of Book Culture / Une invitation de la Société canadienne d’études de la Renaissance coparrainée par la Société historique du Canada et l’Association Canadienne pour l’étude de l’histoire du livre Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 47

5:00-6:00 / 17h-18h)

(Desmarais – 1140)

36. Oral History Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire orale

(Desmarais – 1130)

37. ActiveHistory Business Meeting / Réunion de travail d’HistoireEngagée

(Desmarais – 7170)

38. Canadian Committee on Military History Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur l’histoire militaire

(Desmarais – 1120)

39. Business History Group Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Groupe d’histoire des affaires

(Desmarais – 8161)

40. Labour/Le Travail Editorial Meeting / Réunion éditoriale de Labour/Le Travail

(Desmarais – 10161)

41. Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur la migration, l’éthnicité et le transnationalisme

48 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

Notes Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015 49

50 Monday 1 June 2015 / Le lundi 1er juin 2015

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We Share Our Matters: Two Centuries of Writing and Resistance at Six Nations of the Grand River Rick Monture PB • $27.95 • 978-0-88755-767-5 E-pub • $25 • 978-0-88755-466-7

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MINING AND COMMUNITIES IN NORTHERN SO FAR AND YET SO CLOSE: CANADA: History, Politics, and Memory Cattle Ranching in Western Prairie Canada and the Northern Territory of Australia Arn Keeling and John Sandlos, editors An examination of historical and Warren M. Elofson contemporary social, economic, and A comparative study of frontier cattle environmental impacts of mining on ranching in two societies on opposite Aboriginal communities in Northern Canada. ends of the globe.

Dominique Perron

WINNER

LAURÉATE Prix du Canada en sciences sociales 320 pp, $34.95, 2015 illustrations

Paperback, e-book, Fall 2015 Identités, L’ALBERTA mythes et discours du pétrole dans AUTOPHAGE l’Ouest canadien SHARON POLLOCK: 400 pp, $39.95 First Woman of Canadian Theatre Paperback, e-book Donna Coates, editor L’ALBERTA AUTOPHAGE: Identités, mythes Pollock has played a major role in informing et discours du pétrole dans l’Ouest canadien Canadians about the “dark side” of their history and current events. Dominique Perron “…a penetrating analysis of the contradictory identities of petroleum-rich Alberta.” - Jury

Visit us at the Congress Book Expo www.uofcpress.com Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 53

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1110) 42. Contesting Indigenous Schooling: Education History, Historiography, and Interdisciplinary Methodologies / Contester l’éducation des Autochthones : histoire de l’éducation, historiographie et méthodologies interdisciplinaires

Facilitator / Animatrice : Kristine Alexander (University of Lethbridge) Emma Battell Lowman (University of Leicester): Mamook Komtax Chinook Pipa: Comparing Literacy Strategies and Outcomes of English and Chinook Jargon in the South Central Interior of British Columbia in the late 19th Century Sean Carleton (Trent University): God’s Armies Invade: Colonial Anxiety and State Support for Missionary Schooling in Vancouver Island and British Columbia, 1849-1871 Alison Norman (Trent University): “Indian Masters”: The Hiring of Aboriginal teachers in Southern Ontario Day Schools in the late 19th century Thomas Peace (Huron University College): Context Matters: Towards a Continuous History of Schooling and Colonialism Commentator / Commentatrice : Kristine Alexander (University of Lethbridge) Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 8161) 43. Equal Opportunity and the Shaping of Political Culture in 1960s New Brunswick / Le principe d’égalité et l’élaboration de la culture politique au Nouveau-Brunswick dans les années 1960

Facilitators / Animateurs : Matthew Hayday (University of Guelph) & Shirley Tillotson (Dalhousie University) 54 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

David Frank (University of New Brunswick, Fredericton): Public Goods and Good Jobs: The Byrne Report and the Labour Question in New Brunswick, 1963-68

Greg Marquis (University of New Brunswick, Saint John): Growth Fantasies: Setting the Urban Agenda in 1960s Saint John, New Brunswick

Nicole O’Byrne (University of New Brunswick, Fredericton): Robichaud’s Programme of Equal Opportunity in the Press (1963-1966)

Commentators / Commentateurs : Matthew Hayday (University of Guelph) & Shirley Tillotson (Dalhousie University)

Sponsored by the Political History Group / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1120)

44. Tracking business practices in Canada / Pratiques d’affaires au Canada

Facilitator / Animatrice : Sylvie Taschereau (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières)

Béatrice Craig (Université d’Ottawa): Consommation rurale au Bas- Canada au milieu du 19e siècle : Immigrants britanniques vs. Canadiens français de vieille souche

Kristin Hall (University of Waterloo): Trade Journals, Manhood, and ‘Legitimate Advertising’: Establishing Advertising as a Necessary Business Practice for Canadian Consumer Goods Manufacturers, 1887-1914

Thierry Nootens (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières): Droit, tribunaux et capitalisme : le parcours juridique et judiciaire de George Baptist, magnat du bois de la Mauricie (Québec) (1808-1875)

Christina Williamson (Carleton University): The History of a Parka: How One Object Can Tell a Story

Commentator / Commentatrice : Sylvie Taschereau (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières) Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 55

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1130)

45. Defining the Great Lakes – Saint-Lawrence System : varying perspectives and scales / Définir le système Grands Lacs–Saint- Laurent: perspectives et échelles croisées

Facilitator / Animateur : Alan MacEachern (University of Western Ontario)

Jamie Benidickson (University of Ottawa): From Boundary Waters to Water Boundaries: Legal Dimensions of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence System

Stephen Bocking (Trent University): Invasive Species, Ecological Transformations, and the Formation of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence System

Stéphane Castonguay (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières): Production cartographique, représentation scientifique et espace administratif: le système GL‐SL comme imaginaire géographique

Michèle Dagenais (Université de Montréal) & Ken Cruikshank (McMaster University): Quelques pistes sur les études publiées sur les Grands Lacs – Saint-Laurent depuis 200 ans : un survol

Commentator / Commentateur : Alan MacEachern (University of Western Ontario)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 10161)

46. Political Activism as an Object of Historical Inquiry / L’activisme politique comme un objet d’étude historique / L’activisme politique comme un objet d’étude historique

Facilitator / Animateur : Bruce Douville (Algoma University)

Ian Bradley-Perrin (Concordia University): A Seat at the Table: Rethinking the Cultural History of AIDS Activism

Amanda Piché (Ryerson University): An Early Canadian Homosexual Public?: How Jim Egan’s Print-Based Activism Attempted to Cultivate Changes in Canadian Social Consciousness 56 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Paul-Étienne Rainville (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières): Une jeunesse universitaire en quête d’universel : la lutte des étudiants montréalais contre le racisme et la discrimination raciale, de l’après- guerre aux années 1960

Shannon Stettner (York University): “I think it’s dumb to be killing little babies in their mothers’ stomach”: The Use of Children and Youth in Toronto Operation Rescue Actions

Commentator / Commentateur : Bruce Douville (Algoma University)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1140)

47. Cover-ups, Bribes and Machine Politics: Scandal, Canadian-Style / Opérations de camouflage, pots-de-vin et vie politique à la canadienne

Facilitator / Animateur : John McFarlane (Directorate History and Heritage/Direction Histoire et Patrimoine)

Penny E. Bryden (University of Victoria): Toward a Taxonomy of Political Scandal in Canada

Larry A. Glassford (University of Windsor): Scandal and the Evolution of Political Careers: The Case of the Ontario Hydro Scandal of the 1930s

Mark Kuhlberg (Laurentian University): The Scandal That Never Was: Conservative Corruption in Ontario’s Forest Industry, 1923-1926

Ryan Targa (York University): From Governors to Grocers: Profits and Scandal in Canada during the Great War

Commentator / Commentateur : John McFarlane (Directorate History and Heritage/Direction Histoire et Patrimoine)

Sponsored by the Political History Group / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 57

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1150)

48. Lines Across the (North) West (Coast): Transportation Geographies of Ethnography, Quarantine, and Modernization / Les diagonales qui traversent la côte (nord) Ouest : géographies de transport, ethnographie, quarantaine et modernisation

Facilitator / Animatrice : Frances Reilly (University of Saskatchewan)

Glenn Iceton (University of Saskatchewan): “It was commencing to get wintery”: Ethnographic Field Work, Transportation, and Seasonality in the Yukon-BC Borderlands from the Early to Mid-Twentieth Century

Laura Larsen (University of Saskatchewan): As the Crow Flew: Examining Trudeau-Era Rail Rationalization Policy through HGIS

Frances Reilly (University of Saskatchewan): Communism and Quarantine on the West Coast: Transportation and National Security in Canada’s Cold War

Commentator / Commentatrice : Frances Reilly (University of Saskatchewan)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1160)

49. Gender Studies in Historical Perspective / L’étude du genre dans la recherche historique

Facilitator / Animatrice : Janis Thiessen (University of Winnipeg)

Marcia Braundy (West Kootenay Women’s Digital History Project) KootenayFeminism.com - a growing microcosm of an historical Women’s Movement

Tamara de Szegheo Lang (York University): The Explosion in Grandma’s Attic, the Cabinet of Curiosities, and Chance Encounters in the GLBT History Museum

Kirk Niergarth (Mount Royal University): Gender and the Great Experiment: Soviet Women in Canadian Eyes, 1926-1937 58 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Ivan Simic (University College London): The usage of gender studies in historical research of Eastern European policies

Commentator / Commentatrice : Janis Thiessen (University of Winnipeg)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 7170)

50. Contested Terrains: Constructions of Blackness and Racial Difference in 20th Century Canada / Domaines contestés : élaborations du concept de blackness et de la différence raciale au Canada au XXe siècle

Facilitator / Animatrice : Stephanie Bangarth (King's University College/ University of Western Ontario)

Funké Aladejebi (York University): ‘They don’t want you because you are coloured’: Black Women Teachers and Workplace experiences in Ontario Schools, 1950s-1980s

Deirdre McCorkindale (Queen’s University): What Colour is Intelligence?: The Tanser Study and the Troubling Legacy of the ‘Coloured Man’s Paris’

Melissa N. Shaw (Queen’s University): “No Place for the Ku Kluxers in Ontario”: Black Canadian Activisms Straddling the 49th Parallel

Nassisse Solomon (University of Western Ontario): “Of Canadian Concern”: Why the Abyssinian Crisis on the road to WWII served as Canada’s Call to Action for Social Mobilization against Tyranny and Racial Impunity

Commentator / Commentatrice : Stephanie Bangarth (King’s University College/ University of Western Ontario)

Sponsored by the Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism / Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l’éthnicité et le transnationalisme

HISTOIRE SOCIALE/ SOCIAL HISTORY, Canada’s leading history revue-phare en histoire au journal, welcomes delegates Canada, vous souhaite un to Congress 2015. Congrès 2015 des plus stimulants!

Volume XLVII Numéro / Number 95 Novembre / November 2014 Volume XLVII Numéro / Number 94 Juin / June 2014 Volume XLVIII Numéro / Number 96 Mai / May 2015

HS/SH is well-known for its award-winning and highly-noticed articles: HS/SHHS/SH estestbi bienen connue pour ses articles articlespr primésimés etet remarquésremarqués: : ƒ Special Themed Section “Documenting Migration and Transnationalism: New Directions on Old Themes”, Guest edited by Lisa Chilton and Royden Loewen, May 2015. ƒ Paula Hastings, “Territorial Spoils, Transnational Black Resistance, and Canada’s Evolving Autonomy during the First World War, published in the June 2014 Special Issue on Canada’s Great War”, June 2014. ƒ Valerie Korinek, “‘We’re the girls of the pansy parade’: Historicizing Winnipeg’s Queer Subcultures, 1930s–1970,” May 2012 — Winner of the Best Article Prize on the History of Sexuality awarded by the Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality. ƒ Brian Gettler, “Money and the Changing Nature of Colonial Space in Northern Quebec: Fur Trade Monopolies, the State, and Aboriginal Peoples during the Nineteenth Century”, Nov. 2013. ƒ Alexandre Turgeon, « “Toé, tais-toé!” et la Grande Noirceur duplessiste. Genèse d’un mythistoire », nov. 2013 — Prix Jean - Marie-Fecteau 2014. ƒ Ian Mosby,“, AdministeringCg ColonialSl Science:N: Nutrition Research and Human Biomedical Experimentation in Aboriginal Communities and Residential Schools, 1942-1952”, May 2013.

HISTOIRE SOCIALE / SOCIAL HISTORY À l’avant-garde de l’histoire sociale depuis plus de 45 ans. Celebrating more than 45 years at the forefront of social history.

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 61

9:00-12:00 / 9h – 12h (100 Marie-Curie – 102)

51. Tour of the Archives of the University of Ottawa / Visite des Archives de l’Université d’Ottawa

Visite en français de 9h à 10h30 Veuillez réserver votre place auprès de Michel Prévost, archiviste en chef de l’Université, par courriel à [email protected] English tour from 10:30 to 12:00 Please reserve your spot by emailing Michel Prévost, Chief Archivist of the University, at [email protected]

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1110)

52. Learning about People from Places: Reflections on Social Identities, Place-making and Environmental Policy in Indigenous British Columbia / Connaître les gens à travers les lieux : réflexions sur l’identité sociale, la disposition de l’espace et la politique environnementale des Autochtones en Colombie-Britannique

Facilitator / Animateur : John Lutz (University of Victoria) Whitney Bajric (University of Victoria): The Stein on Stage: Performance, Identities and Alliances in the 1980s “Save the Stein” Movement James Davey (University of Victoria): Environmental Imperialism and the Ancient Forest: Discursive Strategies in Coffee Table Books Produced during B.C.’s War of the Woods Sabina Trimble (University of Victoria): “I am only one voice, but this time I hope that I have some good listeners”: Stó:lõ Storytelling as Environmental Activism at Soowahlie First Nation, B.C. Commentator / Commentateur : John Lutz (University of Victoria) Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone 62 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1120)

53. History of Atlantic Canada / Histoire des provinces atlantiques canadiennes

Facilitator / Animatrice : Jane Errington (Queen’s University)

Angela Duffett (Queen’s University): “I Have Found the Town Very Much Improved”: Transatlantic letter-writing, place, and identity in St. John’s, Newfoundland, 1810-1870

Stephen Hay (University of British Columbia): A Trade in Information and Ignorance: Sailors, Seamen, and other Entrepreneurs of Vernacular Knowledge in the pre-Revolutionary Atlantic, 1740-1775

Joshua Tavenor (Wilfrid Laurier University): Misinterpreting Failure: Feedback Loops, Evidence and the Promotion of Early Seventeenth- Century Newfoundland

Commentator / Commentatrice : Jane Errington (Queen’s University)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1150)

54. Publishing Historical Research in an Era of Increasing Interdisciplinarity: Reflections and Advice from Journal Editors / La publication de recherche historique à une ère d’interdisciplinarité croissante : réflexions et conseils de directeurs de revue

Facilitator / Animateur : Adam Chapnick (Canadian Forces College / Collège des Forces canadiennes, Royal Military College of Canada / Collège militaire royal du Canada & Co-editor / Codirecteur, International Journal: Canada’s Journal of Global Policy Analysis)

Adam Chapnick (Canadian Forces College / Collège des Forces canadiennes, Royal Military College of Canada / Collège militaire royal du Canada & Co-editor / Codirecteur, International Journal: Canada’s Journal of Global Policy Analysis)

Alan Gordon (University of Guelph, Co-Editor and Editor-in-Chief / Codirecteur et rédacteur en chef, Urban History Review / Revue d’histoire urbaine) Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 63

Matthew Hayday (University of Guelph, Editorial Board Member/Membre du Comité éditorial, Canadian Historical Review, Past Associate Editor/ Ancien directeur adjoint, Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d’études canadiennes)

Dan Malleck (Brock University, Editor/Directeur, Social History of Alcohol and Drugs: An interdisciplinary Journal)

Commentator / Commentateur : Michael Bechthold (Wilfrid Laurier University Press)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 7170)

55. Historiography and Intellectual History / Historiographie et histoire intellectuelle

Facilitator / Animatrice : Marie-Josée Lavallée (Université de Montréal)

Serge Dupuis (CEFAN, Université Laval) & Stéphane Savard (Université du Québec à Montréal): Fondée par des historiens ? La discipline de l’histoire franco-ontarienne et son évolution

Marc-André Éthier (Université de Montréal), Catherine Déry (Université de Montréal), Vincent Boutonnet (Université du Québec en Outaouais), Jean-François Cardin (Université Laval) & David Lefrancois (Université du Québec en Outaouais): Les liens entre la mémoire historique et l’enseignement de l’histoire à l’école tel qu’ils se sont manifestés lors du débat concernant l’implantation d’un nouveau programme d’histoire au Québec (2006-2014)

Marie-Josée Lavallée (Université de Montréal): L’histoire intellectuelle récente et l’étude des courants intellectuels : L’exemple de l’influence de l'Antiquité grecque dans la pensée politique d'après-guerre

Stéphane Lévesque (Université d’Ottawa): « La menace d’assimilation pèse encore » : Mémoire, identité et conscience historique des jeunes francophones d’Ottawa

Commentator / Commentatrice : Marie-Josée Lavallée (Université de Montréal) 64 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1130)

56. Secret Lives /Vies clandestines

Facilitator / Animateur : Mark G. McGowan (University of Toronto) Mairi Cowan (University of Toronto): « Sorciers et Magiciens en ce païs » : The Secret Lives of Demons in Seventeenth-Century New France David A. Wilson (University of Toronto): The Double Life of a Secret Policeman: “The Curious Case of Charles Clarke” Commentator / Commentateur : Mark G. McGowan (University of Toronto) Co-sponsored by the Dictionary of Canadian Biography and the Department of History, University of Toronto / Coparrainé par le Dictionnaire biographique du Canada et le Département d’histoire de l’Université de Toronto

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 10161) 57. Roundtable – 100 Shades of Khaki: A Round-Table Discussion of First World War Commemoration / Table ronde – 100 teintes de kaki : discussion sur la commémoration de la Première Guerre mondiale

Facilitator / Animateur : Christopher Schultz (University of Western Ontario) Participants : Rebecca Beausaert (Wilfrid Laurier University & Woodstock Museum National Historic Site): Oxford County during the First World War Christopher Schultz (University of Western Ontario): Canada’s First World War: A Centennial Series on ActiveHistory.ca Nathan Smith (University of Toronto Mississauga & SUNY Empire State College): First World War History and Memory in University Classrooms Jamie Swift (Independent Scholar / Chercheure indépendante): Commemoration and Nationalism

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 65

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1160) 58. Quebec City in the 19th Century: A forgotten Site of Interethnic Contact and Conflict / La ville de Québec au XIXe siècle : site négligé de contact et de conflit interethniques

Facilitator / Animateur : Brian Young (McGill University) Patrick Donovan (Université Laval): Religious Ostentation Past and Present through the Lens of Quebec City's Salvation Army Wars Donald Fyson (Université Laval): Interethnic Conflict and Violence in a Port City: Quebec, 1815-1875 Alex Tremblay (Université Laval): L'ambiguïté des frontières entre anglo-protestants et franco-catholiques au sein des élites de Québec au XIXe siècle Commentator / Commentateur : Brian Young (McGill University)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 8161)

59. Roundtable – Rethinking Gender and Women’s History: Reflections on Interdisciplinary Approaches / Table ronde – Second regard sur le genre et l’histoire des femmes : réflexions sur les approches interdisciplinaires

Facilitator / Animatrice: Carmen J. Neilson (Mount Royal University) Krista Cooke (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire): “Doing” Womens and Feminist Public History Marlene Epp (University of Waterloo): Beyond Sisters or Strangers: Writing Feminist Histories of Immigrant Women and Rewriting Canadian History Katherine M. McKenna (University of Western Ontario): Class Conflict and Gender Roles in Early British North America Beth A. Robertson (Carleton University): Gendered Spirits: Religion, Women and Agency in Canadian History Shannon Stettner (York University): Realizing Reproductive Justice in Canadian History 66 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Heather Stanley (University of Alberta): Primal Urge/National Force: Canadian Sex and Sexuality Historiography

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1140)

60. Rethinking Division: German State Making after 1945 / Second regard sur la division : la formation de l’État germanique après 1945

Facilitator / Animatrice : Jennifer Evans (Carleton University) Eric Allina (University of Ottawa): Becoming New Men of the Revolution: African Workers and East German Industry in the GDR’s Last Decade Jane Freeland (Carleton University): Talking East, Talking West: East German Women Activists against Gender Violence Emmanuel Hogg (Carleton University): “Die Mauer muss weg! Die Mauer muss weg!” (The Wall must go! The Wall must go!)”: Soccer Culture and Identity Formation in Divided Berlin Commentator / Commentatrice : Jennifer Evans (Carleton University)

10:30-12:00 / 10h30 à 12h (STE – H0104) Is All History Now Environmental History? The Anthropocene in Historical Context

(Activité offerte en anglais seulement) Faciliator / Animatrice: Tina Loo (University of British Columbia) Participants:

Daniel Macfarlane (Western Michigan University) Sean Kheraj (York University) Stephen Bocking (Trent University) Jessica DeWitt (University of Saskatchewan) Hosted by the Environmental Studies Association of Canada and co- sponsored by the Canadian Historical Association/ Une invitation de l’Association canadienne d’études environnementales coparrainée par la Société historique du Canada Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 67

12:00-1:00 / 12h-13h (Desmarais – 1120) 61. Graduate Student Committee Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité des étudiant(e)s diplômé(e)s (Desmarais – 1140) 62. Canadian Committee on Women’s History Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes (Desmarais – 1130) 63. Canadian Committee on Labour History Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travail (Desmarais – 7170) 64. Canadian Network for Economic History Business Meeting / Réunion de travail du Réseau canadien d’histoire économique (Desmarais – 10161) 65. Canadian International History – Canadian Foreign Relations Business Meeting / Réunion de travail Histoire internationale du Canada – Relations étrangères canadiennes

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 12102) 66. Poster Session / Séance de présentation par affiche Krista Barclay (University of Manitoba): Family Archives, Community Historical Memory, and Representations of Indigeneity in Small-Town Ontario, 1850-1950 Jennifer L. Bazar (Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care & University of Toronto): Curating the Remembering Oak Ridge Digital Archive and Exhibit Lisa Beiler (University of Waterloo): Herschel Hanging David Alphonse Blanchard (Lakehead University): Boom-and-Bust in Lake Superior’s North Shore: An interdisciplinary historical timeline for two post-war era single-industry forestry towns, Terrace Bay and Dubreuilville

Daniel R. Laxer (University of Toronto): Listening to the Fur Trade 68 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Gillian I. Leitch (CDCI Research Inc.): The Family Farm: Transatlantic Strategy and the Newall Family of Dumfries, Scotland and Cornwall, Ontario

Heather MacDonald (University of Waterloo): “Isn’t it great to know there is a Hereafter”: Gender, Spiritualism and Healing in Interwar Canada

Steve Marti (University of Western Ontario): Embattled Communities: Voluntary Mobilization and Identity in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, 1914-1918

Léon Robichaud (Laboratoire d'histoire de Montréal/Université de Sherbrooke): Les projets numériques du Laboratoire d'histoire et de patrimoine de Montréal

Robyn Schwarz-Pimer (University of Western Ontario): “A Pulp and Paper Happy Place:” The Canadian Pulp and Paper Pavilion at Expo 67

Jennifer Thivierge (University of Ottawa): Teacher, Nurse, or Punch- Key Girl?: A Study on Gender, Computer Science and Higher Education

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1110)

67. Roundtable – Future Directions for Ethnohistory in Canada: Taking Stock 60 Years After the American Indian Claims Commission Launched the Method of Ethnohistory / Table ronde – Orientations futures de l’ethnohistoire au Canada : le bilan, 60 ans après le lancement de la méthode de l’ethnohistoire par la American Indian Claims Commission

Facilitator / Animateur : John Lutz (University of Victoria)

Participants :

Keith Thor Carlson (University of Saskatchewan) J. Douglas Leighton (Huron University College) Sarah Nickel (Simon Fraser University) Carolyn Podruchny (York University) Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 69

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 8161)

68. Roundtable – Public, Private, Political: Charitable Organizations and Citizen Engagement / Table ronde – Public, privé, politique : organismes de bienfaisance et engagement des citoyens

Facilitator / Animatrice : Lara Campbell (Simon Fraser University)

Participants:

Sarah C. Glassford (University of Prince Edward Island) Ian Mosby (McMaster University) Will Tait (Carleton University) Shirley Tillotson (Dalhousie University) Jonathan Weier (University of Western Ontario)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 7170)

69. Roundtable – Making Public History / Table-ronde – Faire de l’histoire publique

Facilitator / Animatrice : Jennifer Anderson (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire)

Participants :

Linda Grussani (Aboriginal Art Centre at AANDC) / Centre d’art autochtone d’AADNC)

Xavier Gélinas (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire)

Lee-Ann Martin (Independent Curator / Conservatrice indépendante)

Alexandra Mosquin (Parks Canada / Parcs Canada)

Sanna Guerin (Independent Interpreter / Interprète indépendante) 70 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Jean-Pierre Morin (Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada / Affaires autochtones et Développement du Nord Canada)

Sponsored by The Public History Group / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire publique

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 10161)

70. History and Environment / Histoire et environnement

Facilitator / Animateur : Gregory M. W. Kennedy (Université de Moncton)

Gregory M. W. Kennedy (Université de Moncton): Building Resilience to Environmental Change in New Brunswick Coastal Communities through Historical and Interdisciplinary Research

Kristine Kowalchuk (Northern Alberta Institute of Technology): Thomas Tryon and Bioregionalism: Learning from Early Modern England’s Alternative Agriculture

Yves Tremblay (Department of National Defence/Ministère de la Défense nationale & University of Ottawa/Université d’Ottawa): Le fédéral, le provincial et le DDT : l’Expo 67 comme moment décisif de l’histoire de la sensibilité écologique au Canada

Commentator / Commentateur : Gregory M. W. Kennedy (Université de Moncton)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1120)

71. Approaching Unusual Sources in History / Témoignages peu communs en histoire

Facilitator / Animateur : Stephen Hay (University of British Columbia)

Bruce Curtis (Carleton University): “I get tired of walkin’ these streets all dressed in black”: Hearing African-American sex trade workers, 1920-1950 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 71

Michelle L. Folk (University of Regina): How Should We ‘Read’ the Writing on the Wall? Approaches to India’s Inscriptions

Alexey Golubev (University of British Columbia): Forgotten Common Places of Late Socialism: Soviet Stairwells and Their Social Conflicts

Cynthia Milton (Université de Montréal): Art from Fractured Pasts: artistic representations as historical truths in the aftermath of violence

Commentator / Commentateur : Stephen Hay (University of British Columbia)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1130)

72. The Actress, Transatlantic Performance and Cultural Negotiation in the Long Nineteenth Century / La comédienne, les performances transatlantiques et la négociation culturelle durant le Long XIXe siècle

Facilitator / Animatrice : Heather Davis-Fisch (University of British Columbia)

Roberta Barker (Dalhousie University): The Bodies of the Eaglet: Maude Adams, Sarah Bernhardt and Theatrical Forms of Capital, Anno 1900

Sasha Kovacs (University of Toronto): Leaving the Capital Behind: Pauline Johnson and The Transatlantic Movements of Wampum

Marlis Schweitzer (York University): Clara Fisher’s Head: George Combe and the Phrenological Career of a Child Actress

Commentator / Commentatrice : Heather Davis-Fisch (University of British Columbia)

Co-sponsored by the Canadian Association for Theatre Research / Coparrainée par l’Association canadienne de la recherche théâtrale

72 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1140)

73. What Kind of Development? Maritime Environmentalism and Regional Development Policy in the 1970s / Quelle sorte de développement? Environnementalisme dans les Maritimes et politique de développement régional dans les années 1970

Facilitator / Animateur : Alan MacEachern (University of Western Ontario)

Mark Leeming (Memorial University of Newfoundland): Local Economic Independence as Environmentalism: Nova Scotia in the 1970s

Mark J. McLaughlin (Trent University): Greening the System: The Conservation Council of New Brunswick’s Responses to State Resource Development, 1969-1983

Henry Trim (University of British Columbia) An Alternative on Prince Edward Island: Environmentalism, Modernization, and Sustainable Development

Commentator / Commentateur : Alan MacEachern (University of Western Ontario)

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1150)

74. Canadian Energy Histories: Kerosene, Coal, and Oil / Histoires de l’énergie canadienne : le kérosene, le charbon et l’huile

Facilitator / Animateur : Steve Penfold (University of Toronto)

Sean Kheraj (York University): On-Shore Oil Spills in Canada: Trans Mountain Pipeline and the Interprovincial Pipeline, 1949-2012

Ruth W. Sandwell (University of Toronto): Searching for Light: Canada's Early Petroleum Industry, 1859-1900

Andrew Watson (York University): “The Tail Cannot Wag the Dog”: Canadian Dependence on American Coal Between the Wars

Commentator / Commentateur : Steve Penfold (University of Toronto) Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 73

1:30-3:00 / 13h30-15h (Desmarais – 1160)

75. Family, Patronage, Politics: Histories of Intimacy and Emotion in late 19th- and early 20th century Canada / Famille, favoritisme, politique : histoires d’intimité et d’émotion à la fin du XIXe et début du XXe siècle au Canada

Facilitator / Animateur : Jeffrey L. McNairn (Queen’s University)

David Banoub (Independent Scholar/Chercheur Indépendant): Desiring a Position: Patronage and Rhetorics of Emotion in late- Victorian Canada

Laura Ishiguro (University of British Columbia): Intimacy and settler family correspondence from British Columbia, 1858-1914

Carmen J. Nielson (Mount Royal University): Duty and Desire: Navigating Politics and Affect in George Brown’s letters

Commentator / Commentateur : Jeffrey L. McNairn (Queen’s University)

3:30-4:30 / 15h30-16h30 (Desmarais – 1160)

76. Presidential Address / Discours de la présidente

Introduced by / Présentée par: Joan Sangster (Trent University)

Dominique Marshall (President of the Canadian Historical Association): Children’s Drawings and Humanitarian Aid: Transnational Expressions and Exhibitions/ Dominique Marshall (Présidente de la Société historique du Canada): Dessins d’enfants et aide humanitaire : expressions et expositions transnationales

4:45-5:45 / 16h45-17h45 (Desmarais – 1160)

77. Annual General Meeting / Réunion annuelle des membres

74 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

6:00-8:00 / 18h-20h (Desmarais – 1160)

78. Awards presentation and reception / Remise des prix et réception

8:00 + / 20h + (Grad House/Maison des diplômés – Café Nostalgica)

79. Social event / Activité sociale (Cliopalooza)

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 75

Notes 76 Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015

Tuesday 2 June 2015 / Le mardi 2 juin 2015 77

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The University of Calgary is proud to host 2016 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences.

80 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais –10161)

80. Damage Control: The History of Sexually Transmitted Infections in Germany and Canada 1914-1975 / Limiter les dommages : l’histoire des infections transmises sexuellement en Allemagne et au Canada, 1914-1975

Facilitator / Animatrice : Jennifer Evans (Carleton University)

Catherine Carstairs (University of Guelph): Penicillin, the Pill and Promiscuity: Sexual Education in 1960s Canada

William John Pratt (University of Calgary): Sex and Soldiering: Venereal Disease in the Canadian Army, 1939-45

Christabelle Sethna (University of Ottawa): Guilty Parties: The Ignorant Husband, the Selfish Wife and the New Woman in “Damaged Lives”

Lisa Todd (University of New Brunswick): “Sexual Abstinence is Every Soldier’s Duty!”: Prostitution, Disease and Nationalism in First World War Germany

Commentator / Commentatrice : Jennifer Evans (Carleton University)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1120)

81. Transnational Ties: North American Women’s Multifaceted Engagements with World War One / Liens transnationaux : engagements à volets multiples des femmes nord-américaines envers la Première Guerre mondiale

Facilitator / Animatrice : Sharon Cook (University of Ottawa)

Lorna McLean (University of Ottawa): A time of war emergency: Julia Grace Wales and public education, 1920 to 1950

Liz Millward (University of Manitoba): The Stinson Sisters’ Pro-war Roles in Canadian Aviation during the First World War Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 81

Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto): Performing for war and peace: Canadian Actresses’ Transnational Engagements with World War One

Commentator / Commentatrice : Sharon Cook (University of Ottawa)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1110)

82. Resistance and Resilience in History / Le refus d’obtempérer et la résistance en histoire

Facilitator / Animateur : Cornelius Jaenen (Emeritus Professor, University of Ottawa)

Sophie Doucet (Université du Québec à Montréal): Sur les traces d’une émotion : la tristesse dans les écrits intimes de Marie-Louise Globensky (1849-1919)

Jonathan Scotland (University of Western Ontario): Getting it Right? Charles Yale Harrison’s Generals Die in Bed as a Representative Example of Canadian Postwar Disillusion

Anna Sheftel (Saint-Paul University) & Luke Moyer (Saint-Paul University): Reconceptualizing Resilience: Holocaust Survivors, Immigration and Social Class

Allison Marie Ward (Queen’s University): The Woman Who Would Not Meet the King: Using Agnes Sharpe to Explore Omissions in Political History

Commentator / Commentateur : Cornelius Jaenen (Emeritus Professor, University of Ottawa)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 8161)

83. Nationalism, Land, and Territory / Le nationalisme et l’aménagement du territoire

Facilitator / Animateur : Julien Labrosse (Université d’Ottawa) 82 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Cristian Ionita (Université de Montréal): Comment mettre la nation sur la carte : Nationalisme et cartographie dans l’Europe centrale avant la Première Guerre mondiale

Dinah Jansen (Queen’s University): Size Matters: The Paris Peace Conference, Russian Liberals, and Russian Territorial Integrity, 1919

Christopher Miller (Concordia University): Making Meaning in the Land: Remembering Expropriation through Oral History in Pickering, Ontario

Xiaping Sun (Saint Mary’s University): Creating the Myth of the Wilderness: A Discursive Analysis of Maoist Land Reclamation in Northeast China

Commentator / Commentateur : Julien Labrosse (Université d’Ottawa)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1130)

84. Canadian Narratives and Canadian Identity / Récits canadiens et identités canadiennes

Facilitator / Animatrice : Merle Massie (University of Saskatchewan/University of Ottawa)

Camie Augustus (University of Ottawa): Geography, Science, and Indigeneity: Professional Discourse and the Creation of Race in Canada (1850-1930)

Megan Baxter (University of Western Ontario): “They are not old enough to understand rightly what they are doing:” Children in the International Order of Good Templars, 1900-1920

Steve Jankowski (York University): The facts of Canada: Changing narratives within the Encyclopedia Britannica

Commentator / Commentatrice : Merle Massie (University of Saskatchewan/University of Ottawa)

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 83

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1140)

85. Practicing the Discipline of History / Regards sur la profession d’historien(ne)

Facilitator / Animatrice : Robin Jarvis Brownlie (University of Manitoba)

Victoria Freeman (York University): First Story: Toronto’s Indigenous History as Smart Phone App

Patti Harper (Carleton University Archives): Characteristics of Archival Narrative – Why it should Matter to You

Danielle Metcalfe-Chenail (Edmonton’s Historian Laureate): Rethinking and Rebranding in History

Anne Toews (York University), Lori Chambers (Lakehead University) & Elise Chenier (Simon Fraser University): Still Working in the Shadow of Men?: An Analysis of Sex Distribution in Publications and Prizes in Canadian History

Commentator / Commentatrice : Esyllt Jones (University of Manitoba)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1150)

86. Notions of State and International Relations in History / L’État et les relations internationales en histoire

Facilitator / Animatrice : Lisa Chilton (University of Prince Edward Island)

Paula Hastings (University of Toronto Scarborough): The Limits of ‘brotherly love’: Rethinking Canada-Caribbean Relations in the Early Twentieth Century

Bradley Miller (University of British Colombia): The Un-Leviathan: The Forming State and Its Failures, 1820-1914

84 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

David Rapaport (Trent University): Reformatting the State: The Privatization of Information Technology as Cause and Reflection of Neo-Liberal State Restructuring (1972-2005)

Commentator / Commentatrice : Lisa Chilton (University of Prince Edward Island)

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1160)

87. Interdisciplinary approaches to women’s history and communication: feminism, media women and their work at Radio- Canada and the Canadian Press News Agency / Approches interdisciplinaires en histoire des femmes et communication : le féminisme, les femmes dans les médias et leur travail à Radio- Canada et à l’Agence de presse canadienne

Facilitator / Animatrice : Magda Fahrni (Université du Québec à Montréal)

Josette Brun (Université Laval): L’actualité sur les femmes à la télévision de Radio-Canada au temps du women’s lib : les Télé-flash de Femme d’aujourd’hui de 1965-1982

Barbara M. Freeman (Carleton University): “You’ll have a good career here, but not a great one.” New(s) Angles on Masculine Attitudes and Female Journalists at Canadian Press, 1960s-1990s

Laurie Laplanche (Université Laval): Le service des émissions féminines télévisées au réseau francophone de la Société Radio-Canada (1965- 1982): une histoire du genre dans les organisations

Commentator / Commentatrice : Magda Fahrni (Université du Québec à Montréal)

Sponsored by the Media and Communication History Committee and the Canadian Committee on Women’s History / Parrainée par le Comité de l’histoire des médias et de la communication et par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 85

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 7170)

88. Roundtable – Landscapes of Injustice: Victim, Perpetrator and Witness Narratives of the Japanese-Canadian Dispossession during the Second World War / Table ronde : Landscapes of Injustice : victime, auteur et témoignages de la dépossession des Canadiens d’origine japonaise pendant la Première Guerre mondiale

Facilitator / Animateur : Jordan Stanger-Ross (University of Victoria)

Participants:

Alicia Fong (Ryerson University) Joshua Labove (Simon Fraser University) Alexander Pekic (Ryerson University) Heather Read (Ryerson University) Momoye Sugiman (Ryerson University) Pamela Sugiman (Ryerson University)

Sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism/Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l'éthnicité et le transnationalisme

8:30-10:00 / 8h30-10h (Desmarais – 1160)

89. Histories of consequence: Indigenous-state relations and historical inheritances in British Columbia / Récits de conséquences : les relations entre les Autochtones et l’État et l’héritage historique en Colombie-Britannique

Facilitator / Animateur : Keith Thor Carlson (University of Saskatchewan)

Arielle Gorin (Yale University): Samandlin's Grave and the Contested Tsilhqot’in Homelands

Megan Harvey (University of Victoria): New Stories for Old? Material and Narrative Inheritances in the BC treaty process

David Vogt (University of Victoria): “Indians on White Lines”: Land, Law, and Trapline Registration in Northern British Columbia, 1925-1945

Commentator / Commentateur : Jim Miller (University of Saskatchewan) 86 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

8:30-10:00 / 8h30 à 10h (Desmarais Building DMS 4101)

Canadian Catholic Historical Association Keynote Lecture / Conférence plénière de la Canadian Catholic Historical Association

(Activité offerte en anglais seulement)

Chair / Animateur: Robert Dennis (University of Prince Edward Island)

Speaker / Conférencière: Jacalyn Duffin (Queen’s University): Medical Saints: Cosmas and Damian in a Postmodern World

Hosted by the Canadian Catholic Historical Association and co- sponsored by the Canadian Historical Association / Une invitation de la Canadian Catholic Historical Association coparrainée par la Société historique du Canada

10:30-12 :00 / 10h30 – 12h (Morisset – 040)

90. Tour of the Centre de recherche en civilisation canadienne-française (CRCCF) / Visite du Centre de recherche en civilisation canadienne- française (CRCCF)

This event is offered in French only

Veuillez réserver votre place auprès de Michel Lalonde, Archiviste en chef, par courriel à [email protected]

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1110)

91. First Nations in Canadian Historiography / Les nations autochtones dans l’historiographie canadienne

Facilitator / Animatrice : Alison Norman (Trent University)

Erin Dolmage (York University): Examining Charles Denney's Metis Genealogy as Colonial Archive Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 87

Melissa Otis (Carleton University): Our collection on Native Americans is limited

Donald B. Smith (Professor Emeritus of History, University of Calgary): Changing Attitudes Toward the First Nations in French- Speaking Canada: The Contribution of Jacques Rousseau (1905-1970)

Commentator / Commentatrice : Alison Norman (Trent University)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 3110)

92. Exploring Family History / À la recherche de l’histoire de la famille

Facilitator / Animatrice : Denyse Baillargeon (Université de Montréal)

Katrina Ackerman (University of Waterloo): Intergovernmental Relations and Family Planning Services in the Maritime Provinces, 1969-1988

Andrea Eidinger (Kwantlen Polytechnic University): Substitute Mothers: The Visiting Homemaker’s Service and Cold War Constructions of Masculinity, Femininity, and Families in the Jewish Community of Montreal

Stephanie O’Neill (Université de Montréal): Utiliser les mémoires en service social comme sources en histoire de la famille et de la consommation à Montréal

Commentator / Commentatrice : Denyse Baillargeon (Université de Montréal)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1120)

93. Archival Stories: Reflections from the Archives of Canada and the Canadian Museum of History / Récits d’archives : réflexions des archives du Canada et du Musée canadien de l’histoire

Facilitator / Animateur : David McGee (Canada Science and Technology Museum / Musée des sciences et de la technologie du Canada) 88 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Jennifer Anderson (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire): Documenting Canada: Discovering the Laurence Nowry fonds

Judith Klassen (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire): Juliette Gaultier and the (Re)presentation of Historic Sound Recordings on the 1920s Concert Stage

Benoît Thériault (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire): Les archives de Marius Barbeau : universalité et interdisciplinarité en recherche au Canada

Jonathan Wise (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire) The Museum, Its Story: 1850 to the Present

Commentator / Commentateur : David McGee (Canada Science and Technology Museum / Musée des sciences et de la technologie du Canada)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1160)

94. Why should history education research matter to historians? / La recherche sur l’enseignement de l’histoire est-elle importante pour les historiens?

Facilitator / Animateur : Stéphane Lévesque (Université d’Ottawa)

Marie-Hélène Brunet (Université de Montréal): Dépasser le mythe de la « brûleuse de brassière »: les idées des élèves à propos du féminisme

Mary G. Chaktsiris (Queen’s University): “Instructors Just Ask General Questions about the Readings”: Reflections from a University History Class

Raphaël Gani (Université d’Ottawa): L'ignorance de l'histoire comme outil d'apprentissage

Geneviève Goulet (Université du Québec en Outaouais): L'enseignement des opérations de la pensée historique combiné à la visite d’un lieu historico-patrimonial Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 89

David Scott (University of Calgary): Re-examining the Purposes of History Education and Historical Research in Perilous Times

Cynthia Wallace-Casey (University of New Brunswick): De- constructing Cabinets of Curiosity: Enabling Students to Think Historically in Community History Museums

Commentator / Commentateur : Stéphane Lévesque (Université d’Ottawa)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1140)

95. Who killed pre-Confederation Canadian history? The place of early-Canada in an interdisciplinary and transnational historiographical environment / Qui a tué l’histoire canadienne d’avant la Conféderation? La place du début du Canada dans un environnement historiographique interdisciplinaire et transnational

Facilitators / Animateurs : Robert Englebert (University of Saskatchewan) & Thomas Peace (Huron University College)

Participants :

Béatrice Craig (University of Ottawa) Jane Errington (Queen’s University) Michel Ducharme (University of British Columbia) Allan Greer (McGill University) Elizabeth Mancke (University of New Brunswick) Adele Perry (University of Manitoba)

Commentators / Commentateurs : Robert Englebert (University of Saskatchewan) & Thomas Peace (Huron University College)

Sponsored by the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Parrainée par la Revue de la Société historique du Canada

90 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 10161) 96. New Perspectives in Economic History / Nouvelles perspectives en histoire économique

Facilitator / Animatrice : Ruth Sandwell (University of Toronto)

Luiza Antonie, Kris Inwood and J. Andrew Ross (University of Guelph): Linked data and the life-course from the Canadian censuses 1871-1901

Peter Baskerville (University of Alberta): The Last Best West: Homesteaders on the Move, Alberta, 1871-1916

Sherry Olson (McGill University): Clues from a bank scandal to unravel the social network of Montreal in the 1840s

Commentator / Commentatrice : Ruth Sandwell (University of Toronto)

Sponsored by the Canadian Network for Economic History/Parrainée par le Réseau canadien d'histoire économique

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1150)

97. Not Goin’ Down the Road: The Politics of Regional Development in Eastern Canada / Autre solution : les politiques du développement régional dans l’Est du Canada

Facilitator / Animateur : Sean Cadigan (Memorial University of Newfoundland)

Will Langford (Queen’s University) Devco, its Transatlantic Sheep, and the Development of Cape Breton

Tina Loo (University of British Columbia): Development as Disciplinary Power: the Bureau d’Aménagement de l’Est du Québec and the Meanings of Citizen Participation in the 1960s

Andrew Parnaby (Cape Breton University): ‘The counterfeit principles of a free enterprise system’: Roots, Region, and Resistance in the Sydney Steel Crisis of 1967

Commentator / Commentateur : Sean Cadigan (Memorial University of Newfoundland) Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 91

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 8161)

98. The Cold War / La Guerre froide

Facilitator / Animateur : Jorge Nallim (University of Manitoba)

Ian Muller (Wilfrid Laurier University): Canadian anti-communism in a bilateral context: More ‘greylist’ than ‘blacklist’?!

Jorge Nallim (University of Manitoba): Decentering the Cold War: the case of the Argentine Association for Cultural Freedom (1950s-1960s)

Matthew Wiseman (Wilfrid Laurier University): Unlocking the ‘Eskimo Secret’: Defence Science in the Cold War Canadian Arctic

Commentator / Commentateur : Jorge Nallim (University of Manitoba)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 1130)

99. Roundtable – What does an interdisciplinary classroom look like? Teaching history within and beyond disciplinary boundaries / Table ronde : en quoi consiste l'interdisciplinarité en classe? Enseigner l’histoire à l’intérieur et au-delà des limites de la discipline

Facilitator / Animateur: Chad Gaffield (University of Ottawa)

Participants:

John Bonnett (Brock University) Patrizia Gentile (Carleton University) Steven High (Concordia University) Jo-Anne McCutcheon (University of Ottawa) Katharine Rollwagen (Vancouver Island University)

10:15-11:45 / 10h15-11h45 (Desmarais – 7170)

100. Roundtable – Thinking Outside the Box: Historians and Interdisciplinarity / Table ronde – Hors des sentiers battus : les historiens et l’interdisciplinarité 92 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Facilitator / Animatrice: Lara Campbell (Simon Fraser University)

Participants:

Sean Carleton (Trent University) Roberta Lexier (Mount Royal University) Daniel Horner (Ryerson University) Daniel Macfarlane (Western Michigan University) Christabelle Sethna (University of Ottawa)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1110)

101. First Nations in Canadian History / Les Autochtones dans l’histoire canadienne

Facilitator / Animateur : Michel Hogue (Carleton University)

Robin Jarvis Brownlie (University of Manitoba): Why Did Residential Schools Continue for So Long?

James Cullingham (Seneca College/Tamarack Productions): A Comparative Look at Native Policy in mid to late 19th century Canada, Mexico and USA

Sarah Katherine Gibson (Queen’s University): Education at the Boundary of Western and Aboriginal Knowledge Cultures in Upper and Lower Canada, 1820-1840

Michael Hamon (McGill University): “We are at present without any armed force...”: Popular politics and Government in Red River

Commentator / Commentateur : Michel Hogue (Carleton University)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1160)

102. Commemoration and the State in 19th and 20th Century Canada / La commémoration et l’État au Canada aux XIXe et XXe siècles

Facilitator / Animatrice : Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto) Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 93

Elizabeth Hudson (Independent Scholar): Unveiling the “Faithful” Mohawk: Contested Commemoration in Brantford, Ontario

Daniel Simeone (McGill University): The Incorporation of History: The Ontario Historical Society and the Ontario state

Robert J. Talbot (University of New Brunswick): Cultural Dualism and the Politics of Dominion Day in 1927

Commentator / Commentatrice : Cecilia Morgan (University of Toronto)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 7170)

103. A Curious Development: Situating Canada in a Global History of Technical Assistance / Phénomène intéressant : la place du Canada dans l’histoire mondiale de l’aide technique

Facilitator / Animatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University)

David Meren (Université de Montréal): From India to Ungava: An Exploration of the Intersecting of Aboriginal History and the History of Canadian Development Assistance

David Webster (Bishop’s University): The CCF beyond the seas: Canadian social democrats as development advisors in Southeast Asia, 1950-1965

Commentator / Commentatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University)

Sponsored by the Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism and the Canadian International History Committee/ Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l'éthnicité et le transnationalisme et le Comité d’Histoire international du Canada

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1130)

104. The Exchange of Ideas in Atlantic and Local Networks: Colonial Readers and Printers / L’échange d’idées dans l’Atlantique et les réseaux locaux : lecteurs et imprimeurs 94 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Facilitator / Animatrice : Leslie Howsam (University of Windsor)

Keith Grant (University of New Brunswick): “O may his evangelical sentiments … have a wide circulation”: Reading ideas, practices, and networks in Edward Manning’s colonial Nova Scotia

Scott McLaren (York University): Injuring the Cause of God: John Wesley’s Struggle to Control Methodist Publishing in America, 1769‐1789

Daniel Samson (Brock University): Print Culture in Rural Mid-19th- Century Pictou, Nova Scotia

Commentator / Commentatrice : Leslie Howsam (University of Windsor)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1140)

105. Remaking and Reimagining the City / Renouvellement et réinvention de la ville

Facilitator / Animatrice : Michèle Dagenais (Université de Montréal)

Harold Bérubé (Université de Sherbrooke): A Different Kind of Urban Redevelopment: The Case of Montreal’s “Golden Square Mile” (1945- 1980)

Daniel Horner (Ryerson University): Re-Thinking the City: Migration, Urban Space and Liberal Governance in Montreal during the Middle Decades of the Nineteenth Century

Don Nerbas (Cape Breton University): Place Ville-Marie and the Making of Modern Montreal

Daniel Ross (York University): Planning for Progress, Planning for People: The Eaton Centre and the Development Debate in Toronto, 1966-1972

Commentator / Commentatrice : Michèle Dagenais (Université de Montréal)

2 Issues The British Journal of Canadian Studies a year! is published twice-yearly by Liverpool University Press on behalf of the British Association for Canadian Studies. BJCS welcomes articles that deal directly or through a comparative frame with Canada’s experiences, place and role in the wider English or French speaking worlds. Its prime objective is to further knowledge, discussion and understanding of Canada’s diverse experiences, peoples, places, perspectives and priorities in past and contemporary contexts The British Journal of Canadian Studies (Revue Britannique d’Études Canadiennes) est publié deux fois par an par Liverpool University Press pour le compte de l’Association Britannique d’Études Canadiennes. Le BJCS invite les articles traitant directement ou à travers une structure comparative, des expériences, de la place et du rôle du Canada dans les ensembles plus larges des mondes anglophones et francophones.

Editors: Dr Danielle Fuller, University of Birmingham Dr Ceri Morgan, Keele University Book Reviews Editor: Vivien Hughes

http://liverpool.metapress.com/content ISSN Print 0269-9222 Online 1757-8078 Online access at http://liverpool.metapress.com

For sample copies/advertising contact Chantel Baldry Liverpool University Press • 4 Cambridge Street, Liverpool L69 7ZU, UK Tel: +44 [0]151 794 2233 • Email: [email protected] www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk Université d’Ottawa | Faculté des arts

Le CRCCF s’intéresse à la société et à la culture des communautés francophones de l’Amérique du Nord d’hier et d’aujourd’hui. Il mène des activités de recherche et de diff usion du savoir en plus de conserver et de mettre en valeur une riche collection de ressources documentaires. Dans le monde de la recherche universitaire sur les francophonies canadiennes, le CRCCF se distingue par le développement en synergie de ces trois volets d’activité : archives, recherche et publications. Le regard pluridisciplinaire posé sur les milieux de vie francophones du Canada et son action dans la communauté font en sorte que le CRCCF constitue le principal pilier de la recherche sur le fait français à l’Université d’Ottawa. Il participe activement à la mission de l’institution de « préserver et [de] développer la culture française en Ontario ».

« le CRCCF constitue le principal pilier de la recherche sur le fait français à l’Université d’Ot tawa »

Archives | Recherche | Diffusion

Centre de recherche en civilisation canadienne-française (CRCCF)

Tél. : 613-562-5877 | Téléc. : 613-562-5143 | [email protected] arts.uOttawa.ca/crccf Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 97

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1150)

106. Frontiers of Our Past: The 1920s in Canada / Les frontières de notre passé : les années 1920 au Canada

Facilitator / Animateur : Alan Bowker (Independent Scholar/Chercheur indépendant)

Susan Joudrey (Saint Mary’s University): Captive Audience: The 1923 Raid on Calgary City Hall

Andrew Nurse (Mount Allison University): ‘And Our Failure Seemed Almost Complete for the Time Being’: Reconsidering the Canadian Folk-Song and Handicraft Festival, 1926-31

Molly Ungar (University of the Fraser Valley): Vampires, Vamps, and Vamping in the 1920’s

Commentator / Commentateur : Alan Bowker (Independent Scholar/Chercheur indépendant)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 8161)

107. Exploration and Immigration in Canadian History / Exploration et immigration dans l’histoire canadienne

Facilitator / Animatrice: Katie Simanzik (University of Ottawa)

Marilyn Barber (Carleton University) & Murray Watson (University of Dundee): Invisible Immigrants: The English in Canada since 1945

Geoffrey Little (Concordia University): “This very extensive and almost unknown portion of the empire”: The Montreal Natural History Society’s Surveys of Rupert’s Land

Gustavo Velasco (London School of Economics): The Post, the Railroad and the State: New Approaches to study Western Canada Settlement, 1870-1900

Commentator / Commentatrice : Katie Simanzik (University of Ottawa) 98 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 10161)

108. Roundtable – Scars of Class: Oral Histories of Workers’ Health and Environmental Justice / Table ronde – Cicatrices de classes sociales : histoires orales sur la justice des travailleurs en termes de santé et d’environnement

Facilitator / Animateur : Craig Heron (York University)

Participants:

Michael A. Commito (McMaster University) Steven High (Concordia University) Lachlan MacKinnon (Concordia University) Robert Storey (McMaster University) Stacey Zembrzycki (Concordia University)

Commentator / Commentatrice : Katharine Rollwagen (Vancouver Island University)

12:00-1:30 / 12h-13h30 (Desmarais – 1120)

109. Roundtable on James Daschuk’s Clearing the Plains, winner of the 2014 Sir John A. Macdonald Prize from the Canadian Historical Association/ Table-ronde sur le livre Clearing the Plains de James Daschuk, lauréat du prix Sir-John-A.-Macdonald 2014 de la Société historique du Canada

Facilitator / Animatrice : Carolyn Podruchny (York University)

Participants :

Mary-Ellen Kelm (Simon Fraser University) Ian Mosby (McMaster University) Susan Neylan (Wilfrid Laurier University)

Commentator / Commentateur : James W. Daschuk (University of Regina)

Sponsored by the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Parrainée par la Revue de la Société historique du Canada

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 99

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 7170)

110. Roundtable – Longitudinal Research from Historical Sources / Table ronde – Recherche longitudinale dans les sources historiques

Facilitator / Animateur : Eric Sager (University of Victoria)

Participants:

Herbert Emery (University of Calgary) Michael Haan (University of New Brunswick) Doug Munro (University of Queensland)

Co-sponsored by the Canadian Sociological Association and Canadian Population Society / Coparrainée par la Société canadienne de sociologie et la Canadian Population Society

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1120)

111. Roundtable on Mark Salber Phillips’ On Historical Distance, winner of the 2014 Wallace K. Ferguson Prize from the Canadian Historical Association/ Table-ronde sur le livre On Historical Distance de Mark Salber Phillips, lauréat du prix Wallace K. Ferguson 2014 de la Société historique du Canada

Facilitator / Animatrice : Jacqueline Holler (University of Northern British Columbia)

Participants :

Kenneth Dewar (Mount Saint Vincent University) Marcie Frank (Concordia University) Allan Greer (McGill University) Barbara Leckie (Carleton University)

Commentator / Commentateur : Mark Salber Phillips (Carleton University)

Sponsored by the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Parrainée par la Revue de la Société historique du Canada

100 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1160)

112. History in the Classroom / L’histoire dans la salle de classe

Facilitator / Animateur : Jeffrey Brison (Queen’s University)

Caroline-Isabelle Caron (Queen’s University): History vs. Pseudo- history: deconstructing the popular past in the connected classroom

Shabnam Inanloo Dailoo (Athabasca University): Erasing Disciplinary Boundaries – Athabasca University’s Approach to Heritage and History Education and Practice

Margaret T. Rockwell (University of Alberta): Bringing a Bronze WW1 Memorial to Life: How a Class Assignment Shows the Value of Digital Archives

Commentator / Commentateur : Jeffrey Brison (Queen’s University)

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1150)

113. Approaches to Collaborative Research / Approches de recherche concertée

Facilitator / Animateur : Ryan Shackleton (Know History Inc.)

Alexander Campbell (Know History Inc.): Historic Metis Communities and Electronic Resources: Notes from a Decade of Use in the Field

Emily Keyes (Carleton University): Untangling the Technology of Genealogy

Émilie Pigeon (York University): The Rise of the Historical Network Analysis Method and Its Imprint on the Past

Ryan Shackleton (Know History Inc.): Historian’s For Hire – Large Scale Historical Inquires and the Complexity of Team Based Research Projects

Commentator / Commentateur : Ryan Shackleton (Know History Inc.)

Making the past come alive

Graduate Studies History: MA, PhD

The Tri-University Graduate Program in History combines the faculty and resources of three of Canada’s premier universities. With over 60 graduate faculty in the program, we are able to provide courses and supervise research across a vast range of areas. At the same time, through small seminars, close student-professor relationships, teaching assistantships and scholarships held at one of our three participating campuses, we maintain the atmosphere of smaller, more intimate educational institutions. Our PhD program focusses on eight major fields: Canadian History, Cold War Era History, Early Modern European History, Medieval History, Modern European, Scottish History, www.triuhistory.ca War and Society, and World History. Our faculty’s numerous areas of interest for research and graduate teaching include the Atlantic world, the history of crime, culture and entertainment, family and youth, gender and sexuality, health and nutrition, imperialism, indigenous history, military history, politics and international relations, religious history, rural history, urban history, the history of science and the environment, and tourism history. PhD Program Each year we accept up to 20 new doctoral students interested in our eight major fields. All eligible students receive substantial multi-year financial support, all are provided with teaching assistantship opportunities and, in their final program year, all are offered a course of their own to teach in a mentored setting. Our students generally move through the field completion phase of their program in one year, and they devote the majority of their studies to their own research, teaching, and writing. With its solid research orientation, our program is attractive to students interested in academic and non-academic careers. Through our first-year field seminars, extensive teaching opportunities and professional development courses, our program provides superlative preparation for the academic job-market. MA Program With an average of 20 MA seminars offered eachy ear, we provide one of the most extensive ranges of graduate courses in Canada. All eligible students in the program receive guaranteed financial support in the form of teaching assistantships and scholarships. In our flexible program, students complete their degree through coursework, or in a combination of courses and a major research paper or thesis. With over 20 faculty in each of Canadian and European history, 6 in medieval, 6 in American, and 10 in non-western history, students are assured supervision in the areas that interest them.

For a comprehensive list of our faculty, areas and courses, visit our website: www.triuhistory.ca 102 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1110)

114. Sensory Encounters and Embodied Histories in the Fur Trade and Nineteenth-Century Northwest / Rencontres sensorielles et histoires incarnées dans la traite des fourrures dans le Nord-Ouest au XIXe siècle

Facilitator / Animatrice : Mary-Ellen Kelm (Simon Fraser University)

Daniel Robert Laxer (University of Toronto): Sensing New Peoples: Diet, Dress, and Dance in the Western Fur Trade, 1760-1821

Stacy Nation-Knapper (York University): Feeling It: Sensory Experiences of the Nineteenth-Century Columbia River Plateau Fur Trade

Carolyn Podruchny (York University): Embodying Denial: The Vanishing Life of the Metis Giant from Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan, 1881-1904

Commentator / Commentatrice : Mary-Ellen Kelm (Simon Fraser University)

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1130)

115. New Perspectives on Canadian Foreign Policy in the Diefenbaker Era, 1957-1963 (Part 1) / Nouveau regard sur la politique étrangère canadienne à l’ère Diefenbaker, 1957-1963 (1e partie)

Facilitator / Animatrice : Penny E. Bryden (University of Victoria)

Stephen Azzi (Carleton University): Diefenbaker and the Culture of Camelot

Greg Donaghy (Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada/Affaires étrangères, Commerce et Développement Canada): From the Top Down: Eisenhower, Diefenbaker, and Canada-US Relations, 1957-61

Michael D. Stevenson (Lakehead University): Sidney Smith, Howard Green, and the Conduct of Canadian Foreign Policy

Commentator / Commentatrice : Penny E. Bryden (University of Victoria) Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 103

Co-sponsored by the Political History Group and Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada / Coparrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique et Affaires étrangères, Commerce et Développement Canada

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 10161)

116. Literary Translation and Reinterpretation of History / Traduction littéraire et relecture de l’histoire

Facilitator / Animatrice : Madeleine Stratford (Université du Québec en Outaouais)

Pierre Anctil (University of Ottawa): La littérature yiddish de Montréal : un univers en quête de traducteurs

Clara Foz (University of Ottawa): Los Antiguos Canadienses : un classique canadien-français au service du panaméricanisme

Gillian Lane-Mercier (Université McGill): L’impact de facteurs institutionnels sur l’évolution des rapports de force culturels intra- et internationaux

Denise Merkle (University of Moncton): William Chapman, poète et traducteur

Commentator / Commentateur : Madeleine Stratford (Université du Québec en Outaouais)

Co-sponsored by the Canadian Association for Translation studies / Coparrainée par l’Association canadienne de traductologie

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 8161)

117. Roundtable – Critical Reflections on Bryan D. Palmer’s Contribution to the Writing of Labour and Working-Class History / Table ronde – Réflexions critiques sur la contribution de Bryan D. Palmer dans l’historiographie de l’histoire du travail et de la classe ouvrière

Facilitator / Animateur : Gregory S. Kealey (University of New Brunswick) 104 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Participants : Neville Kirk (Emeritus Professor of History, Manchester Metropolitan University) Annalee Lepp (University of Victoria) Andrée Lévesque (McGill University, ret.) Chad Pearson (Collin College, Texas) Charlotte Yates (McMaster University) Sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Labour History / Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travail

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 1140) 118. Roundtable: Reading History, Reading Sociology / Table ronde - Lire l’histoire, lire la sociologie Facilitator / Animateur : Phillip Primeau (Carleton University) Participants : Bruce Curtis (Carleton University) Catherine Desbarats (McGill University) Frédérick Guillaume Dufour (Université du Québec à Montréal) Matthew Lange (McGill University) Dominique Marshall (Carleton University) Shirley Tillotson (Dalhousie University) Co-sponsored by the Canadian Sociological Association / Coparrainée par la Société canadienne de sociologie

1:45-3:15 / 13h45-15h15 (Desmarais – 3110) 119. Le marché Sainte-Anne et le parlement de Montréal : un dialogue interdisciplinaire / St.Anne’s Market and the Parliament of Montreal : an interdisciplinary dialogue Facilitator / Animateur : Harold Bérubé (Université de Sherbrooke) Joanne Burgess (Université du Québec à Montréal): Comprendre la construction du marché Sainte-Anne : dialogue entre histoire, archéologie et architecture Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 105

Louise Pothier (Musée Pointe-à-Callière): Culture matérielle, archéologie et histoire : le parlement du Canada-Uni et ses armoiries

Léon Robichaud (Université de Sherbrooke): Approche globale de la numérisation 4D du parlement de Montréal

Alain Roy (Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et Archives Canada): Les archives et la bibliothèque du Parlement-Uni : regard croisé entre histoire et archéologie

Commentator / Commentateur : Harold Bérubé (Université de Sherbrooke)

3:30-5:30 / 15h30-17h30 (Simard – 222)

120. Capitals and Peripheries: Historical Perspectives on International Development / Capitales et périphéries : perspectives historiques sur le développement international

Facilitator / Animateur: Ian Smillie (McLeod Group)

Stephanie Bangarth (King’s University College / University of Western Ontario): “Is our assistance worthwhile?”: The Role of Tripartisanship in the Canadian Response to Refugee and International Development Crises, 1968 – 1978

Jill Campbell-Miller (Saint Mary’s University): Integrating History and International Development Studies: Lessons from the Canadian-Indian Aid Experience

John F. Devlin (University of Guelph): State Theory, Historical Sociology, and Comparative Agricultural Development

Commentator / Commentateur : Ian Smillie (McLeod Group)

Co-sponsored by the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development (CASID) and the Canadian Council on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism / Coparrainée par l’Association canadienne d’études du développement international (ACÉDI) et par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l’éthnicité et le transnationalisme

106 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 10161)

121. Witchcraft in Canada: from Early Modern Demonology to Colonial Clash of Cultures / La sorcellerie au Canada : de la démonologie du début des temps modernes au conflit des cultures colonial

Facilitator / Animatrice : Elizabeth Mancke (University of New Brunswick)

Kathryn Labelle (University of Saskatchewan): Oky ontatechiata: Wendat Witchcraft and The Panic of 1635-1645

Scott Moir (Cape Breton University): The Survival of Scottish Witchcraft Belief in Canada

Stephanie Pettigrew (University of New Brunswick): Witchcraft in the French Atlantic World: Gender and Social Tension in New France

Commentator / Commentatrice : Elizabeth Mancke (University of New Brunswick)

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1110)

122. Indigenous Peoples, Labour, and Industrial Development in Canada / Les Autochtones, le Travail et le développement industriel au Canada

Facilitator / Animateur : John Lutz (University of Victoria)

Anne R. Janhunen (University of Saskatchewan): ‘A Regular Curse’: Indigenous Labour and the Paradox of Early Twentieth-Century Industry in British Columbia's Fraser Valley

Brittany A. Luby (Laurentian University): The International Joint Commission and the Woes of “Civilized” Men: An Examination of Flood Damage Assessments and Compensatory Systems on Lake of the Woods, 1893 – 1925

Daniel Rueck (University of Ottawa): Industrial Development and Indian Act Modernity in Kahnawake, 1880-1935

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 107

Commentator / Commentateur : John Lutz (University of Victoria)

Part of the mini-conference in Aboriginal History sponsored by the Aboriginal History Studies Group / Rattachée à la mini-conférence en histoire autochtone parrainée par le Groupe d’étude d’histoire autochtone

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1130)

123. New Perspectives on Canadian Foreign Policy in the Diefenbaker Era, 1957-1963 (Part 2) / Nouveau regard sur la politique étrangère canadienne à l’ère Diefenbaker, 1957-1963 (2e partie)

Facilitator / Animatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University)

Nicole Marion (Carleton University): An Unexpected Ally: Diefenbaker’s Foreign Policy and the Canadian Anti-Nuclear Weapons Movement

Asa McKercher (Queen’s University): ‘Quizas, Quizas, Quizas’: Diefenbaker and Latin America, 1957-63

Cory Scurr (Wilfrid Laurier University): Cold War Warrior? Diefenbaker and Canadian-Soviet Relations

Commentator / Commentatrice : Laura Madokoro (McGill University)

Sponsored by the Political History Group and Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada / Parrainée par le Groupe d’histoire politique et Affaires étrangères, Commerce et Développement Canada

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1120)

124. Man and his Environment / L’Homme et son milieu

Facilitator / Animatrice : Merle Massie (University of Saskatchewan/University of Ottawa)

Stacey Alexopoulos (York University): Surveying a Problem: Statistics and Housing Policy Development, 1958‐1962 108 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Jessica Dewitt (University of Saskatchewan): Park Formation as Catalyst for Restoration: A Pennsylvania River’s Ecological Revivification

Adrian Gamble (York University): Documenting the Canadian Arts and Crafts Movement: An Exercise in Interdisciplinarity

Merle Massie (University of Saskatchewan/University of Ottawa): Grounding science with history: Place methodology from the field

Commentator / Commentatrice : Merle Massie (University of Saskatchewan/University of Ottawa)

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1160)

125. The Greeks – Agamemnon to Alexander The Great Exhibition / L’exposition Les Grecs – d’Agamemnon à Alexandre le Grand

Facilitator / Animateur : Terence Clark (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire)

Terence Clark (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire): The Idea of History from Whence it Came: Untangling the threads of myth and history in Ancient Greece

Jean-François Léger (Canadian Museum of History / Musée canadien de l’histoire): Les Grecs : une expérience muséale plurielle : Défis d’interprétation et scénario innovateur d’un parcours couvrant 6000 ans d’histoire

William A. Parkinson (The Field Museum/University of Illinois at Chicago): Archaeology, Ancient History, and the Longue Durée: The Neolithic Roots of Ancient Greece

Commentator / Commentateur : Terence Clark (Canadian Museum of History/Musée canadien de l’histoire)

Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 109

Participants to the Annual Meeting of the CHA can attend the pre- inauguration of the exhibition The Greeks – Agamemnon to Alexander The Great at the Canadian Museum of History for free with proof of registration

Sur présentation d’une preuve d’inscription, les participants à la Réunion annuelle de la SHC peuvent assister gratuitement à la pré- inauguration de l’exposition Les Grecs – d’Agamemnon à Alexandre le Grand au Musée canadien de l’histoire

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1140)

126. Law and Rights in African History / Loi et droits dans l’histoire africaine

Facilitator / Animatrice : Meredith Terretta (University of Ottawa)

Olabisi D. Akinkugbe (University of Ottawa): Rethinking the Nexus between Law and Development and the New International Economic Order

Bonny Ibhawoh (McMaster University): Beyond the Bill of Rights: Theorizing the Oppositional Politics of Human Rights in Post-Colonial Africa

Lexington Izuagie (Ambrose Alli University): The Willink Minority Commission and Minority Rights in Nigeria

Mairi S. MacDonald (University of Toronto): “Widespread proofs of great energy”: Enforcing Human Rights in the Independent Congo State

Meredith Terretta (University of Ottawa): Anticolonial Cause Lawyering, Transnational Activism, and the Rule of Law in Independence Era Africa

Commentator / Commentatrice : Meredith Terretta (University of Ottawa)

110 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 1150)

127. History, Interdisciplinarity, and the Indian Ocean World / L’histoire, l’interdisciplinarité et le monde de l’océan Indien

Facilitator / Animateur : Emmanuel Hogg (Carleton University)

J. Pablo Arroyo-Mora (IOWC, McGill University): The Indian Ocean World Database: an interdisciplinary approach for understanding human-environment interactions

Rashed Chowdhury (IOWC, McGill University): Russian Explorers in the Indian Ocean World in the Late Nineteenth Century

Chinnaiah Jangam (Carleton University): Rethinking History in Indian Subcontinent: Politics of Identity and the Project of Writing History

Commentator / Commentateur : Emmanuel Hogg (Carleton University)

Co-sponsored by the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association and the Indian Ocean World Centre / Coparrainée par la Revue de la Société historique du Canada et par le Indian Ocean World Centre

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 7170)

128. L’histoire environnementale et les savoirs interdisciplinaires du passé / Environmental History and Interdisciplinary Knowledges of the Past

Facilitator / Animateur : Stéphane Castonguay (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières)

Maude Flamand-Hubert (Université du Québec à Rimouski/Paris IV Sorbonne): Explorer, inventorier, classifier : la séparation des terres comme lieu de négociation interdisciplinaire

Maude-Emmanuelle Lambert (Independent Scholar/Chercheure indépendante, Historica Canada): Embellir et aménager les abords routiers : du Club des Habitants aux ingénieurs de l’État québécois (1945-1960) Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 111

Valérie Poirier (Université du Québec à Montréal): « Choice Between Automobile and Survival » : la pollution automobile comme enjeu de santé publique (1960-1970)

Commentator / Commentateur : Stéphane Castonguay (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières)

Co-sponsored by the Network in Canadian History & Environment (NiCHE) / Coparrainée par la Nouvelle initiative canadienne en histoire de l’environnement (NiCHE)

3:30-5:00 / 15h30-17h (Desmarais – 8161)

129. Roundtable – Reflecting on Greg Kealey and Canadian Labour History / Table ronde – Regard sur Greg Kealey et l’histoire du Travail au Canada

Facilitator / Animatrice : Janis Thiessen (University of Winnipeg)

Participants:

Christina Burr (University of Windsor) Sean Cadigan (Memorial University of Newfoundland) Dominique Clément (University of Alberta) Craig Heron (York University) Benjamin Isitt (University of Victoria) Andrew Parnaby (Cape Breton University) Kirk Niergarth (Mount Royal University)

Sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Labour History / Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travail

112 Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015

Notes Wednesday 3 June 2015 / Le mercredi 3 juin 2015 113

JOURNAL OF THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION REVUE DE LA SOCIÉTÉ HISTORIQUE DU CANADA

CALL FOR PAPERS: APPEL DE COMMUNICATION : All participants of the 2015 CHA Tous les participants à la Réunion annuelle Conference are warmly invited to submit de la SHC sont cordialement invités à sou- their conference papers for publication mettre le texte de leur communication pour in issues 1 and 2 of the Journal of the publication dans la Revue de la Société historique Canadian Historical Association / Revue de du Canada/ Journal of The Canadian Historical la Société historique du Canada. Founded in Association. Fondée en 1922 sous le nom de 1922 under the name of Annual Reports Rapports annuels de la Société historique du of the Canadian Historical Association / Canada /Annual Reports of the Canadian Rapports annuels de la Société historique Historical Association, publie, dans l’une ou du Canada, the journal publishes the l’autre langue offi cielle, les meilleurs com- best papers presented at the Canadian munications offertes à la réunion annuelle Historical Association annual meeting de la société historique du Canada dont les and submitted to the Editorial Board textes ont été soumis au comité de rédac- for consideration, in areas any fi eld of tions, quel que soit le domaine de recher- history and in either offi cial language. The che en histoire. Le Comité désire publier Board seeks innovative contributions les communications les plus novatrices, soit that open new avenues of research, place parce qu’elles ouvrent de nouvelle perspec- a familiar subject in a new perspective, tive, ou qu’elles proposent une méthodol- or use innovative methodology or theory ogie ou une théorie nouvelle susceptible that could interest those engaged in d’intéresser tout chercheur en histoire ou historical and interdisciplinary research. œuvrant dans des disciplines connexes. La The JCHA appears twice a year. The fi rst RSHC paraît deux fois par année : le pre- issue is a print and on-line publication. mier numéro est à la fois imprimé et affi ché The second issue is published on the en ligne; le second est publié uniquement internet only and is devoted especially to sur internet traite principalement de ques- thematic issues, transnational histories, tions thématiques, d’histoire transnationales and historiographical topics. A refereed et d’historiographie. Tous les textes sont journal, the JCHA/RSHC publishes soumis à un processus d’évaluation par les work by academic and independent pairs. Si les historiens travaillant dans des scholars as well as by historians working universités soumettent une bonne partie des in the public service or the private sector. articles publiés dans la revue, les historiens Submissions should be in formal article à l’emploi des gouvernements ou du sec- format and adhere to the guidelines set teur privé sont encouragés à contribuer. Les up by the JCHA. The fi nal word count auteurs sont invités à utiliser le format clas- should be between 7000 and 10000 sique d’un article qui adhère aux directives words. The deadline for submissions is aux auteurs de la RSHC et de respecter une August 30th, 2015. longueur de 7 000 à 10 000 mots. La date limite est le 30 août 2015. For further information about how to submit your paper, please contact Pour de plus amples renseignements, ou the JCHA’s Managing Directors, Jane pour soumettre un article, veuillez contacter Freeland and Ian Wereley, at jcha-rshc@ la directrice de la RSHC, Jane Freeland, à cha-shc.ca. [email protected]. The Historical Association of Canada 115

List of / Liste des participants

Ackerman, Katrina 92 Blocker, David 5 Adema, Seth 19 Blumer, Nadine 1 Aikenhead, Paul 4 Bocking, Stephen 45 Aivalis, Christo 5 Bonnett, John 99 Akin, David 1 Boudreau, Michel 30 Akinkugbe, Olabisi D. 126 Boutonnet, Vincent 55 Aladejebi, Funké 50 Bowker, Alan 106 Alexander, Kristine 42 Bradley-Perrin, Ian 46 Alexopoulos, Stacey 124 Bradley-St-Cyr, Ruth 8 Allina, Eric 60 Bramadat, Paul 20 Anctil, Pierre 12, 26, 31, 116 Braundy, Marcia 49 Anderson, Jennifer 93 Brison, Jeffrey 112 Antonie, Luiza 96 Brisson, Jeff 28 Arroyo-Mora, J. Pablo 127 Brookfield, Tarah 22 Augustus, Camie 84 Brown, Blake 30 Auzas, Vincent 10 Brun, Josette 87 Azzi, Stephen 115 Brunet, Marie-Hélène 94 Baillargeon, Denyse 92 Bryden, Penny 6, 47, 115 Bajric, Whitney 52 Burgess, Joanne 119 Bakerville, Peter 96 Burr, Christina 129 Bangarth, Stephanie 23, 50, 120 Cadigan, Sean 97, 129 Banoub, David 75 Cameron, Ross 24 Barber, Marilyn 107 Campbell, Lara 22, 68, 100 Barclay, Krista 66 Campbell, Alexander 113 Barker, Roberta 72 Campbell-Miller, Jill 120 Barnard, Stuart 8 Cardin, Jean-François 55 Barry-Shaw, Nikolas 5 Carleton, Sean 42, 100 Baxter, Megan 84 Carlson, Keith Thor 27, 67, 89 Bazar, Jennifer 66 Caron, Caroline-Isabelle 112 Beausaert, Rebecca 57 Carstairs, Catherine 80 Bechthold, Michael 54 Castonguay, Stéphane 45, 128 Beiler, Lisa 66 Chaktsiris, Mary 94 Benidickson, Jamie 45 Chapnick, Adam 54 Bérubé, Harold 105, 119 Chenier, Elise 86 Black, Kelly 34 Chilton, Lisa 29, 86 Blanchard, David Alphonse 66 Chowdhury, Rashed 127 116 La Société historique du Canada

Clark, Terrence 125 Emery, Herbert 33, 110 Clément, Dominique 7, 129 Englebert, Robert 95 Commito, Micheal 108 Epp, Marlene 59 Cook, Sharon 81 Errington, Jane 53, 95 Cooke, Krista 59 Éthier, Marc-André 55 Cowan, Mairi 56 Evans, Jennifer 60, 80 Craig, Béatrice 44,95 Farhni, Madga 87 Crivello, Maryline 10 Fehr, Amanda 3 Cruickshank, Ken 45 Flamand-Hubert, Maude 128 Cullingham, James 101 Fleming, Scott 24 Cummins, Alyshea 23 Folk, Michelle L. 71 Curtis, Bruce 71, 118 Fong, Alicia 88 Dagenais, Michèle 45, 105 Foz, Clara 116 Dailoo Inanloo, Shabnam 112 Frank, David 43 D'Amico, Francesca 4 Frank, Marcie 111 Daschuk, James 109 Freeland, Jane 60 Davey, James 52 Freeman, Victoria 85 Davis-Fisch, Heather 72 Freeman, Barabara M. 87 de Szegheo Lang, Tamarah 49 Frenette, Yves 1 Delacroix, Christian 10 Fyson, Donald 58 Déry, Catherine 55 Gaffield, Chad 10, 99 Desbarats, Catherine 118 Gamble, Adrian 124 Devlin, John F. 120 Gani, Raphaël 94 Dewar, Kenneth 111 Gélinas, Xavier 69 Dewitt, Jessica 124 Gentile, Patrizia 99 Di Mascio, Anthony 25 Gibson, Sarah Katherine 101 Dolamge, Erin 91 Giesbrecht, Jodi 21 Donaghy, Greg 115 Glassford, Larry A. 47 Donovan, Patrick 58 Glassford, Sarah C. 68 Doucet, Sophie 82 Goette, Richard 32 Douville, Bruce 46 Golubev, Alexey 71 Downey, Allan 19 Gordon, Alan 54 Ducharme, Michelle L. 95 Gorin, Arielle 89 Duffett, Angela 53 Goulet, Geneviève 94 Dufour, Frédérick Guillaume 118 Grafton, Emily K. 21 Dupuis, Serge 55 Grant, Peter 4 Eidinger, Andrea 92 Grant, Keith 104 Elizabeth Tonna, Charlotte 8 Greer, Allan 95, 111 Canadian Historical Association 117

Grussani, Linda 69 Jones, Esyllt 85 Guerin, Sanna 69 Jones-Gailani, Nadia 20 Haan, Michael 110 Joudrey, Susan 106 Haggarty, Liam 19 Kealey, Gregory S. 7, 117, 129 Hall, Kristin 44 Kelm, Mary-Ellen 109, 114 Hamilton, Michelle A. 35 Kennedy, Gregory M.W. 70 Hamon, Michael 101 Keyes, Emily 113 Harper, Patti 85 Kheraj, Sean 74 Harvey, Megan 89 Kikkert, Peter 32 Hastings, Paula 9, 86 Kirk, Neville 117 Hay, Stephen 53, 71 Klassen, Judith 93 Hayday, Matthew 43, 54 Knickerbocker, Madeline 27 Heidt, Daniel 32 Kovacs, Sasha 72 Heron, Craig 108, 129 Kowalchuk, Kristine 70 Hewitt, Steve 7 Kuhlberg, Mark 47 High, Steven 99, 108 Kurbegović, Erna 30 Ho, Mabel 23 Labelle, Kathryn 121 Hogg, Emmanuel 60, 127 Laberge, Martin 26 Hogue, Michel 25, 101 Labove, Joshua 88 Holler, Jacqueline 111 Labrosse, Julien 83 Horner, Daniel 100, 105 Lainey, Jonathan 11 Howsaw, Leslie 104 Lambert, Maude-Emmanuelle 128 Hudson, Elizabeth 102 Lane-Mercier, Gillian 116 Ibhawoh, Bonny 126 Lange, Matthew 118 Iceton, Glenn 48 Langford, Will 97 Innes, Robert 3 Laplanche, Laurie 87 Inwood, Chris 96 Lapointe-Gagnon, Valérie 10 Ionita, Cristian 83 Larsen, Laura 48 Ishiguro, Laura 75 Lasserre, Frédéric 25 Isitt, Benjamin 129 Laugs, Christoph 27 Izuagie, Lexington 126 Lavallée, Marie-Josée 55 Jaenen, Cornelius 82 Laxer, Daniel R. 66, 114 Jangam, Chinnaiah 127 Leckie, Barabara 111 Janhunen, Anne 122 Lee, Erica 3 Jankowski, Steve 84 Leeming, Mark 73 Janovicek, Nancy 22 Lefrançois, David 55 Jansen, Dinah 83 Léger, Jean-François 125 Jarvis Brownlie, Robin 85, 101 Leighton, Douglas 67 118 La Société historique du Canada

Leitch, Gillian 66 McFarlane, John 47 Lepp, Annalee 117 McGee, David 93 Lévesque, Stéphane 55, 94 McGowan, Mark G. 8, 56 Lévesque, Andrée 117 McGowan, Mark 56 Lexier, Roberta 100 McGregor, Heather E. 34 Little, Goeffrey 107 McKay, Ian 24 Loewen, Royden 20 McKenna, Katherine 59 Loo, Tina 97 McKercher, Asa 9, 123 Lowman Battell, Emma 34, 42 McLaren, Scott 104 Luby, Brittany A. 122 McLaughlin, Mark 73 Lutz, John 52, 67, 122 McLean, Lorna 81 Lynne, Marks 20 McMahon, Colin 26 MacDonald, Katya C. 27 McNairn, Jeffrey 75 MacDonald, Heather 66 Meren, David 103 MacDonald, Mairi S. 126 Merkle, Denise 116 MacDougall, Robert 28 Metcalfe-Chenail, Danielle 85 MacEachern, Alan 45, 73 Miller, Bradley 86 Macfarlane, Daniel 100 Miller, Christopher 84 Mackey, Eva 34 Miller, Jim 89 MacKinnon, Lachlan 108 Milligan, Ian 5 Madokoro, Laura 29, 103, 123 Millward, Liz 81 Malek, Jon G. 23 Milton, Cynthia 71 Malleck, Dan 54 Moir, Scott 121 Mancke, Elizabeth 95, 121 Moran, Ry 11 Mann, Jatinder 9 Morgan, Cecilia 81, 102 Marchildon, Gregory P. 6 Morin, Jean-Pierre 69 Marion, Nicole 123 Morton, Desmond 26 Marquis, Greg 43 Mosby, Ian 68, 109 Marshall, Dominique 12, 76, 118 Mosquin, Alexandra 69 Marshall, Allison 20 Muhammedi, Shezan 23 Marshall, Dominique 12, 76, 118 Mullaly, Sasha 30 Marti, Steve 9, 66 Muller, Ian 98 Martin, Eryk 22 Munro, Doug 10, 110 Martin, Lee-Martin 69 Nallim, Jorge 98 Massie, Merle 84, 124 Nation-Knapper, Stacy 114 Masson, Isabelle 21 Neagu, Maria 10 McCorkindale, Deirdre 50 Nielson, Carmen J. 59, 75 McCutcheon, Jo-Anne 99 Nerbas, Don 105 Canadian Historical Association 119

Neuman, Tracy 28 Reilly, Frances 48 Neylan, Susan 19, 109 Remes, Jacob 28 Nickel, Sarah 3, 67 Robertson, Beth A. 59 Niergarth, Krik 49, 129 Robichaud, Léon 66, 119 Noël, Patrick-Michel 10 Rockwell, Margaret T. 112 Nootens, Thierry 44 Rollwagen, Kathrine 99, 108 Norman, Alison 42, 91 Ross, Cameron 24 Nurse, Andrew 106 Ross, Andrew J. 33, 96 Oates Lee, Lori 31 Ross, Daniel 105 O'Byrne, Nicole 43 Roy, Alain 119 Oliver, Dean F. 12 Rueck, Daniel 122 Olson, Sherry 96 Russell, Jason 33 O’Neil, Stephanie 92 Sager, Eric 110 Otis, Melissa 91 Saha, Shandip 8 Parker, Stuart 31 Salmon, Stephen 33 Parkinson, William A. 125 Samson, Daniel 104 Parnaby, Andrew 97, 129 Sandwell, Ruth 74, 96 Pasolli, Lisa 6 Sangster, Joan 76 Pass, Forrest 35 Savard, Stéphane 55 Peace, Thomas 42 Schultz, Christopher 57 Pearson, Chad 117 Schwarz-Pimer, Robyn 66 Pekic, Alexander 88 Schweitzer, Marlis 72 Penfold, Steve 74 Scotland, Jonathan 82 Perry, Adele 95 Scott, Elizabeth 29 Pettigrew, Stephanie 121 Scott, David 94 Phillips, Mark Salber 112 Scurr, Cory 123 Piché, Amanda 46 Sethna, Christabelle 80, 100 Pigeon, Émilie 113 Shackleton, Ryan 113 Podruchny, Carolyn 67, 109, 114 Shaw, Melissa N. 50 Poirier, Valérie 128 Sheftel, Anna 82 Pothier, Louise 119 Sholdice, Mark 28 Pratt, William John 80 Simanzik, Katie 107 Primeau, Phillip 118 Simeone, Daniel 102 Racine-St-Jacques, Jules 10 Simic, Yvan 49 Rainville, Paul-Étienne 46 Smillie, Ian 120 Rapaport, David 86 Smith, Nathan 57 Read, Heather 88 Smith, Donald B. 91 Reilly, Sharon 21 Solomon, Nassisse 50 120 La Société historique du Canada

Squires, Jessica 11 Tran, Von Troi 10 Stanger-Ross, Jordan 88 Tremblay, Alex 58 Stanley, Heather 59 Tremblay, Yves 70 Stettner, Shannon 46, 59 Trim, Henry 73 Stevenson, Michael D. 115 Trimble, Sabina 52 Storey, Robert 108 Turek, Tyler 9 Stratford, Madeleine 116 Ungar, Molly 25, 106 Sugiman, Momoye 88 Velasco, Gustavo 107 Sugiman, Pamela 88 Vogt, David 89 Sun, Xiaping 83 Wallace-Casey, Cynthia 94 Sweeny, Shelley 11 Ward, Allison Marie 82 Swift, Jamie 57 Wark, Wesley 7 Tait, Will 68 Watson, Andrew 74 Talbot, Robert J. 24, 102 Webster, David 103 Targa, Ryan 47 Weier, Jonathan 68 Taschereau, Sylvie 44 Williamson, Christina 44 Tavenor, Joshua 53 Willis, John 25 Terretta, Meredith 126 Wilson, David A. 56 Thériault, Benoît 93 Wise, Jonathan 93 Thiessen, Janis 49, 129 Wiseman, Matthew 98 Thieverge, Jennifer 66 Woitkowitz, John 32 Tillotson, Shirley 68, 118 Wolters, Rachel 29 Titley, Brian 31 Wood, Whitney 30 Todd, Lisa 80 Yates, Charlotte 117 Toews, Anne 85 Young, Brian 58 Tonna, Charlotte Elizabeth 8 Zembrzycki, Stacey 108 Tough, David 6 Canadian history

Shortlisted Shortlisted Shortlisted Shortlisted 2015 2015 2015 2015 Sir John A. François-Xavier François-Xavier François-Xavier Macdonald Prize Garneau Medal Garneau Medal Garneau Medal

French Canadians, Furs, and 6WDQGLQJ8SZLWKGa’axsta’las Indigenous Women in the Making Jane Constance Cook and the Politics RIWKH3DFLȴF1RUWKZHVW of Memory, Church, and Custom Jean Barman Leslie A. Robertson the .ZDJXȇĄ Gixsam Clan Uncovers the forgotten story of the French Canadians who, along with the A stirring portrait of a controversial Indigenous women in their lives, shaped Kwakwaka’wakw leader and the WKH&DQDGLDQDQG$PHULFDQ3DFLȴF H΍RUWVRIKHUGHVFHQGDQWVWRUHFRQFLOH Northwest. DGLɝFXOWKLVWRU\

2015 | 978-0-7748-2805-5 | pb 2013 | 978-0-7748-2385-2 | pb

Sensing Changes :LIHWR:LGRZ Technologies, Environments, and the Lives, Laws, and Politics in Everyday, 1953-2003 Nineteenth-Century Montreal Joy Parr Bettina Bradbury A social and sensory history of life with A fascinating look at how women’s lives megaprojects that reveals how humans shaped, and were shaped, by 19th- make sense of their world when they century Montreal as they moved from no longer recognize the environment marriage to widowhood. around them. 2012 | 978-0-7748-1952-7 | pb 2010 | 978-0-7748-1724-0 | pb

www.ubcpress.ca stay connected thought that counts History in the Making

Patrician Families and the Making of Quebec The Taschereaus and McCords Brian Young Shortlisted • Sir John A. Macdonald Prize, 2015 “… breaks new ground in multiple ways, especially through the use of elite histories to interrogate changing authority relations over multiple generations. In the process, it reshapes our understanding of class, culture, and social relations.” –Bettina Bradbury, York University

A Church with the Soul of a Nation Making and Remaking the United Church of Canada Phyllis D. Airhart Finalist • Canada Prize in the Humanities, 2015 “… will stand for a long time as the most thoughtfully and thoroughly developed judgment and will be the gold standard against which other efforts to interpret the history of the United Church must be measured.” –Mark Noll, University of Notre Dame

The Canadian Oral History Reader Edited by Kristina R. Llewellyn, Alexander Freund, and Nolan Reilly An indispensable collection of state-of-the-art work in oral history by Canadian scholars.

Visibly Canadian Imaging Collective Identities in the Canadas, 1820–1910 Karen Stanworth “… makes a powerful argument for why visual culture matters, and how historians can enrich our understanding of the past by paying attention to images of all kinds.” –Gillian Poulter, Acadia University

The Idea of Liberty in Canada during the Age of Atlantic Revolutions, 1776–1838 Michel Ducharme Translated by Peter Feldstein Winner (original French edition) • Sir John A. Macdonald Prize, 2011 “This will be an unavoidable text in the literature on the history of ideas in Quebec.” –Ollivier Hubert, Université de Montréal

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