PROGRAMME FINAL DE LA 79e RÉUNION ANNUELLE DE LA SOCIÉTÉ HISTORIQUE DU CANADA UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON, ALBERTA et FACULTÉ SAINT-JEAN, EDMONTON, ALBERTA du 27 - 29 mai 2000
Le congrès de la S.H.C. se déroule cette année á l'Université de l'Alberta á Edmonton. Fondée en 1908, l'Université de l'Alberta compte environ 30 000 étudiants á temps plein et environ 3 000 professeurs permanents ou en voie de permanence. Une partie des activités se déroulent á la Faculté Saint-Jean de l'Université de l'Alberta. Également fondée en 1908, la Faculté Saint-Jean (une institution francophone, autrefois désignée sous le nom de collège Saint-Jean) est située á environ trois kilomètres du campus de l'Université de l'Alberta. L'inscription, le salon des exposants et la plupart des séances et des activités ont cependant lieu en plein cœur du campus de l'Université de l'Alberta. En fait, sauf pour les séances á la Faculté Saint-Jean du dimanche matin 28 mai, les séances de la S.H.C. se déroulent dans l'édifice «Henry Marshall Tory» et l'édifice adjacent au «Tory Building» le «Business Building» de la Faculté d'administration, tous deux situés en plein centre du campus (voir les plans du site ou d'autres feuillets). La séance plénière est prévue pour le dimanche après-midi 28 mai de 13 h 30 á 15 h 20 au «Tory Lecture Theatre B2». Il s'agit d'une séance coparrainée par la Société royale du Canada. Le conférencier invité est Irwin Cotler et le thème de la conférence est celui des droits de la personne. Cette séance plénière sera suivie par le discours du président de la Société historique du Canada, Irving Abella, á 15 h 30, également au «Tory Lecture Theatre B2», et la réception du président de la Société á 17 h au Lister Hall. Le programme comporte également plusieurs activités organisés conjointement avec la Société royale du Canada, l'Association canadienne d'étude indigène et autochtone (en anglais la «Canadian IndigenousNative Studies Association»), la «Jewish Historical Association», le Comité canadien sur l'histoire et l'informatique, l'ONF et l'«Encyclopédie du Canada».Enfin, il est sans doute utile de noter que le secrétariat de la S.H.C. est situé pour la durée du colloque sur le campus de l’Université de l’Alberta, dans la pièce T-2-58 du «Tory Building». FINAL PROGRAM OF THE 79Th ANNUAL MEETING OF THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON, ALBERTA and FACULTÉ SAINT-JEAN, EDMONTON, ALBERTA MAY 27 - 29 2000
This year, the CHA Congress takes place at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. Founded in 1908, the University of Alberta has approximately 30,000 students and 3,000 professors who are permanent or working toward their permanency. Some of the activities will be held at the Faculté Saint-Jean of the University of Alberta. Also founded in 1908, the Faculté Saint-Jean (a francophone institution, formerly known as Collège Saint-Jean) is located about three kilometres from the University of Alberta campus. However, registration, the exhibitors' show and most of the meetings and activities take place in the heart of the University of Alberta campus. Except for the sessions at the Faculté Saint-Jean, on Sunday morning, May 28, the CHA sessions are being held in the Henry Marshall Tory Building and the building adjacent to the Tory Building, the Business Building of the Faculty of Administration, both located in the very centre of the campus (see the maps on site or on the form). The plenary session will be held on Sunday afternoon, May 28, from 1:30 to 3:20 in Tory Lecture Theatre B2. This session is co-sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada. The guest speaker is Irwin Cotler and the session theme is human rights. Following the plenary session, the president of the Canadian Historical Association, Irving Abella, will deliver a speech at 3:30, also in Tory Lecture Theatre B2, and the reception hosted by the Association president will be held at 5:00 in Lister Hall. The program also includes several activities organized jointly with the Royal Society of Canada, the Canadian Indigenous/Native Studies Association, the Jewish Historical Association, the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science, the Association for Canadian Studies, the Canadian Committe on Women’s History, the Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality, the Canadian History and Computer Science Committee, the NFB and the Canadian Encyclopedia. Also, it is useful to note that, for the duration of the conference, the CHA secretariat will be located on the University of Alberta campus, in Room T-2-58 of the Tory Building. THURSDAY 25 MAY 2000 JEUDI 25 MAI 20002:00 - 5:00 Henry Marshall Tory Building T3-02 CHA Executive Meeting Réunion de l'exécutif de la S.H.C. FRIDAY 26 MAY 2000 VENDREDI 26 MAI 20009:00 - 5:00 Tory Breezeway TB 104 CHA Council Meeting Réunion du conseil d'administration de la S.H.C. SATURDAY 27 MAY 2000 SAMEDI 27 MAI 20009:00 - 10:15 Business Building1-05 1. Popular, Public and Postmodern:The Uses of History Les facettes de l’histoire populaire, de l’histoire publique et de l’histoire postmoderne David J. Regeczi, Queen's University Tired Conventions:A Historical and Rhetorical Analysis of the Academic Historian's Relationship with Non-Academic HistoryWayne A. Hunt, Mount Allison University he Public Uses and Abuses of History:Foundationalism, Communication Technology, and the Creation of Political Identities-the case of the 'Third Way' Chair/Président: Donald Wright, St. Thomas University
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-06 2. Constructing Imperial Identities La construction de l’identité impériale Wade A. Henry, University of British Columbia Imagining the Great White Mother and the Great King: Aboriginal Tradition and Royal Representation at the 'Great Pow-wow' of 1901Peter Henshaw, Queen's University Canada as a 'Region' within the British Empire:John Buchan's Conception of Canadian Identity, 1935-40 Chair/Président: Richard Connors, University of Alberta
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-09 3. The Commodification of North American Sports and Leisure in the Early 20th Century La réification des sports et des loisirs en Amérique du Nord au début du XXe siècle Doug Bailie, University of Alberta 'Profitable Leisure': The Motion Picture Industry's Fight Against Amusement Taxes in Canada, 1918-1930Stacy L. Lorenz, Augustana University College Media, Culture, and Community:Canadians in a 'World of Sport', 1870-1939Lana S. Muck, University of Alberta Fighting Irish Spirit:Notre Dame Football and Irish Catholic Identity in the United States, 1918-1931 Chair/Président(e):TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-10 4. Canadian Business and Enemy Submarines Le commerce et les sous-marins ennemis Sean Rogers, Mount Allison University The Economic Consequences of German Submarine Warfare Against Canada During the Second World War: The Case of Nova Scotia SteelSteve Salmon, National Archives of Canada ...this d----d Vaudreuil’: The Marine Investments of the Home Bank, 1916-1923 Chair/Président: Ken Cruikshank, McMaster University
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 3-06 5. National History in Canada: The View from a New Generation L’histoire nationale au Canada. Le point de vue d’une nouvelle génération Tammy Nemeth, University of British Columbia Re-examining National HistoryAnthony Price, University of British Columbia Finding the Nation in North-Western British Columbia: Populism and the Local CommunityDominique Clement, University of British Columbia Finding the Nation in Ottawa: Parliamentary Supremacy and the Spy Trials of 1946-9 Chair/Président: Michiel Horn, York University
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 2-05 6. No New Deals, Just Bad Deals:The Unemployed, Veterans and Teachers in Canada During the Great Depression Une Nouvelle Donne sans espoir.Les chômeurs, les anciens combattants et les enseignants au Canada pendant la Crise Erik J. Strikwerda, University of Alberta From Short-Term Emergency to Long-Term Crisis:Public Works Relief in Saskatoon, 1929-1932Lara Campbell, Queen’s University 'We Who Have Wallowed in the Mud of Flanders':World War One Veterans and the Great Depression in Ontario, 1929-1939Sheila Cavanagh, University of Western Ontario The Ontario Teacher's Board of Reference Act of 1938:A Case Study of Discipline and Relations Cases Involving Elementary Public School Women Teachers:Ontario, 1938-48 Chair/Présidente: Jennifer Jay, University of Alberta
8:30 - 10:00 Central Academic Building 357 7. Chemical Research in Montreal La recherche en chimie á Montréal TBA/Á communiquerJames P. Hull, Okanagan University College Federal Science and the Development of Industrial Chemistry at McGillTBA/Á communiquer Chair/ Président(e): TBA/ Á communiquer Session sponsored by the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science Séance organisée par la Société canadienne d’histoire et philosophie des sciences
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-05 8. Irish Identities in the Province of Quebec L’identité irlandaise au Québec Gillian I. Leitch, Université de Montréal Irish Identity and the Founding of Saint Patrick's MontrealRobert J. Grace, Université Laval Irish Community Development in a Catholic City Chair/Président: Peter Gossage, Université de Sherbrooke
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-06 9. Civilized Drinking in Canada Civisme et consommation d’alcool au Canada H. Julia Roberts, University of Toronto Ely Playter's Tavern in York, Upper Canada:Perspectives on a Crafted Cultural EnvironmentGreg Marquis, University of New Brunswick Civilized Drinking:Alcohol and Society in New Brunswick, 1945-1975 Chair/Présidente: Cheryl Warsh, Malaspina University College
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-09 10. History and Theory Histoire et théorie Morris Altman, University of Saskatchewan Staple Theory and Export-Led Growth:Constructing Differential GrowthRick Szostak, University of Alberta A Scheme for Unifying Human Research:Its Implications for Historical Science Chair/Présidente: Rosemary Ommer, University of Calgary
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-10 11. The Boundary Between Civilization and Fascism:Reactions of Politicians, Workers, and Pacifists Outside Germany to the Rise of Hitler La ligne de démarcation entre civilisation et fascisme.La réaction des politiciens, des travailleurs et des pacifistes hors de l’Allemagne face á la montée d’Hitler Clement Leibovitz, Independent Scholar The British Establishment Assesses Hitler, 1933-1939Alvin Finkel, Athabasca University So Where Were the Workers While Hitler Armed?Popular and Elite Reactions to the Rise of Nazism and Fascism:Evidence from Britain, France and the United StatesGeorgina M. Taylor, Editor, Saskatchewan History Internationalism, Co-operation, and Feminist Pacifism:The Friendship of Emmy Freundlich and Violet McNaughton Chair/Président: Dennis Sweeney, University of Alberta
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 2-05 12. Leisure, Sport, and the Construction of Gender in Ontario's Women's Academies, Colleges, and Camps Les loisirs, le sport et la construction de l’identité sexuelle dans les pensionnats, les collèges et les camps de femmes en Ontario Elizabeth Smyth, OISE Convent Schools, Calisthenics and Concert Halls:Constructing Gender/Gendering ConstructionAnna Lathrop, Brock University 'Strap a Compass and Knife and Axe to your Belt':The role of wilderness training in the socialization of women at The Margaret Eaton School, 1925-1942Susan L. Forbes, Brock University 'Nothing But a Rag Between You and the Sky': Northway Lodge Girls' Camp and the Wilderness Experience Chair/Présidente: Linda Kealey, Memorial University of Newfoundland Session sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History and the Canadian Women's Studies Association Séance organisée par le comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes et l’Association canadienne des études sur les femmes
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 2-09 13. The Canadian History Electronic Resource Centre Le centre de ressources électroniques sur l’histoire canadienneJosé Igartua, Université du Québec á Montréal, Bob Hesketh, and Chris Hackett, Chinook Multimedia Inc.
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 3-06 Distinguished Speaker, Dr. Paul Staudohar, Professor of Business Administration, California State University, Hayward Conférencier invité : M. Paul Staudohar, professeur en Administration des affaires, California State University, Hayward Chair/Président: David Mills, University of Alberta Dr. Staudohar’s talk will address one of the main themes of the conference: Popular Culture, especially Sport and Leisure Studies. Dans sa conférence, M. Staudohar traitera d’un desprincipaux thèmes du congrès, á savoir la culture populaire, et plus spécialement le sport et les loisirs. Dr. Staudohar is author of: Grievance Arbitration in Public Employment, The Sports Industry and Collective Bargaining, and Industrial Relations in a New Age.He has edited Baseball’s Best Short Stories and has co-edited The Business of Professional Sports. Le professeur Staudohar est l’auteur de Grievance Arbitration in Public Employment, The Sports Industry and Collective Bargaining, et Industrial Relations in a New Age.Il a été directeur du recueil de Baseball’s Best Short Stories et a codirigé The Business of Professional Sports.
10:15 - 12:00 Central Academic Building 357 14. Canadian Views of Science Canadian Views of Science Kenneth Pryke, University of Windsor Acadian Mines and the Development of Nova Scotia, 1846-1871Jean-Louis Trudel Marie-Victorin and his Flore Laurentienne: The Scientist as Nation-BuilderStephen T. Koerner, independent scholar Canada and the Post-War Reparations Programme Chair/Président(e): TBA/ Á communiquerL Session sponsored by the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science Séance parrainée par la Société canadienne d’histoire et philosophie des sciences
12:00- 1:20 Business Building Business meetings / Séances de travail 1-23: Chairs of History Departments Directeurs des départements d’histoire1-27: Canadian Military History Group Groupe en histoire militaire1-31: Canadian Urban History Association Société canadienne d’histoire urbaine4-05: Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la sexualité4-13: Canadian Committee on Labour History Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travailB-06: Environmental History Group Groupe d’études en histoire de l’environnementB-09: Economic Historians in Canada Groupe d’études en histoire économique du CanadaB-10: Canadian Committee on the History of the Second World War Comité canadien d’histoire de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-05 15. Creating Recreational Space L’aménagement des espaces récréatifs PearlAnn Reichwein, University of Alberta Holidays at the Banff School of Fine Arts: Culture, Nature, and Tourism in Banff National ParkKaren Wall, Red Deer College Old Strathcona:Invisible Cities and the Shop for MeaningKen Cruikshank and Nancy B. Bouchier, McMaster University Creating Urban Recreational Space:Class, Environment, and the Shaping of Hamilton's Summer Playground, Burlington Beach, 1870-1970 Chair/Président(e):TBA/Á communiquer
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-06 16. Canadians and Their Incomes Les revenus des Canadiens Eric Sager, University of Victoria A New Source on Wages and Earnings:The Canadian Census of 1901Alan Green, Queen's University and Mary MacKinnon, McGill University Immigrants to Canada, 1901: The View from East and the Last, Best West Chair/Président: Ken Norrie, University of Alberta
171:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-06 17. Abnormal Men, Pink Mules, and Pale, Ethereal Looking Lesbians:The Postwar Definition of Canadian Mores Les anormaux, les pantoufles roses, les lesbiennes pâles et éthérées.Les mœurs des Canadiens telles qu’on les définissait dans les années d’après-guerre Beckie Ross, University of British Columbia 'The Canadian Sky is Falling': Sex Crimes on Stage in the Post World War II EraNancy Renwick, Concordia University "By Silence Denied": Homosexuality in the Popular Media in Canada, 1958-1959 Chair/Présidente:Elise Chenier, Queen's University Sponsored by the Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality Session parrainée par le Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la sexualité
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-10 Editorial Board, Labour/Le Travail Comité de rédaction, Labour/Le Travail
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 2-05 18. Paths Not Taken: Three Revisionist Accounts of Canadian Federalism in the 1930s and 1940s Hors des sentiers battus.Trois révisionnistes expliquent le fédéralisme canadien des années 1930 et 1940 P. Bryden, Mount Allison University Ontario's National Aspirations:Reconstructing Federalism at the Dominion-Provincial Conference on ReconstructionT. Henderson, York University A Nation Made Safe for Provinces:Nova Scotia and the Rowell-Sirois ReportBarry Ferguson, University of Manitoba and Robert Wardhaugh, University of Winnipeg Impossible Conditions of Inequality: John W. Dafoe, the Rowell-Sirois Commission, and the Failed Re-making of Canadian Federalism Chair/Président: Doug Owram, University of Alberta
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 2-09 19. Canadian History in Film [Round Table] L’histoire du Canada dans les films [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: James Cullingham, Tamarack ProductionsLoretta Todd, National Film Board of CanadaAdam Symansky, National Film Board of CanadaGene Allen, Canadian Broadcasting CorporationBill Waiser, University of SaskatchewanLarry Hannant, Camosum CollegeChair/Président:Gerald Friesen, University of Manitoba
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 1-09 20. Canadians and Their Property Les Canadiens et leurs propriétés Ken Sylvester, University of Victoria All Things Being Equal:Land Ownership and Ethnicity in Rural Canada, 1901Kris Inwood, University of Guelph and Sue Ingram, Internet Solutions Property Ownership by Married Women in Victorian OntarioPeter Baskerville, University of Victoria Did Religion Make a Difference?: Religion and Landholding in Urban Canada, 1901 Chair/Président: Alan Green, Queen’s University
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 2-05 21. The Future of the History of Sexuality in Canada [Round Table] L’avenir de l’histoire de la sexualité au Canada [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: Robin Brownlie, University of TorontoRinaldo Scott, York UniversityBecki Ross, University of British ColumbiaChair/Présidente:Elise Chenier, Queen's University Session sponsored by the Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la sexualité
3:00- 4:15 Business Building 3-06 22. Power and Place: Boundaries of Settlement and Production in Historical Perspective Pouvoir et géographie. Une perspective historique sur les frontières de peuplement et de production John Walsh, University of Guelph Geographical Knowledge and the Emergence of the Ottawa-Huron Tract, 1841-1861Stephen High, University of Ottawa The Post-Industrial Facade of the Global Factory Chair/Président:Chad Gaffield, University of Ottawa
6:00 p.m Dinner sponsored by the Native Studies History Group to honour Dr. Mary Black-Rogers and the late Ed. Rogers.Details available from Jean Manore. Souper subventionné par le Groupe d’étude en histoire autochtone en l’honneur de Mme Mary Black-Rogers et du regretté Ed. Rogers.Renseignement : Jean Manore. SUNDAY 28 MAY 2000 DIMANCHE 28 MAI 20009:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 1-01, Faculté Saint-Jean Presentation of the NFB’s Web site on the history of Canada Présentation du site Web de l’ONF sur l’histoire du Canada Marie-Josée Therrien, Ph.D., ONF/NFB
9:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 3-01, Faculté St. Jean 23. Representations of Canadians and Canadiennes at the Time of the First World War La représentation des Canadiens et des Canadiennes á l’époque de la Première Guerre mondiale Ian Miller, Wilfrid Laurier University 'Entirely from the Standpoint of Patriotic Service': Toronto Women and the First World War Robert Rutherdale, University of British Columbia 'Vernacular Sites and Unlikenesses': Approaches to Communication and Social Differentiation on Canada's First World War Home Front Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 3-10, Faculté Saint-Jean 24. Crime and Punishment Crime et châtiment Pascal Bastien, Université Laval, Université de Paris-XIII Fêtes populaires et représentation du pouvoir dans le rituel de l'exécution publique, France, XVIIe-XVIIIe sièclesChris Dummitt, Simon Fraser University 'There Must Be Responsibility': Masculinity and the Modern Violence of Capital Murder in Vancouver, 1945-1968Brian Raychaba, McMaster University The Identities of Culpability: Capital Crime and Royal Prerogative of Mercy in Canada, 1919-1939 Chair/Président: R.C. Macleod, University of Alberta
9:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 3-26, Faculté Saint-Jean 25. Visions of Nation from Cultural Patriarchs La nation vue par les patriarches de la culture Michel Bock, Université d'Ottawa Les minorités françaises et le "séparatisme" de l'Action française de Montréal, 1917-1928Philip Massolin and Robert Cole, University of Alberta Robertson Davies' View of Canadian CultureKaren A. Finlay, University of Victoria Lawren Harris and Vincent Massey: Articulating Diversity Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 3-52, Faculté Saint-Jean 26. Separate Schools in a Distinct Society Les écoles séparées d’une société distincte Roderick MacLeod, McGill University 'Without Support From the Public': Building Schools for the City of Montreal's Protestant Community, 1850-1950Mary Anne Poutanen, McGill University ‘Unless She Gives Better Satisfaction': Teachers, Protestant Education, and Community in Rural Quebec, Lobacher and Gore District, 1863-1945 Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Room/salle 3-58, Faculté Saint-Jean 27. Law and State Authority in Colonial Societies, 1650-1800 La loi et le pouvoir étatique dans les sociétés coloniales, de 1650 á 1800 Christophe Horguelin, University of Toronto The Quebec Oligarchy and the Establishment of Royal Absolutism in Canada, 1645-1675James Muir, York University Law and Labouring People in Halifax, 1749-1765Jerry Bannister, Memorial University of Newfoundland The Naval State in Newfoundland, 1749-1791
Chair/Président: Allan Greer, University of Toronto Commentator/Commentaire: Donald Fyson, Université Laval
10:30 - 11:45 Room/salle 3-01, Faculté Saint-Jean 28. Representations of Canadians and Canadiennes during Wartime, Part II La représentation des Canadians et des Canadiennes en temps de guerre, 2e partie Jérôme Coutard, INRS-Culture et société, et Isabelle Dornic, Université Laval De l’usage des représentations en histoire : images croisées de femmes durant la Première Guerre mondiale au CanadaClaude Beauregard, Défense nationale Les populations civiles et la guerre au XXe siècle Chair/Président(e): TBA/ Á communiquer
10:30 - 11:45 Room/salle 3-28, Faculté Saint-Jean 29. Approaches to the Study of Families Les diverses façons d’aborder l’étude des familles Marvin McInnis, Queen's University A Comparative Perspective on the Historical Decline of Infant and Child Mortality in CanadaPeter Gossage, Université de Sherbrooke Canadian Stepfamilies at the Turn of the Twentieth CenturyDominique Marshall, Carleton University Canada and the League of Nations’ Child Welfare Committee Chair/Président: Gerhard Ens, University of Alberta
10:30 - 11:45 Room/salle 3-10, Faculté Saint-Jean 30. The Consumption and Production of Cloth and Clothing La consommation et la production de biens textiles Doug McCalla, Trent University Textile Purchases by Rural Upper Canadians, 1808-1861Béatrice Craig, University of Ottawa and Elizabeth Turcotte, Carleton University Market Orientation, Production Diversification and Domestic Cloth Production in Quebec and New Brunswick in the Nineteenth CenturyLouise Lamontagne, University of Toronto Flexible Production and the Reformation of a Man's Tailoring Bill: New York City's Men's Garment Industry, 1900-1920 Chair/Président: Ken Sylvestre, University of Victora and University of Alberta
10:30 - 11:45 Room/salle 3-26, Faculté Saint-Jean 31. Eighty Years of the RCMP: Two Tales Quatre-vingts ans d’histoire de la GRC. Deux récits Anthony Gulig, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Shifting Sands: Treaty Rights and Fish and Game Law Enforcement in Northern Saskatchewan, 1920-1945Steve Hewitt, University of Saskatchewan While Unpleasant it is a Service to Humanity: The RCMP's War on Drugs in the 1920s Chair/Président: Greg Marquis, University of New Brunswick
10:30 - 11:45 Room/salle 3-52, Faculté Saint-Jean 32. Presenting the Past: Rediscovering the Children of Peace and their Role in Canadian History Une réinterprétation du passé. Les Children of Peace et leur rôle dans l’histoire du Canada Heather MacDougall, University of Waterloo Sharing Knowledge, Building Skills: Public History and Client-Oriented ResearchRobynne Rogers Healey, University of Alberta 'Roaring Like Bulls and Barking Like Dogs': Academic and Popular Historians Telling the Story of Quakers in Canada Chair/Présidente: Jane Errington, Royal Military College
10:30 -11:45 Room/salle 1-01, Faculté Saint-Jean 33. Jim Marsh, McClelland and Stewart, The Canadian Encyclopedia Jim Marsh, McClelland et Stewart, L’encyclopédie du Canada
1:30 -3:20 Tory Lecture Theatre B2 Plenary Session on Human Rights: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Plénière sur les droits de la personne : perspectives historiques et contemporaines Chair/Présidente: Patricia Marchak Speaker/Conférencier: Irwin Cotler, M.P. Session co-sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada Séance parrainée par la Société royale du Canada
3:30 - 5:00 Tory Lecture Theatre B2 Canadian Historical Association Presidential Address Discours du Président de la Société historique du Canada Irving Abella, York University CHA Annual Meeting Assemblée annuelle de la S.H.C.
5:00 - 7:00 Lister Hall Banquet Room CHA's President's Reception Réception du Président de la S.H.C. MONDAY 29 MAY 2000 LUNDI 29 MAI 20009:00 - 12:00 Henry Marshall Tory Building 2-39 CHA Council Meeting Réunion du conseil d’administration de la S.H.C.
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-05 34. Constructing Urban Space in Calgary Le développement de l’habitat urbain á Calgary Bettina Liverant, University of Alberta Patterns on the Land: An Examination of Themes of Order and Wilderness in the Planning of the Region, Town and City of CalgaryWhitney Lackenbauer, University of Calgary The Politics of Contested Space: Controversy and the Construction of Currie Barracks Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-06 35. Rural Life through Literary Biography La vie rurale dans les biographies littéraires Kathryn Carter, Duke University Crossed Boundaries: Narrating Frontiers in Hilda Rose's Stump FarmSasha Mullally, University of Prince Edward Island Authoring an Archetype: Country Doctor Biographies in Cape Breton and Maine Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 -10:15 Business Building 1-09 36. Cultural Encounters of the NorthWestern Kind La rencontre des cultures dans le Nord-Ouest canadien George Colpitts, University of Alberta The Rise of Economy, Indian 'Needs,' and Early Nineteenth Century Fur Trade AccountsPaul Hackett, University of Manitoba Perilous Periphery: The Canada Northwest as Epidemic Hinterland During the First Half of the Nineteenth CenturyDuane Thomson, Okanagan University College Power Relationships in Interior Plateau of British Columbia in the Hudson Bay Company Era Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 1-10 37. Education and Identity on the Prairie West Éducation et identité dans les Prairies Amy von Heyking, Concordia University College Creating 'Western Canadians': Prairie Schools and Regional Identities, 1905 to the 1980sJames Enns, University of Calgary The Creation of Community Identity Through the Development of the Prairie Bible InstituteSonia Mycak, The University of New South Wales Regional and Cultural Identities Merge and Develop: Ukrainian Immigrants and Successive Generations of Ukrainian-Canadians of the Prairie Provinces Chair/Président(e): Barry Ferguson, University of Manitoba
Business Building 2-05 38. he Construction of Regional Identities Jeffrey L. McNairn, York University 'on the road to prosperity': The Literature of Travel and the Quest for Homo Oeconomicus in the Maritimes to 1850James D. Mochoruk, University of North Dakota> The Construction of a Regional Identity: Northern Manitoba on the Eve of Industrialization8.3 Cam McEachern, Queen's University Time's Grip Along the Athabasca, 1920s and 1930s Chair/Présidente: Randi Warne, Mount Saint Vincent University
Business Building 3-06 39. Part I: The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Never the Twain...? Maritime and Western Canadian IdentitiesCenturies Part I: The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Jamais la rencontre...? L’identité des Maritimes et de l’Ouest canadien. Première partie : les XVIIIe et XIXe siècles Première partie : les XVIIIe et XIXe siècles Ruth Sandwell, University of British Columbia The Limits of Modernity: Roughnecks and Resistance on Salt Spring Island, British Columbia, 1860-1900Michael Prokopow, Simon Fraser University 'Peculiar Munificence and Parental Care': The Role of the Imperial Sensibility in the Settlement and State Formation of New Brunswick, 1783-1820 Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
9:00 - 10:15 Business Building 2-09 40. Access to Information: Past, Present, and Future [Round Table] L’accès á l’information. Portrait rétrospectif, actuel et prospectif [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: John H. Bryden, Member of Parliament, Wentworth-BurlingtonHon. John Reid, Information Commissioner of CanadaDaniel German, Access Section, National Archives of CanadaSteve Hewitt, Dept. of History, University of SaskatchewanNormand Sirois, Head Disclosures, Access to Information and Privacy Section, Canadian Security Intelligence ServiceChair/Président: Gregory Kealey, Memorial University of Newfoundland
10:00 - 12:00 Tory Lecture Theatre II 41. Treaty Wrongs and Treaty Rights in the Treaty Six Area Corruption et résistance dans le territoire du Traité Six Theodore Binnema, University of Calgary Corruption in the Canadian Indian Affairs Department in the Laurier EraRobert Irwin, University of Alaska, Fairbanks No Means No: Ermineskin's Resistance to Land Surrender, 1905-1920Laurie Meijer Drees, Malaspina University College 'Nikanistimakewin,' Thing for the Future: The Political Thought of John Tootoosis and John Callihoo Chair/Président: John Tobias, Red Deer College Session co-sponsored by Canadian Indigenous/ Native Studies Association Séance parrainée par l’Association d’étude indigène et autochone
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-05 42. The Formation, Negotiation and Intersection of Identities La formation des identités, leur comparaison et leurs croisements Patricia L. Rogers, Michigan State University Nova Scotian Merchants in an Anglo-American Atlantic World: A Case Study of Colonial Identity Formation, 1780-1830 Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 1-10 43. Challenges to Ethnic Hegemony in Intellectual Community and Culture: Jewish Students and Professors at the University of Toronto, 1910-1950 L’enjeu de l’hégémonie ethnique dans les milieux intellectuel et culturel. Le cas des étudiants et des professeurs juifs á l’université de Toronto 1910-1950 Wyn Millar, Independent Scholar 'We Wanted Our Children Should Make it Better': Jewish Medical Students at the University of Toronto, 1910-1951Paul Stortz, OISE/University of Toronto 'We're a Living Death': Community, Campus, and Refugee Professors and the University of Toronto, 1935-1945Michiel Horn, York University Leopold Infeld, The Cold War, and Academic Freedom Chair/Président: Irving Abella, University of Toronto
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 2-09 44. Canadian Committee on History and Computing Poster and Computer Demonstration Le comité canadien sur l’histoire et l’informatique. Démonstration
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 3-06 45. Never the Twain...? Maritime and Western Canadian Identities Part II: The Twentieth Century Jamais la rencontre...? L’identité des Maritimes et de l’Ouest canadien. Seconde partie : le XXe siècle Jean Barman, University of British Columbia From Nova Scotia to British Columbia with the McQueen Sisters: The Transfer West of a Canadian Identity, 1887-1941Malcolm MacLeod, Memorial University of Newfoundland Articulating/Defending Regional Interests: Malcolm MacLeod at the 'Maritime Farmer', 1906-1935 Chair/Président: Paul Voisey, University of Alberta
10:30 - 11:45 Business Building 3-10 46. TBA/á communiquer Gerald Tulchinsky, Queen's University 'Justice and only justice thou shalt pursue': The Social Voice of Canada's Reform RabbisAnother paper to be provided by the JHS Une communication de la S.H.J. Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer Sponsored by the Jewish Historical Society Séance organisée par la Société d’histoire juive 47. Human Rights in Canda [Round Table] Les droits de la personne [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: Justice Rosalie Abella, Human Rights and Civil LibratiesDr. Kathleen Mahoney, Women’s RightsDr. John Borrow, "Listening for a Change": Aboriginal Oral History and the CourtsChair/Président: Marty Friedaland Session co-sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada Séance parrainée par la Société royale du Canada
12:00- 1:20 Business Building Business meetings / Séances de travail 1-23: Oral History Group Groupe d’histoire orale1-27: Native History Study Group Groupe d’étude en histoire autochtone1-31: Graduate Students' Group Regroupement des étudiant-es des cycles supérieurs3-05: Editorial Board, Histoire sociale/Social History Comité de rédaction, Histoire sociale/Social History4-05: H-Canada/ Canadian Committee on History and Computing H-Canada/Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique4-13: Canadian Committee on Women's History Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmesB-09: Northern History Group Groupe d’histoire nordiqueB-10: Business History Group Groupe d’histoire des affaires
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-05 48. The Construction of Rural Identities Le développement de l’identité rurale Cecilia Danysk, Western Washington University Corporate Agriculture vs. Family Farms: Qu'Appelle Valley Squatters and the Contest for Rural IdentityLaura A. Detre, University of Maine 'The Contented Farmer': Canadian Government Advertisements in the Newspapers of Fulton County Ohio, 1898-1914 Chair/Présidente: Ruth Sandwell, University of British Columbia
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-06 49. Discourse and Reality: The Native Experience Discours et réalité. L’expérience des autochtones R. Scott Sheffield, Wilfrid Laurier University Whither the Indian: The Image of the 'Indian' in English-Canada, the 'Indian problem', and the Special Joint Parliamentary Committee on the Indian Act, 1946-1948Miriam Wright, University of British Columbia Native Participation in the Commercial Salmon Fishery of Alert Bay, BC, 1945-1968 Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer Session sponsored by Canadian Indigenous/Native Studies Association Séance parrainée par l’Association d’étude indigène et autochtone
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 1-10 50. Bad Habits: Regulating Dependence on Masturbation, Drug Use, and Aboriginal Relief in Twentieth-Century Canada La masturbation, la consommation de drogues et l’aide gouvernementale aux autochtones. Des manières de contrôler ces fléaux au Canada, au XXe siècle Robin Brownlie 'Can You Spare a Dime?' Fear of Aboriginal Dependence and the Indian Department's Handling of Relief and Band Funds in Inter-War OntarioCatherine Carstairs, University of Toronto Regulation and Resistance: Policing Drug Users, 1945-1961Christabelle Sethna, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education Taken Hold of at the Right Time: Weaning Children from Masturbation Chair/Présidente: Wendy Mitchinson, University of Waterloo
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 2-05 . Women, Welfare and Work in Mid-20th Century Halifax Les femmes, la sécurité sociale et le travail á Halifax au milieu du XXe siècle Suzanne Morton, McGill University From Infant Homes to Day Care: Institutional Support for the Children of Single Mothers in Halifax, 1940-1975Shirley Tillotson, Dalhousie University The Politics of Need: Gender, Social Work, and Fundraising in Halifax, 1941 to 1953Judith Fingard, Dalhousie University Race, Gender and Domestic Service in Post-War Halifax Chair/Présidente: Frances Fwyripa, University of Alberta Sponsored by the Canadian Women's Studies Association Séance organisée par l’Association canadienne des études sur les femmes
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 2-09 52. Historians and the Media [Round Table] Les historiens et les médias [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British ColumbiaDoug Owram, University of AlbertaFranca Iacovetta, University of TorontoIrving Abella, York UniversityDavid Frank, University of New BrunswickGreg Kelly, Producer, "This Morning," CBCLinda Goyette, The Edmonton JournalMike Dawson, Queen’s UniversityChair/Présidente: Steve Hewitt, University of Saskatchewan
53. Boundaries and Community: Native Ranching and Heritage in the Interior of British Columbia Frontières et collectivités. Le ranching autochtone et le patrimoine dans l’intérieur de la Colombie-Britannique Mary-Ellen Kelm, University of Northern British Columbia Where Cowboys are Indians: Transcultural Communities and the Writing of Popular History in Western CanadaClaudette Gouger, University of Northern British Columbia Native Ranching in the Interior of British ColumbiaKen Favrholdt, Seewepeme Museum and Heritage Park Indian Cowboys: Native Employees on Ranches in British Columbia's Southern Interior Chair/Présidente: Sarah Carter, University of Calgary
1:30 - 2:45 Business Building 3-10 54. Journeys through the Maze: Historians and the Legal System Les historiens dans le dédale du système judiciaire Ronald Stevenson, Department of Justice Canada 'Living with the Dead’: A Lawyer’s Perspective on HistoriansBob Beal, Trent University Whose Facts? Historians and LawyersArthur J. Ray, University of British Columbia Courtroom as Classroom: First Nations' History in Court Chair/Président: Justice John McClung, Alberta Court of Appeal
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 1-05 55. Legislating Women's Freedoms L’encadrement de la liberté d’action des femmes Maureen G. Elgersman Lee, University of Southern Maine Classified Information: Black Women and Slavery in the Late 18th-Century Canadian PressRoderick G. Barman, University of British Columbia The Boundaries of Gender and Power: Princess Isabel of Brazil, 1846-1889-The Woman Who Would Not RuleTracy Penny Light, University of Waterloo Resisting Discourses: Medicine, Women and Abortion in Canada, 1945-1969 Chair/Président: David Johnson, University of Alberta
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 1-09 56. Boundaries of Challenge, Peripheries of Change: Native Responses in North American History Défis frontaliers et changements périphériques. La réponse des autochtones dans l’histoire de l’Amérique du Nord Murray Heckbert, University of New Brunswick Resistance in the Borderlands: The Kentucky Shawnee in a Revolutionary Age,1770-1775Susan Neylan, University of British Columbia Transforming Class Through Religion: Nineteenth Century Protestant Missions to the Tsimshian and the Construction of Social IdentityMartha Walls, Univeristy of New Brunswick Federal Electoral Legislation and Political Activity in Maritime Native Communities,1900-1951 Chair/Président(e): TBA/Á communiquer
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 2-05 57. Whither Aboriginal Historical Studies [Round Table] Où vont les études historiques autochtones ? [Table ronde]
Participants/Participantes: Mary Ellen Kelm, University of Northern British Columbia, The Challenges and Opportunities of Community-Based ResearchJanet Chute, Dalhousie University, History: The Lifeblood of the Prevailing Maritime Aboriginal Rights CampaignBarry Cottam, independent scholar/chercheur indépendantChris Anderson, University of AlbertaChair/Présidente: Jean Manore, Trent University Session co-sponsored by the Canadian Indigenous/ Native Studies Association Séance parrainée par l’Association d’étude indigène et autochone
3:00 - 5:00 Business Building 2-09 58. Human Rights and Crimes Against Humanity Les droits de la personne et les crimes contre l’humanité rving Abella, York University The Immigrant Experience and Human RightsJim Walker Defining Human Rights in Canada: What is the Question?Michael Mandel, Osgoode Hall Law School of York Politics and Human Rights in the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia: Our Case Against NATO and the lessons to be learned from it Chair/Présidente: Judith Fingard Session sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada Séance parrainée par la Société royale du Canada
3:00 - 4:15 Business Building 3-06 59. Jon Gjerde's Minds of the West, Book Review Session Discussion du livre Minds of the West de Jon Gjerde John Herd Thompson, Duke UniversityElizabeth Jameson, Texaco Chair in American Studies, University of CalgaryRoyden Loewen, University of WinnipegSheila McMannus, York University Chair/Président: Gerald Friesen, University of Manitoba TUESDAY 30 MAY 2000 MARDI 30 MAI 20009:00 Henry Marshall Tory Building 2-58 Canadian Historical Review editorial advisory board meeting Réunion A NOTE FROM THE PROGRAM CO-CHAIRSDear Friends and Colleagues, Welcome to the 79th annual Canadian Historical Association Congress. The main themes of this year's conference are: 1) The Discipline & the Profession: From Positivism to Postmodernism; 2) Boundaries and Peripheries; 3) Popular Culture, especially Sport and Leisure Studies; 4) Ideals and Infotech: Communications and Public History. We have the honour to welcome several special guest speakers, including Irwin Cotler, whose plenary session will focus on human rights; and Paul Staudohar, our distinguished speaker whose talk will examine the theme of sports and populuar culture; and historian colleagues from different parts of Canada and from outside the country. Participants will also be able to choose from about 60 activities and workshops of all kinds, some of which have been jointly organized with the Royal Society of Canada, the Association for Canadian Studies, the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science, the Canadian Committee on Women's History, the Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality, and the Canadian Indigenous/Native Studies Association. Located near the Old Strathcona area, on the south shore of the Saskatchewan River, the University of Alberta Campus offers many advantages, including a large number of cafés, restaurants, theaters, cinemas, bars, etc. In short, if the participants are not entirely taken up by purely intellectual and scientific matters, there will certainly be plenty to distract them during their stay in Alberta's capital. We wish you a pleasant stay in Edmonton, David Mills Claude Couture Co-Chairs 2000 Program Committee MESSAGE DES COPRÉSIDENTSChers amis et collègues, Bienvenue au 79e congrès annuel de la Société historique du Canada. Les grands thèmes du colloque de cette année sont : 1) La discipline historique. Du positivisme au postmodernisme; 2) Frontières et périphéries; 3) Culture populaire, sports et loisirs; 4) Infotech, communications et histoire publique. Nous avons l'honneur de recevoir á titre de conférenciers plusieurs invités spéciaux, notamment Irwin Cotler, don't la conférence plénière portera sur les droits de la personne, ainsi que des collègues historiens et historiennes d'un peu partout au pays et de l'extérieur du pays. Les congressistes pourront aussi choisir parmi une soixantaine d'activités et d'ateliers de toutes sortes, dont certains ont été conjointement organisés avec la Société Royale du Canada et l'Association indigène et autochtone du Canada. Situé á proximité du quartier «Old Strathcona», sur la rive sud de la rivière Saskatchewan, le campus de l'Université de l'Alberta offre aussi plusieurs avantages, don't un grand nombre de cafés, restaurants, théâtres, cinémas, bars, etc. Bref, les congressistes, s'ils ne sont pas entièrement absorbés par des tâches strictement intellectuelles et scientifiques, trouveront sûrement matière á se distraire au cours de leur séjour dans la capitale albertaine. Nous vous souhaitons donc un agréable séjour á Edmonton, David Mills Claude Couture Coprésidents Comité du programme 2000 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSAs co-chairs of the CHA 2000 Program Committee, we would like to thank a number of people who have supported us throughout the 18 to 20 months of preparation for the Congress. The CHA president, Irving Abella, gave us constant encouragement and we benefitted from the expertise of former CHA presidents, particularly the outgoing president, Greg Kealey. Other members of the Program Committee did excellent work and we would like to highlight these individuals for their contributions: Karen Dubinsky, Robynne Healy, Kris Inwood, Jeff Keshen, Valerie Korinek, Brian McKercher, PearlAnn Reichwein, John Thompson, Bill Waiser, Randi Warne. No CHA Congress could take place without the invaluable assistance and conscientious work of Joanne Mineault and Marielle Campeau of the Ottawa office. They have our heartfelt thanks. We would also like to highlight the excellent work of the CHA treasurer, Claude Beauregard, as well as the much-appreciated assistance of Paul Ledwell and Suzanne Dagenais, of the Canadian Federation of Human and Social Sciences, and not forgetting the unflagging work of Tim Burton, main organizer of the Learned Societies Conference in 2000. We thank each and everyone of you, including our team of students and volunteers. In closing, we would like to express our gratitude to the following organizations for their important financial support: the Social Sciences Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Federation of Human and Social Sciences, the University of Alberta. David Mills Claude Couture REMERCIEMENTSEn tant que coprésidents du comité du programme 2000 de la S.H.C., nous tenons á remercier un certain nombre de personnes qui nous ont appuyés tout au long des 18 á 20 mois de préparation du congrès. Le président de la S.H.C., Irving Abella, nous a constamment encouragés et nous avons pu compter sur l'expertise d'anciens présidents de la S.H.C., notamment le président sortant Greg Kealey. Les autres membres du comité du programme ont aussi travaillé de façon exemplaire et nous tenons á souligner la contribution de chacun et de chacune : Karen Dubinsky, Robynne Healy, Kris Inwood, Jeff Keshen, Valerie Korinek, Brian McKercher, PearlAnn Reichwein, John Thompson, Bill Waiser, Randi Warne. Aucun congrès de la S.H.C. ne pourrait avoir lieu sans l'aide précieuse et le travail consciencieux de Joanne Mineault et de Marielle Campeau du bureau d'Ottawa. Nous les remercions chaleureusement. Nous tenons aussi á souligner le travail exemplaire du trésorier de la S.H.C. Claude Beauregard, de même que l'aide très précieuse de Paul Ledwell et de Suzanne Dagenais, de la Fédération canadienne des sciences humaines et sociales, sans oublier l'inlassable travail de Tim Burton, l'organisateur en chef du Congrès des sciences sociales et humaines en l'an 2000. Nous vous remercions tous et toutes, ainsi que notre équipe d'étudiants et de bénévoles. En terminant, nous tenons á exprimer notre gratitude á l'endroit des organismes suivants pour leur importante contribution financière : le Conseil de recherche en sciences humaines du Canada, la Fédération canadienne des sciences humaines et sociales, ainsi que l'Université de l'Alberta. David Mills Claude Couture CHA PRIZESThe CHA will award the following prizes at its Annual General Meeting on 28 May 2000: the François-Xavier Garneau Medal ($2000 and a Medal), awarded every five years for an outstanding book in the field of history; the Sir John A. Macdonald Prize ($1000), awarded annually for the best book in Canadian History; the Wallace K. Ferguson Prize ($1000), awarded annually for the best book in a field of history other than Canada; the John Bullen Prize ($500), for an outstanding historical dissertation; and two Hilda Neatby Prizes, for the best articles in women's history in English and in French. The CHA will also award the Clio Awards for the best monographs in regional history and to societies or individuals who have made significant contributions to local and regional history. PRIX DE LA S.H.C.La S.H.C. décernera les prix suivants lors de son assemblée générale annuelle, le 28 mai 2000 : la Médaille François-Xavier Garneau (2 000 $ et une médaille), décernée á chaque cinq ans pour la publication d'un ouvrage exceptionnel en histoire; le prix sir John A. Macdonald (1 000 $), décerné annuellement pour le meilleur livre en histoire canadienne; le prix Wallace K. Ferguson (1 000 $), attribué annuellement pour le meilleur livre en histoire autre que l'histoire du Canada; le prix John Bullen, pour la meilleure thèse de doctorat (500 $); deux prix Hilda Neatby pour les meilleurs articles de langues anglaise et française sur l'histoire des femmes. La S.H.C. décernera également les prix Clio pour les meilleures monographies en histoire régionale et pour la contribution importante de sociétés ou d'individus á l'histoire régionale et locale. SHORT LISTS FOR BEST 1999 BOOKSThe Canadian Historical Association celebrates twenty years of awarding book prizes by announcing its short lists of best books in Canadian and non-Canadian history published in 1999. The winners will be announced at the national organization's annual meeting in Edmonton on 28 May 2000. The FRANÇOIS-XAVIER GARNEAU MEDAL has been awarded every five years for an outstanding scholarly book in the field of history by a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant living in Canada. Short listed for 1999 (books published between 1993 and 1997), in alphabetical order, are: - Gérard Bouchard. Quelques Arpents d'Amérique : population, économie, famille au Saguenay, 1838-1971. Montréal : Les Éditions du Boréal, 1996.
- Bettina Bradbury. Working Families: Age, Gender, and Daily Survival in Industrializing Montreal. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1993.
- Jonathan Vance. Death So Noble: Memory, Meaning, and the First World War. UBC Press, 1997.
The SIR JOHN A. MACDONALD PRIZE has been awarded annually since 1977 for the book judged to have made the most significant contributions to Canadian history. The author and publisher can be located anywhere in the world. Short listed for 1999, in alphabetical order, are: - Michael Bliss. William Osler. A Life in Medicine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- Patrice Groulx. Pièges de la mémoire : Dollard des Ormeaux, les Amérindiens et nous. Hull : Vents d’Ouest, 1998.
- H.V. Nelles. The Art of Nation-Building: Pageantry and Spectacle at Quebec’s Tercentenary. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
The WALLACE K. FERGUSON PRIZE has been awarded annually since 1980 for the book judged to be the outstanding historical study in a field other than Canadian history by a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant living in Canada. Short listed for 1999, in alphabetical order, are: - Michael Bliss. William Osler. A Life in Medicine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- Serge Lusignan. «Vérité garde le roy» : la construction d’une identité universitaire en France (XIIIe-XVe siècle). Paris : Publications de la Sorbonne, 1999.
- Patricia Marchak. God’s Assassins: State Terrorism in Argentina in the 1970s. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1999.
The Canadian Historical Association is a national association representing historians across Canada. As well as honouring the best books, articles, and doctoral theses published each year and encouraging scholarship through an annual conference and a variety of ongoing publications, it is active on behalf of such issues as copyright, protocols for promoting research integrity, research funding, and heritage policies. For information, contact: Canadian Historical Association 395 Wellington Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0N3 tel: 613-233-7885 fax: 613-567-3110 FINALISTES DES PRIX DES MEILLEURS LIVRES, 1999La Société historique du Canada décerne des prix depuis vingt ans et pour souligner l'événement, elle est heureuse de présenter les finalistes des prix pour les meilleurs ouvrages en histoire canadienne et non canadienne publiés en 1999. Les noms des gagnants seront annoncés le 28 mai 2000 lors du congrès de la Société, qui se tiendra á Edmonton. La MÉDAILLE FRANÇOIS-XAVIER GARNEAU est accordée á tout les cinq ans á un citoyen canadien ou á un immigrant reçu vivant au Canada qui aura publié un ouvrage exceptionnel en histoire. Les finalistes de 1999 (ouvrage publiés entre 1993 et 1997) sont, dans l'ordre alphabétique : - Gérard Bouchard. Quelques Arpents d'Amérique : population, économie, famille au Saguenay, 1838-1971. Montréal : Les Éditions du Boréal, 1996.
- Bettina Bradbury. Working Families: Age, Gender, and Daily Survival in Industrializing Montreal. Toronto : McClelland & Stewart, 1993.
- Jonathan Vance. Death So Noble: Memory, Meaning, and the First World War. Vancouver: UBC Press, 1997.
Le prix SIR JOHN A. MACDONALD est accordé annuellement depuis 1977 á l'auteur d'un livre ayant le plus contribué á l'étude de l'histoire du Canada. Ce concours s'adresse aux auteurs et aux éditeurs du monde entier. Les finalistes de 1999 sont, dans l'ordre alphabétique : - Michael Bliss. William Osler. A Life in Medicine. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- Patrice Groulx. Pièges de la mémoire : Dollard des Ormeaux, les Amérindiens et nous. Hull : Vents d’Ouest, 1998.
- H.V. Nelles. The Art of Nation-Building: Pageantry and Spectacle at Quebec’s Tercentenary. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1999.
Le prix WALLACE K. FERGUSON est décerné annuellement depuis 1980 á un ouvrage remarquable en histoire traitant d’un domaine autre que l’histoire du Canada; l’auteur doit résider au Canada et être citoyen canadien ou immigrant reçu. Les finalistes de 1999 sont, dans l’ordre alphabétique : - Michael Bliss. William Osler. A Life in Medicine. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- Serge Lusignan. «Vérité garde le roy» : la construction d’une identité universitaire en France (XIIIe-XVe siècle). Paris, Publications de la Sorbonne, 1999.
- Patricia Marchak. God’s Assassins: State Terrorism in Argentina in the 1970s. Montreal and Kingston : McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1999.
La Société historique du Canada est une organisation nationale qui représente les historiens de tout le Canada. En plus de récompenser les meilleurs livres, articles et thèses de doctorat publiés chaque année, elle encourage également la recherche en histoire en organisant une conférence annuelle et en publiant couramment diverses études; elle intervient activement dans les dossiers qui concernent les historiens, comme celui du droit d’auteur, celui de l’élaboration d’un protocole de recherche, celui de subventions á la recherche et des politiques relatives au patrimoine. |