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Canadian Société Historical historique where people meet history and history meets people | au carrefour de l’histoire et des collectivités Association du Canada 2.3 2019 Decolonizing and Indigenizing a University History Department La décolonisation et l’indigénisation d’un départment d’histoire universitaire The Audacity of His Enterprise Louis Riel and the Métis Nation That Canada Never Was, 1840–1875 M. Max Hamon Cloth $39.95 478pp December 2019 New and Forthcoming Books Ordinary Saints Women, Work, and Faith in Newfoundland Bonnie Morgan Harold Innis Paper $37.95 368pp November 2019 Biography, Cultural Memory, and the Continental Fur Trade William J. Buxton Paper $37.95 336pp Friends, Foes, and Furs November 2019 George Nelson’s Lake Winnipeg Journals, 1804–1822 Harry W. Duckworth Cloth $65.00 568pp The Greater Gulf November 2019 Essays on the Environmental History of the Gulf of St. Lawrence Edited by Claire Elizabeth Campbell, Edward MacDonald, and Brian Payne Paper $34.95 384pp Hinterland Remixed November 2019 Media, Memory, and the Canadian 1970s Andrew Burke Paper $29.95 248pp 14 photos The Clean Body A Modern History Peter Ward Cloth $37.95 368pp November 2019 Brewed in the North A History of Labatt’s Matthew Bellamy Cloth $34.95 536pp McGill-Queen’s University Press mqup.ca October 2019 Follow us on Facebook and Twitter @McGillQueensUP INTERSECTIONS 7 News from the Field | Nouvelles du milieu 2.3 | SOMMAIRE INSIDE Experiments in Decolonizing & Indigenizing 14 Violer la femme, tuer le peuple 3 16 The Sexual Harassment Survey -
Labour History and the Interlocking Hierarchies of Class, Ethnicity, and Gender: a Canadian Perspective*
International Review of Social History 44 (1999), pp. 197–215 1999 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis SUGGESTIONS AND DEBATES Labour History and the Interlocking Hierarchies of Class, Ethnicity, and Gender: A Canadian Perspective* R UTH A. FRAGER ‘‘No nation is supposed to be so advanced as the British nation, no race so progressive as the white’’, declared Cotton’s Weekly, the newspaper of the Social Democratic Party of Canada. ‘‘BUT HERE IN TORONTO NO CHINESE, NO HINDOOS, NO JAPS, NO INDIANS, NO BLACKS, NO FOREIGNERS NEED BE IMPORTED. WHITE GIRLS AND MEN OF BRITISH BIRTH BREAK THE STRIKES.’’1 It was 1911. The newspaper was commenting on strike-breaking by ‘‘white’’ workers during a strike at a Toronto garment factory where male and female Jews had walked out. The newspaper compared this with cases out West: ‘‘In British Columbia when miners rise up in rebellion against the shameful conditions, Chinese are brought into the mines. In this and other western provinces, Japs, Hindoos, and Indians fill the places of the white toilers because they live on cheaper food and under such intolerable conditions no white people can stand it.’’2 Focusing on the Toronto strike, the newspaper’s disgust with those who refused to join ‘‘strikers who are brave enough to struggle for human treat- ment’’3 centred on the cutters, who were skilled Anglo-Celtic males, and on the Anglo-Celtic female strike-breakers. ‘‘Craft Unionism was shown up as selfish’’, declared the paper, not only because these cutters scabbed but also because English-speaking men from other craft unions refused the Jewish strikers’ request to try to persuade the cutters to join the strike.4 Women * I thank Lynne Marks, Carmela Patrias, and Don Wells for all their help. -
The Congress CHA Business Office During Congress Is Located in the History Department, 573 Glenridge Avenue (GL 228)
2014 CHA ANNUAL MEETING / RÉUNION ANNUELLE 2014 DE LA SHC UNIVERSITÉ BROCK UNIVERSITY The Congress CHA business office during congress is located in the History Department, 573 Glenridge Avenue (GL 228) Le bureau de la SHC durant le congrès est dans le département d’histoire au 573, avenue Glenridge (GL228) Sunday, 25 May 2014 / Dimanche, 25 mai 2014 20.00 – 21.30 (Academic South Block 215) 1. Sochi and Beyond: Russia’s Anti-Gay Legislation, Human Rights and the Practice of History / Après Sotchi : la législation anti gay de la Russie, les droits de la personne et la pratique de l'histoire Roundtable discussion / Table ronde Facilitator / Facilitateur : Yves Frenette Participants : Michael Dawson Lyle Dick Erica Fraser Dominique Marshall 19.00 – 23.00 2. Graduate Student Social Merchant Ale House, 98 St. Paul St. in downtown / au centre-ville de St. Catharines MONDAY, 26 MAY 2014 / LUNDI, 26 MAI 2014 8.30 – 10.30 3. Ethnicity, Multiculturalism, and Transnationalism / Ethnicité, multiculturalisme et transnationalisme Animator/animatrice: Carolyn Podruchny (York University, Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Co-editor / Corédactrice de la Revue de la Société historique du Canada) Aitana Gula (York University): We are Al-Andalus: Muslims, Memory, and the Politics of Belonging in Democratic Spain Robert M. Zecker (St Francis-Xavier University): “Giving Reaction the Jitters”: Radical Slavs, Interracial Organizing and Other ‘Un-American’ Ideas, 1930-1954 Russell A. Kazal (University of Toronto): Pluralists of the World: “World Thinking”, -
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15-0622 Dept of History Newsletter.qxp 11/12/15 3:13 PM Page 1 ChroniclesNEWSLETTER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Fall 2015. Vol. VI In one of the leaders’ debates, Mr. perhaps we might consider doing what Trudeau advocated for going into debt any entrepreneur does – borrow capital to leverage the funds necessary to in- to finance the hiring of the new faculty vest in future growth and prosperity. who will underwrite the future’s growth. Interest rates have never been lower, Such, anyway, are the idle musings that he declared. It has never been cheaper preoccupy so many of us as we seek to to borrow for the capital we need to cope with the new budget world we compete tomorrow. As you may know, inhabit and the future it portends. the university adopted recently a The second thing that emerged from budget model premised on the elimina- the campaign was that I cannot recall tion of deficits and the binding of de- the word “university” ever being said partmental funding to departmental by any of the candidates except in enrolments. At present the Department conjunction with a Liberal promise for has to close a gap of almost $800,000 first nations’ scholarships. To be sure, between what past budgets once pro- Ontario’s universities lie not within the vided to us and what the new budget purview of Ottawa but rather within will give based on our enrolment pro- that of Queen’s Park. But unlike in file. The new model seeks to liberate Australia or New Zealand where within faculty-members entrepreneurial universities are considered corner- energy to make-up for diminishing gov- stones of economic development, ernment funding by raising enrolments, From the Chair universities in Ontario, and perhaps creating new programs, cutting where Professor James Carson in Canada too, have fallen off the we can cut, and, for the time being, not public map. -
An Index to Labour / Le Travail Volumes 63 & 64, 2009
Document généré le 27 sept. 2021 17:41 Labour / Le Travail An Index to Labour / Le Travail Volumes 63 & 64, 2009 Volume 65, printemps 2010 URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/llt65ind01 Aller au sommaire du numéro Éditeur(s) Canadian Committee on Labour History ISSN 0700-3862 (imprimé) 1911-4842 (numérique) Découvrir la revue Citer ce document (2010). An Index to Labour / Le Travail Volumes 63 & 64, 2009. Labour / Le Travail, 65, 263–279. All rights reserved © Canadian Committee on Labour History, 2010 Ce document est protégé par la loi sur le droit d’auteur. L’utilisation des services d’Érudit (y compris la reproduction) est assujettie à sa politique d’utilisation que vous pouvez consulter en ligne. https://apropos.erudit.org/fr/usagers/politique-dutilisation/ Cet article est diffusé et préservé par Érudit. Érudit est un consortium interuniversitaire sans but lucratif composé de l’Université de Montréal, l’Université Laval et l’Université du Québec à Montréal. Il a pour mission la promotion et la valorisation de la recherche. https://www.erudit.org/fr/ an index to labour/le travail volumes 63 & 64, 2009 A ARNESEN, Eric – Faction figure: James P. Cannon, early ACTIVISM communist history, and radical faith; – A Hard Rain Fell: SDS and Why It review essay. 63 (Spring 2009) 243–58 Failed; book review. 63 (Spring 2009) ARREDONDO, Gabriela F. 319–21 – Mexican Chicago: Race, Identity, and AFGHANISTAN Conflict, 2001– Nation, 1916–39; book review. 64 (Fall – Creating a Failed State: The US and 2009) 257–8 Canada in Afghanistan; book report. ARTISANS John W. Warnock. -
Programme of the 82 Annual Meeting of the Canadian
PROGRAMME OF THE 82nd ANNUAL MEETING OF THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY, HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 29-31 MAY 2003 TUESDAY 27 MAY 2003 MARDI 27 MAI 2003 1:00 - 5:00 / 1 h - 17 h McCain 2104 CHA Executive Meeting Réunion de l'exécutif de la S.H.C. WEDNESDAY 28 MAY 2003 MERCREDI 28 MAI 2003 9:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h McCain 2116 CHA Council Meeting Réunion du conseil d'administration de la S.H.C. 11:00 - 5:00 / 11 h - 17 h McCain 2118 Meeting of Chairs of History Departments Réunion des directeurs(trices) des départements d'histoire 9:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h Scotiabank Auditorium, McCain Building / Salle Scotiabank, Édifice McCain Event of related interest: Symposium on education for the professions Réunion connexe : symposium sur la formation des professionnels THURSDAY 29 MAY 2003 JEUDI 29 MAI 2003 8:30 - 5:00 / 8 h 30 - 17 h McCain 2nd floor/McCain 2ième étage Canadian Historical Association / Canadian Committee on History and Computing Computer Poster / Demonstration Session Société historique du Canada / Comité canadien d'histoire et d'informatique Séance de démonstration informatique 8:30 - 10:00 / 8 h 30 - 10 h McCain 2022 1. Cultural Tension and Identity of Professors in Canada and the United States: Refugees, Radicalism, and Visual Representation, 1890-1945 Tension culturelle et identité des professeurs au Canada et aux États-Unis. Réfugiés, radicalisme et image, 1890-1945 Kimberly Marinucci, New York University Seeds of Radicalism: American Professors in the Public Domain, 1926-1934 E.L. Panayotidis, University of Calgary Visual Caricature in the Depiction of "Intellectual Icebergs": Constructing Professorial Identities Through the Visual, 1898-1915 Paul Stortz, University of Calgary Challenges to Ethnic Hegemony: Socio-Academic Response to Refugee Professors at the University of Toronto, 1935-1945Chair and commentator/Président et commentateur: Reginald Stuart, Mount Saint Vincent University 8:30 - 10:00 / 8 h 30 - 10 h McCain 2104 2. -
Report on Lord Dalhousie's History on Slavery and Race
Report on Lord Dalhousie’s History on Slavery and Race AUGUST, 2019 Scholarly panel Dr. Afua Cooper: Chair Professor Françoise Baylis Dean Camille Cameron Mr. Ainsley Francis Dr. Paul Lovejoy Mr. David States Dr. Shirley Tillotson Dr. H.A. Whitfield Ms. Norma Williams Research Support Ms. Jalana Lewis, Lead Researcher Ms. Kylie Peacock Mr. Wade Pfaff With contributions from Dr. Karly Kehoe and Dr. Isaac Saney 3 REPORT ON LORD DALHOUSIE’S HISTORY ON SLAVERY AND RACE COVER: MEMORIAL OF GABRIEL HALL OF PRESTON, A BLACK REFUGEE WHO EMIGRATED TO THE COLONY OF NOVA SCOTIA DURING THE WAR OF 1812 PHOTOGRAPHER GEORGE H. CRAIG, MARCH 1892 COURTESY: NOVA SCOTIA ARCHIVES Table of Contents Note from Dr. Teri Balser, Interim President and Vice-Chancellor.....................................................................................6 Note from Dr. Afua Cooper, Chair of the Panel and Lead Author of the Report ...............................................................7 Foreward to the Lord Dalhousie Report by Dr. Kevin Hewitt, Chair of the Senate ...........................................................9 Executive Summary for the Lord Dalhousie Report .........................................................................................................11 1.0 Dalhousie University’s Historic Links to Slavery and its Impact on the Black Community: Rationale for the Report ............................................................................................................................................17 1.1 Dalhousie College: A legacy -
Workers and Canadian History I
Gregory S. Kealey Review Article Workers and Canadian History I The Condition of the Working Class in Toronto-1900-1921. by Michael J. Piva. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 1979. Pp. xviii, 190. Paper. A Culture in Conflict: Skilled Workers and Industrial Capitalism in Hamilton, Ontario, 1860-1914. by Bryan D. Palmer. Montreal: MeGill-Queen's University Press, 1979. Pp. xviii, 331. $23.50. Paper, $10.95. 'Dangerous Foreigners ': European Immigrant Workers and Labour Radicalism in Canada, 1896-1930. by Donald Avery. Toronto: Mc Clelland and Stewart, 1979. Pp. 204. Paper, $6.95. Romantic nationalism has been the major ingredient of the few Cana dian historical work1; which have appealed to popular audiences. There can be little doubt that the attractiveness of the Laurentian syn thesis of Donald Creighton, for example, lay in its proud story of na tion building. When he and his generation of Canadian historians turned their pens away from the country's economic development which figured so prominently in their work in the 1930s, they reiterated the sar:ne theme through larger than life biographical studies of the men who embodied the national ideal. If the period before 1960 was a time for national celebration, the years which have followed have been decades of significant reassessment. This has been particularly true in Canadian historical writing where the Laurentian thesis has been subjected to withering critiques. Social history has provided one vantage point from which the elegance of Creightonian history seems more wishful than factual. Within social history, studies of the Canadian working class question have been particularly prominent in questioning the older synthesis. -
Bibliography of Canadian Educational History / Bibliographie D'histoire De
127 Historical Studies in Education / Revue d’histoire de l’éducation BIBLIOGRAPHY / BIBLIOGRAPHIE Bibliography of Canadian Educational History / Bibliographie d’histoire de l’éducation canadienne Compiled by / compilée par Kristin Hall This issue continues the bibliography on Canadian educational history and related fields most recently listed in volume 26, number 2 (Fall 2014). Please note that suggestions for possible inclusion in the bibliography of Canadian educational history are welcome and should be forwarded to the Historical Studies in Education editorial team. Nous poursuivons ici notre bibliographie de l’histoire de l’éducation au Canada et autres domaines connexes, bibliogra- phie dont la dernière mis à jour fut effectuée dans le volume 26, numéro 2 (automne 2014). S’il-vous-plaît, noter que les suggestions pour une éventuelle inclusion dans la bibliographie de l’éducation canadienne sont les bienvenues et doivent être envoyées à l’équipe éditoriale de la Revue d’histoire de l’éducation. Journals systematically searched include/Les périodiques qui ont fait l’objet d’un dépouille- ment systématique sont : Acadiensis, Alberta History, BC Studies, British Journal of Educational Studies, Canadian and International Education, Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin ca- nadien d’histoire du médecine, Canadian Ethnic Studies/Études éthniques au Canada, Canadian Geographer/Géographe canadien, Canadian Historical Review, Canadian Journal of Education/ Revue canadienne de l’éducation, Canadian Journal of Higher Education/La revue -
The Perpetuation of the Rural Ideal at the Wellington County Museum and Archives
Exhibition and Ideology: The Perpetuation of the Rural Ideal at the Wellington County Museum and Archives by Robyn Graham A Thesis presented to The University of Guelph In partial fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Guelph, Ontario, Canada © Robyn Graham, May, 2013 ABSTRACT Exhibition and Ideology: The Perpetuation of the Rural Ideal at the Wellington County Museum and Archives Robyn Graham Advisor: University of Guelph, 2013 Professor Alan Gordon This thesis is an analysis of the rural ideal as it resonates through exhibition at local county museums in southern Ontario. This study brings attention to the potential for museums to perpetuate the rural ideal through the manner in which they frame artifacts and create historical displays. Through a combination of a through historiography which features public history, museums, and rural history, this thesis argues that museums work in a similar manner as text or images to identify with an ideology. Utilizing the Wellington County Museum and Archives as a case study, exhibits of the institution are deconstructed to demonstrate their association with the ideal and the potential influence this may possess on audiences. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First, I would like to thank the Archivist, Karen Wagner, and the entire staff at the Wellington County Museum and Archives for taking the time to help me search through their extensive collection. There were many days when I would walk into the building and have no idea what I was looking for. On those days, I relied heavily on the staff that took an interest in my research and listened intently as I tried to explain what my thesis was and use their extensive knowledge of the archives to figure out which materials would aid in my search – subsequently pushing out cart after cart of boxes for me to sift through. -
Introduction: Canadian Tourism History
Introduction: Canadian Tourism History BEN BRADLEY and J. I. LITTLE* REFLECTING the fact that tourism has been the world’s fastest growing industry in recent decades, the relatively new field of tourism history is expanding rapidly.1 In doing so, it has moved well beyond the traditional top-down focus on major industrial and institutional players such as transcontinental railway companies and government agencies to examine topics such as “popular” (or non-elite) tourist practices, the role played by small-scale entrepreneurialism, tourism’s effects on rural areas and small towns, and its complicated environmental consequences. There is still no general history of tourism in Canada, however, and this is the first collection of articles dedicated to the subject.2 These articles originated with a workshop held in Vancouver in October 2014. It was funded by a SSHRC Connections grant as well as Simon Fraser University, with the assistance of the Network in Canadian History and Environment (NiCHE). Titled “Landscape, Nature, and Memory: Tourism History in Canada,” the workshop had a largely cultural and social focus, though every presentation reminded us that tourism is a business with a long economic history. The papers selected for this publication also demonstrate how tourism history now draws from other emergent fields including environmental history, commemoration studies, and mobility studies. This collection has a broad temporal and geographic range, and its themes include * Ben Bradley, Grant Notley Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of History & Classics at the University of Alberta, and Jack Little, professor emeritus in the Department of History at Simon Fraser University, are the guest editors of this issue of Histoire sociale / Social History.