Coffee, juice, etc. Mackenzie
Café, jus, etc.
JCHA Panel: Gender, the Family, and the Social History of Empire / Groupe de discussion de la RSHC : Les rapports hommes-femmes, la famille et l'histoire sociale de l'empire
(Special Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale de la Revue de la SHC) ME 4332
30.1 Cynthia Milton, Université de Montréal
Widows on the fringe of empire: women writing from 18th-century Ecuador30.2 Jane Samson, University of Alberta
Christianity, masculinity and authority in the life of George Sarawia
30.3 Elizabeth Vibert, University of Victoria
Loyal Men and Needy Families: Black Settler Petitions in 1780s Nova Scotia
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Adele Perry, University of Manitoba
31. Practical Problems and Pragmatic Solutions in Conducting Ethical Research / Problèmes pratiques et solutions pragmatiques dans la recherche éthique
(Sponsored by the Native History Group of the CHA)
(Séance parrainée par le Groupe d'étude en histoire autochtone de la SHC) ME 4342
31.1 Keith Thor Carlson, University of Saskatchewan
The Politics of Ethics: Humanities Research in the World of Medical-, Social Science-, and Education-dominated Ethics Boards31.2 Patricia McCormack, University of Alberta
Ethical Requirements: How Far is too Far? Going Overboard to Satisfy University Risk Management31.3 Kathryn Muller, McGill University
Who Speaks for Whom?: Problems and Potential Solutions of Conducting Research in Indigenous Communities31.4 Keren Rice, University of Toronto
SSHRC, PRE, and ethics in research with Aboriginal peoples
31.5 Marlene Brant Castellano, Trent University
Guidelines for Community Engagement in the TCPS 2nd Edition
32. Making Modern Canada: IV / Construire un Canada moderne : IV ME 3328
32.1 Asher Kirk-Elleker, University of GuelphThe Canadian Immigrant Experience through the Prism of Micro-Data
32.2 Charles Jones, University of Toronto
Using Historical Census Data in Teaching
32.3 Patrick Dunae and John Lutz, University of Victoria
Teaching Through the Prism of the Census
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Barbara Lorenzkowski, Concordia University
1700-1900 / 17 h 00 – 19 h 00
President Reception, hosted by Roseanne Runte, President, Carleton University / Réception offerte par la présidente de l'Université Carleton, Roseanne Runte
Alumni Hall
TUESDAY, 26 MAY 2009 / MARDI 26 MAI 2009
0830-1000 / 08 h 30 – 10 h 00
33. The Diefenbaker Interlude: Reappraising Canada's external affairs legacy, 1957- 1963 / L'Interlude Diefenbaker : Réévaluation du legs des affaires étrangères du Canada, 1957-1963 ME 3444
33.1 Daniel Macfarlane, University of Ottawa
Brink by Brick: Diefenbaker and the 1961 Berlin Wall Crisis
33.2 Asa McKercher, University of Ottawa
Northern Reflections: American Perceptions of Canadian Nationalism, 1960-196333.3 Caralee Daigle, Queen's University
Understanding and Appreciation?: Canada, the U.S. and the Cuban Missile Crisis
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Galen Perras, University of Ottawa
34. Private Voices, Public Display / Voix privées, présentation publique ME 4494
(Sponsored by the Carleton Centre for Public History)
(Séance parrainée par Carleton Centre for Public History)
34.1 Katherine J. Taylor, Parks Canada
War Bride Commemoration: A Journey of Remembering
34.2 Susan L. Joudrey, Carleton University
Claiming Space: the Indian Village as a contested site of memory
34.3 Jennifer Wilhelm, Library and Archives Canada
“Picturing the Nation in City of Gold”: Authority, photographs, and historical documentary
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Claire Campbell, Dalhousie University
35. Jesuits in the Early-Modern North Atlantic World / Les jésuites dans l’Atlantique Nord au début de l'ère moderne ME 3269
35.1 Stéphanie Jeanne Tésio (Université d’Ottawa)
Expansion coloniale et savoirs botaniques au XVIIIe siècle : l’œuvre des deux médecins du roi Michel Sarrazin (1659-1734) et Jean-François Gaultier (1708-1756) dans la vallée du Saint-Laurent35.2 Chris M Parsons, University of Toronto
Jesuit Networks and French Knowledge of the Environment of New France35.3 David Stiles, University of Toronto
The Most Righteous Progressivism: Jesuit-State Rivalry in Madrid, 1766-1767
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Paul Nelles, Carleton University
36. Class and Ideology in a Changing British World, 1880-1950 / Classes sociales et idéologie dans un monde britannique en évolution, 1880-1950 ME 4236
36.1 Kirk Niergarth, Trent University
William Lyon Mackenzie King’s 1908 Adventure in Diplomacy: An outsider’s reading36.2 Don Nerbas, University of New Brunswick
Becoming a Shibboleth of the Right: A Case Study of “Britishness” in Canada during the 1930s and 1940s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Norman Hillmer, Carleton University
38. Babies in the Archives, Kids in the Classroom: Parenthood in the Academic World (Roundtable) / Les bébés aux archives, les enfants en classe : Les parents dans le monde universitaire (Table ronde) ME 4332
(Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women's History)
(Séance coparrainée par le Comité canadien de l'histoire des femmes)
Adele Perry, University of Manitoba, Amélie Bourbeau, Université Laurentienne, Esyllt Jones, University of Manitoba, Mark Kuhlberg, Laurentian University, Alison Norman, University of Toronto
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
39. Corporate Cultures in Cold War Canada / Cultures organisationnelles au Canada durant la guerre froide ME 3235
39. 1 Rénald Fortier, Musée de l’aviation du Canada
Nouveau et amélioré : Les annonces publicitaires de l’industrie aéronautique canadienne, 1945–196539.2 Martin Weger, York University
The Canadian Tire Corporation Ltd or La Corporation Canadienne Tire Ltée? Canadian Tire in Quebec, 1939-1989.39.3 Katharine Rollwagen, University of Ottawa
Who’s Holding the (Purse) Strings? Eaton’s Junior Councils and Executives and Adolescent Consumer Authority in Mid-twentieth-century Canada
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : James Cameron, St. Francis Xavier University
40. Democracy and Intimacy: Transatlantic Reflections on the Moral History of Postwar Germany / Démocratie et intimité : Réflexions transatlantiques sur l'histoire morale de l'Allemagne d'après-guerre ME 3328
40.1 Till van Rahden, Université de Montréal
Clumsy Democracy, Unsociable Citizens: Toward a Moral History of Postwar Germany40.2 Natalie Scholz, University of Amsterdam
Contested Authorities of the Past and the Present in West German Discourses on ‘Wohnkultur’ during the 1950s40.3 Annette Timm, University of Calgary
A Moral History of Lebensborn?
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Holger Nehring University of Sheffield
1000-1030 / 10 h 00 – 10 h 30
Nutrition Break Mackenzie
Pause-santé
1030-1200 / 10 h 30 – 12 h 00
41. Memory and Authority in the North Atlantic World / Mémoire et autorité dans l’Atlantique Nord ME 4494
(Sponsored by the Carleton Centre for Public History)
(Séance parrainée par Carleton Centre for Public History)
41.1 Chris Tait, Department of National Defence
The Politics of Holiday-making in Canada: Wilfrid Laurier, Imperialism, and the 24th of May41.2 Lee Slinger, York University
The Parti Communiste Francais and the Commemoration of the Revolution of 1789 in 193941.3 Paul Baxa, Ave Maria University
Rome is Here: Images of Romanità and the Authority of the Past during Mussolini’s visit to the Veneto in 193841.4 Valeries Deacon, York University
Victims of the Vichy Syndrome: How the Right was Erased from the Memory of the French Resistance
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Susan Whitney, Carleton University
43. Race and Racialization in British Columbia / Race et racialisation en Colombie-Britannique ME 4236
43.1 LiLynn Wan, Dalhousie University
"By Virtue of the Accident of Birth": The White Identity in Vancouver, 1919-1939”43.2 Emma Joy Battell Lowman, BC Ministry of Advanced Education and Labour Market DevelopmentContesting Colonial Histories: Addressing the Silence on “3rd wave” Missionization in BC Historiography43.3 Sean Foster Patrick Carleton, Simon Fraser University
Colonizing Minds: Public Education, the Textbook Indian, and the Struggle for Settler Hegemony in British Columbia, 1920-1970
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Myra Rutherdale, York University
44. Rum in overlapping Early-Modern Atlantic worlds / Le rhum dans le chevauchement des mondes de l'Atlantique Nord au début de l'ère moderne ME 3444
44.1 Bertie Mandelblatt, Université de Montréal
New England Rum from French Molasses? Mercantilism, Smuggling and the New England/French Antilles Exchange Networks in Rum and Molasses in the 18th Century44.2 Emily Burton, Dalhousie University
Rum and Authority in a British Imperial Outpost: Consumption and Regulation in Eighteenth-century Nova Scotia44.3 Stephen Hay, University of British Columbia
A Popular Culture of Paternalism: Authority and Alcohol in Cartwright’s Labrador, 1770-1786
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Jerry Bannister, Dalhousie University
45. Global Perspectives on Indigenous Religious Encounter and Exchange / Perspectives globales sur la rencontre et l'échange religieux autochtones ME 3269
45.1 Chelsea Horton, University of British ColumbiaCitizens of the World: “Glocal” Indigenous Baha’i Histories45.2 Tolly Bradford, University of AlbertaCreating a New “Native Politics”: Native Missionary as Advisor and Spokesperson45.3 Daniel Sims, University of Alberta
Present Day Tsay Keh Ney Religious Beliefs and Religious Tradition
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Kerry Abel, Independent Researcher / chercheur indépendant
46. A Roundtable on Franca Iacovetta, Gatekeepers: Reshaping Immigrant Lives in Cold War Canada (Between the Lines Press, 2006), Winner, 2007 Macdonald Prize / Table ronde sur Franca Iacovetta, Gatekeepers: Reshaping Immigrant Lives in Cold War Canada (Between the Lines Press, 2006), lauréate du Prix Macdonald 2007
ME 4332
Elise Chenier (Simon Fraser University), Magda Fahrni (Université du Québec à Montréal), Royden Loewen (University of Winnipeg)
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Marilyn Barber, Carleton University
47. Les identités régionales : du terroir au territoire / Regional Identities : from soil to territory ME 3235
47.1 Julien Massicotte, Université de Laval
Régionalisme et référence collective en Acadie
47.2 Marcela Neagu, Université de Laval
Usages et mésusages de l’histoire en Transnistrie
47.3 Adélaïde Daraspe, Bordeaux-III
Construire son identité sur les bancs de l'école : l'apprentissage de l'histoire dans les Ikastolas du Pays Basque Nord 47.4 Camille Martin, Université de Sherbrooke
L’identité régionale bretonne : du mythe à la réalité
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Tristan Landry, Université de Sherbrooke
48. Exploring the Vietnam War through New Sources / La guerre du Vietnam à travers de nouvelles sources ME 3328
48.1 Brian Clancy, University of Western Ontario
The Lesser of Evils: Clark Clifford and the Elusive Search for Peace in Vietnam, 196848.2 Geoffrey C. Stewart, University of Western Ontario
Civic Action, Revolution and Nation-Building in the Republic of Vietnam: 1955-196348.3 Harish Mehta, McMaster University Bertrand Russell's Informal Diplomacy: "We sympathize with North Vietna, but we are not Hanoi's propagandists"48.4 Sydney Liam van Beek, University of Western Ontario
Dominant or Dominated? Shaping Memory at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Andrew Hunt, University of Waterloo
1200-1300 / 12 h 00 – 13 h 00
Business meetings
Séances de travail
Committee on Canadian Foreign Relations / Comité des affaires étrangères du Canada ME 4332
Editorial Board, Histoire sociale / Social History / Comité de rédaction d’Histoire sociale / Social History ME 4494
Active History (www.activehistory.ca/) ME 4236
1330-1500 / 13 h 30 – 15 h 00
49. CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION KEYNOTE ADDRESS / DISCOURS-PROGRAMME DE LA SOCIÉTÉ HISTORIQUE DU CANADA Minto Building, Bell Theater 2000
49.1 Gerald Friesen, University of ManitobaCanadians and Their Pasts1500-1530 / 15 h 00 – 15 h 30
Nutrition Break Southam
Pause-santé
1530-1615 / 15 h 30 – 16 h 15
50. Presidential Address / Discours du président Southam Theatre B
50.1 Craig Heron, York University
Harold, Marg, and the Boys in History: The Relentless Relevance of Class
1630-1715 / 16 h 30 – 17 h 15
General Meeting / Assemblée générale Southam Theatre B
(Note: There will be trusted guides to lead delegates directly from the general meeting to the CHA President’s Gala.) (Les congressistes seront ensuite guidés vers le gala du président de la SHC)
1730-1900 / 17 h 30 – 19 h 00
The CHA President's Gala / Gala du président de la SHC CO FFC East
1900-2300 / 19 h 00 – 23 h 00
CLIO-PALOOZA! – CHA SOCIAL – DANCE / CLIO-PALOOZA! – ACTIVITÉ SOCIALE – DANSE DE LA SHC CO FFC East
WEDNESDAY, 27 MAY 2009 / MERCREDI 27MAI 2009
0830-1000 / 08 h 30 – 10 h 00
52. Asserting Transnational Identities after Migration / Affirmation d'identités transnationales d'après-migration Tory 206
52.1 Christa Wirth, Harvard University
“I wanted to be a Yankee!” Ethnic Identity Construction in a U.S. Family of Italian Descent52.2 Eric L. Payseur, York University
Za Polskę: Defining a Polish-Canadian Identity since World War II
52.3 Brigitte Grossmann Cairus, York University
The Destiny of a Gypsy Queen: Promoting Romanie Identity in Contemporary Brazil
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto
53. Addresses in the Archives: Applications of GIS for Understanding Urban History Mapping Patterns of Race, Segregation and Environmental Hazards / Des adresses dans les archives : Le SIG pour comprendre les représentations de la race, de la ségrégation et des risques environnementaux en histoire urbaine Tory 213
(Co-sponsored by / Séance coparrainée par Canadian Association of Geographers/l'Association canadienne des géographes and by / et par the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences / la Fédération canadienne des sciences humaines)
53.1 Jason Gilliland, University of Western Ontario, Sherry Olson, McGill University, and Danielle Gauvreau, Concordia UniversityDid Segregation Increase as the City Expanded? The Case of Montreal, 1881-190153.2 John S. Lutz, University of Victoria, Patrick A. Dunae, Vancouver Island University, and Jason Gilliland, University of Western OntarioLocating Race in the Queen City: Towards a GIS of Racial Space in Victoria, British Columbia, 189153.3 Michael Hayek, University of Western Ontario, Godwin Arku, University of Western Ontario, and Jason Gilliland, University of Western OntarioIdentifying Potential Brownfield Sites with Historical GIS
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Kris Inwood, University of Guelph
54. Active History: History for the Future / Active History : L’histoire pour l’avenir Tory 210
54.1 Jim Clifford, York University, Keith Jamieson, Wilfrid Laurier University, Geoffrey Reaume, York University, Robin Elliott, Independent Researcher
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Thomas Peace, York University
55. Authority, Sexuality and The Body / Autorité, sexualité et le corps Tory 208
55.1 Scott F. de Groot, Queen’s University
Out of the Closet and Into the Library: Gay Liberation and the Politics of Knowledge55.2 Cameron Duder, University of Otago
The Making of the Transgender Expert
55.3 Kristin Ivy Ireland, Queen’s University
Sex Reassignment Surgery in Ontario in the 1960s and 1970s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Patrizia Gentile, Carleton University
56. La culture politique au Québec - I / Political Culture in Quebec - I Tory 340
56.1 Jessica van Horssen, University of Western Ontario
Body Politics in Asbestos, Quebec
56.2 Harold Bérubé, INRS-UCS/University of Wisconsin
La misère des riches : les banlieues bourgeoises de Montréal et la crise, 1929-193956.3 Amélie Bourbeau, Université Laurentienne
Autorités contestées : le cas de l’assistance privée chez les catholiques de Montréal, 1930-1970FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Dominique Marshall, Carleton University
57. Aboriginal Oral History and Canadian Courts / L'histoire orale autochtone et les cours de justice canadiennes Tory 447
(Sponsored by the Canadian Oral History Association / Coparrainée par l’Association canadienne d’histoire orale)
57.1 Christopher Bracken, University of Alberta
The Judge and the Pharmakon: Oral History and Aboriginal Rights
57.2 R. J. Brownlie, University of Manitoba
Judicial and Historical Authority in Aboriginal Oral History
57.3 Winona Wheeler, Athabasca University
Faulty Methodologies: Oral Histories are Not Documents
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Mary Jane L. McCallum, University of Winnipeg
58. Centres, Margins, and Authority of the Past / Centres, marges et autorité du passé Tory 446
58.1 Susan L. T. Ashley, York/Ryerson University
Marginalized Racial Groups and the Negotiation of Public Heritage
58.2 Anne Frances MacLennan, York University
Mediating Historical Authority through Popular Culture: Historical Signposts, Timelines and Markers of Collective Memory58.3 Caroline-Isabelle Caron, Queen’s University
L'autorité historique en Acadie néo-écossaise. Vie et mort du musée de H. Léander d'Entremont58.4 John Belshaw, North Island College, and Diane Purvey, Thompson Rivers UniversityDeathscapes and the Quality of Life in Small BC Cities
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Del Muise, Carleton University
59. Regulation, Sterilization, and Executions: Assessing the Contours of State Authority in Canada / Réglementation, stérilisation et exécutions : Évaluation des contours de l'autorité étatique au Canada Tory 240
59.1 Blake Brown, St. Mary’s University
Disarming the Rogue and the Child: Regulating Revolvers in Late- nineteenth Century Canada59.2 Erika Dyck, University of Saskatchewan
Eugenic Sterilization in Alberta: An Historical Examination of State and Medical Authority59.3 Michael Boudreau, St. Thomas University
“The disgust of the community against hanging”: State Authority & the Execution of Bennie Swim in New BrunswickFACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Jim Phillips, University of Toronto
60. Colonial and Continental Encounters in the North / Rencontres coloniales et continentales dans le Nord Tory 342
60.1 Brad Martin, Northwestern University
National Landscape, Native Hunting Ground: Negotiating Federal Authority in Kluane National Park, Yukon Territory, 1940-199360.2 Matthew Paul Trudgen, Queen’s UniversityMr. High Commissioner Meet the U.S. Army of Occupation: The Americans in the Canadian North, 1942-194560.3 Ryan Shackleton, Independent Researcher
From Gate Keeper to Guard Keeper: The Changing Role of the RCMP on Baffin Island during the 1950s and 1960s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : John MacFarlane, Department of Defence / ministère de la Défense
1000-1030 / 10 h 00 – 10 h 30
Nutrition Break Tory
Pause-santé
1030-1200 / 10 h 30 – 12 h 00
61. Commemorating Canada / Commémorer le Canada Tory 206
61.1 Matthew Hayday, University of Guelph
Celebrating Canada: The Politics, the Policies and the Parties
61.2 Yves Y. Pelletier, Queen’s University
Diefenbaker, Pearson and the Art of Shaping the Public Memory of Sir John A. Macdonald during the 1960s 61.3 PearlAnn Reichwein, University of Alberta
Expedition Yukon 1967: Canada’s Centennial and the Politics of Ascent in the St. Elias Mountains61.4 James Trepanier, York University
'Fit for Citizenship,': Scouting and the Centennial Celebrations
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Alan Gordon, University of Guelph
62. Addresses in the Archives: Applications of GIS for Understanding Urban History Mapping Social Networks and Business Relationships / Des adresses dans les archives : Le SIG pour comprendre les représentations des réseaux sociaux et des relations d'affaires en histoire urbaine Tory 213
(Co-sponsored by / Séance coparrainée par Canadian Association of Geographers/l'Association canadienne des géographes and by / et par the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences / la Fédération canadienne des sciences humaines)
62.1 Jordan Stanger-Ross, University of Victoria
Addresses in the Archives: Toward a Social History of Spatial Relationships62.2 Mary-Anne Poutanen, McGill University, and Jason Gilliland, University of Western OntarioMapping Work in Early-twentieth Century Montreal: Rabbi Simon Glazer, Social Mobility, and the Jewish Community62.3 Mathew Novak, University of Western Ontario, and Jason Gilliland, University of Western OntarioForm, Function and Fluidity of the Central Retail District in London, Canada: 1880-1930
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Kris Inwood, University of Guelph
63. Gender and Sense of Place in a Transborder and Transnational World / Rapports hommes-femmes et appartenance dans un monde transfrontière et transnational
(Sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women's History)
(Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l'histoire des femmes) Tory 210
63.1 Lisa Chilton, University of Prince Edward Island Becoming British: Empire Migrations and the Construction of Gendered White Settler Identities63.2 Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto
Immigrant Gifts, Cross-Border Pluralism, and Canadian Celebrations or Appropriations?: Women’s “Multicultural” Work at the International Institute of Toronto in North American Context, 1940s-1970s63.3 Royden K. Loewen, University of Winnipeg
Transculturalism and Low German Mennonite Women from Mexico in Southern Ontario
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
64. Sexuality and Authority in Twentieth Century Canada / Sexualité et autorité au Canada au XXe siècle Tory 208
(Sponsored by the Canadian Committee for the History of Sexuality) (Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d'histoire de la sexualité)
64.1 Heidi MacDonald, University of Lethbridge
On Hold?: The Attempted Imposition of Moral Authority on Canadian Youths' Sexuality During the Great Depression64.2 Maria N. Ng, University of Lethbridge
Writing Sexuality and Authority: Chinese Canadian Women Life Writing64.3 Kristina R. Llewellyn, University of Ottawa
“Better Teachers, Biologically Speaking”: The Authority of the ‘Marrying-Kind’ of Teacher in Post-WWII Schools
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Christina Simmons, University of Windsor
65. La culture politique au Québec - II/ Political Culture in Quebec – II Tory 340
65.1 Éric Bédard, Université du Québec à Montréal
Le groupe québécois Mes aïeux ! Nostalgie réactionnaire ou désir de « réenraciment »?65.2 Jeffery Vacante, University of Western Ontario
The Posthumous Lives of René Lévesque
65.3 Michael Gauvreau, McMaster University
Winning Back the Intellectuals: Inside Canada’s “First War on Terror”, 1968-1970 65.4 Alexandre Turgeon, Laval
La caricature de Robert La Palme : sédition et contestation dans le Québec de l’après-guerre
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Dominique Marshall, Carleton University
66. Governance, Identity and Challenges to Authority during Canada's Great War / Gouvernance, identité et contestation de l'autorité durant la Grande Guerre au Canada
Tory 447
66.1 Nic Clarke, University of Ottawa
The Sons of Foreign Sailors and English Dock-prostitutes: The Choquette-Hazelton Affair of April 191666.2 Alison Norman, University of Toronto
A New Patriotism: How Six Nations Soldiers and Women Experienced and Challenged the Authority of the Six Nations Council66.3 Nathan Smith, University of Toronto
Legitimacy, Authority and Protest: Canada's Returned Soldiers and the Problem of 'Bolshevikism' at the End of the Great War
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : P. Whitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s University
67. The First Draft of History: Archives, Archival Selection and the Determination of History / Première ébauche de l'histoire : Archives, sélection archivistique et la détermination de l'histoire Tory 446
67.1 Dara Price, Library and Archives Canada
Flies on the Punkah: Identity, Authenticity, and the Authority of the Written Record in British India67.2 Jessica Squires, Library and Archives Canada/Carleton University
The Bagot Commission, Recordkeeping and State Formation
67.3 Matt Dyce, University of British Columbia
Archives, Museums, and Spatial Authority: Frontier Histories of the Athabasca Landing Trail
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Bruce Curtis, Carleton University
68. Women, Medicine, and Authority in Modern Canada / Les femmes, la médecine et l'autorité dans le Canada moderne Tory 240
68.1 Jessica Haynes, Carleton University
‘Take Two and Call Me in the Morning’: The Question of Authority in the Women’s Health Movement68.2 Beth Palmer, York University
‘Lonely, tragic, but legally-necessary pilgrimages’: Albertan Women’s Travels to Seattle for Abortion in the 1970s 68.3 Shannon Lea Stettner, York University
“Not vitally concerned” : Canadian Women’s Efforts to Construct Authority over Abortion during the 1960s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Eileen O’Connor, University of Ottawa
69. Authority and the North Pole / L’autorité et le pôle Nord Tory 342
69.1 Michael F. Robinson, University of Hartford
Taking Wild Theories Seriously: a New Look at the Arctic’s Mythic Places69.2 Karen Routledge, Rutgers University
“Old Man” Greely: Authority and the Lady Franklin Bay Expedition, 1881-188469.3 Lyle Dick, Parks Canada
The Club: How Wall Street Placed Robert Peary on the North Pole
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Kenn Harper, Independent Scholar / chercheur indépendant
1200-1330 / 12 h 00 – 13 h 00
Business meetings
Séances de travail
Public History Group / Groupe d'histoire publique Tory 206
Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality / Comité canadien d'histoire de la sexualité Tory 213
Canadian Committee on Military History / Comité canadien sur l'histoire militaire Tory 446
Graduate Student Committee / Comité des étudiants diplômés Tory 447
Canadian Committee on Labour History / Comité canadien sur l'histoire du travail Tory 342
Canadian Oral History Association / Association canadienne d'histoire orale Tory 240
Business History Group / Groupe d'histoire des affaires Tory 210
1330-1500 / 13 h 30 – 15 h 00
70. Notions of Rurality / Concepts de ruralité Tory 206
70.1 Jason Patrick Bennett, Library and Archives Canada
“From shiftless fruit tramps to a respected seasonal reservoir of people”: Migratory Labour, Science, and Community Identity in the Orchards of the Pacific Northwest, 1900-195070.2 Sharon Ann Weaver, University of Guelph
Rural Encounters: 1970s Back to the Land - Cape Breton, NS and Denman, Hornby and Lasqueti Islands, BC70.3 Joshua D. MacFadyen, University of Guelph
Mennonites and Mixed Paint: Canada’s Flax Commodity Chain, 1878-190170.4 David Mizener, York University
‘To be stewards of the earth – trustees of God’s world’: Agriculture, Stewardship and Authority in Post-World War Two Rural Ontario
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Royden K. Loewen, University of Winnipeg
71. Migration and the Making of “Chineseness”: Examining Forms of Identification between Overseas Chinese and Chinese State Projects in the Twentieth Century / Migration et construction de l’identité chinoise : Les formes d'identification entre les Chinois d'outre-mer et les projets étatiques de la Chine au XXe siècle.
Tory 213
71.1 Tina Mai Chen, University of Manitoba
Organizing and Educating for Chinese Citizenship: Guomindang Activities and the Making of “Chineseness” among Overseas Chinese in Burma after WWII71.2 Alison R. Marshall, Brandon University
Forgetting Chiang Kai-shek: The Right Wing KMT Connection in Manitoba71.3 Glen Douglas Peterson, University of British Columbia
Patriots, Refugees, Tycoons and Students: “Returning” to China in the 1950s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : David Webster, University of San Francisco
73. Sex, Archives, and Authority: Policing Sexuality/Policing the Past / Le sexe, les archives et l'autorité : Contrôle de la sexualité / contrôle du passé Tory 208
(Sponsored by the Canadian Committee for the History of Sexuality) (Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d'histoire de la sexualité)
73.1 Steven Maynard, Queen’s UniversityWatching the Detectives: Sex and Authority at the Toronto Police Museum73.2 Patrizia Gentile, Carleton University
Resisted Access?: National Security, the Access to Information Act, and Queers in the Archives73.3 Gary Kinsman, Laurentian University
Queering the Archives: The Social Organization of Forgetting and the Resistance of Remembering
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Jennifer Evans, Carleton University
74. Canada in an Age of Political Anxiety / Le Canada à l’ère de l'anxiété politique Tory 340
74.1 Corey Slumkoski, University of New Brunswick
Atlantic Union and the Chimera of Region
74.2 Colin Coates, York University
“Happy Accommodation”: Debating Hutterite Communal Lands in Alberta, 1932-197274.3 Jordan Birenbaum, University of Ottawa, and Michael Behiels, University of OttawaJ. G. Diefenbaker’s Canadian Bill of Rights, 1960: A Federal Statute or a Constitutionally Transformative Document?74.4 Jon Joseph Sufrin, York University
Two-Nations Nationalists and the End of Canada
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Matthew Hayday, University of Guelph
75. Manifester : Les formes d’une prise de parole / Protesting: Aspects of an Intervention Tory 447
Jean-Philippe Warren, Concordia University, Ivan Carel, University of Concordia, Martin Pâquet, Université Laval, Karine Hébert, Université du Québec à Rimouski, and Ève Lamoureux, Université Laval
76. Authority, Aboriginality, and Expertise / Autorité, autochtonité et expertise Tory 446
76.1 Robert Irwin, Grant MacEwan College
Canadian Federalism and Treaty Eight in British Columbia
76.2 John Long, Nipissing University
Authority and Illusion: Treaty-Making in Far Northern Ontario in 1905
76.3 Fiona Davis, University of Melbourne
White Men Watching: Experts and Authority on the Cummeragunja Indigenous Reserve, Australia, May and June 1938 76.4 Martha Walls, St. Francis Xavier University
Exploring Federal Culpability in Residential Schooling: The Shubenacadie Indian Residential School
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : J.R. Miller, University of Saskatchewan
77. Display, Authority, and Bodies / Visualisation, autorité et le corps Tory 240
77.1 Braden P.L. Hutchinson, Queen’s University
Embodied Authority: The Death of Sir John A. Macdonald and the Theatrics of State Authority77.2 Tracy Penny Light, University of Waterloo
Public Authority as Professional Authority: Consumer Culture and the Medicalization of Gender Roles in Interwar Canada77.3 R.C. Wawruck-Hemmett, Dalhousie University
A Woman for All Reasons: Visual Representations of the New Soviet Woman in Popular Art during the 1930s
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : James Opp, Carleton University
78. Women in Diaspora: Memory, Religion and Custom in Post-War Canadian Immigrant Communities / Les femmes dans la diaspora : Mémoire, religion et coutume des communautés immigrantes canadiennes d'après-guerre Tory 342
(Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women's History)
(Séance coparrainée par le Comité canadien de l'histoire des femmes)
78.1 Noula Mina, University of Toronto
Remembering the Homeland: Greek Immigrant Memory in Toronto78.2 Nadia Lewis, University of Toronto
Requiem for Iraq: Resettlement, Remembrance and the Role of Women in the Iraqi Diaspora in Toronto, 1980 to 200778.3 Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
Memories of Sauerkraut and Zwieback: Foodways in the Mennonite Diaspora
FACILITATOR / ANIMATRICE : Stacey Zembrzycki, Concordia University
1500-1530 / 15 h 00 – 15 h 30
Nutrition Break Tory
Pause-santé
1530-1700 / 15 h 30 – 17 h 00
79. Constructing Confederation and Constructing the Nation / Construire la Confédération et construire la nation Tory 206
79.1 Andrew David Smith, Laurentian University
Which Technological Innovations Contributed the Most to Canadian Confederation?79.2 Ruth Frost, University of British Columbia
Canadian Authorities and Immigration Policy in the 1870s-1890s
79.3 Bradley John Miller, University of Toronto
From Colony to Member State: Copyright and the Canadian Constitutional Order, 1867-1886
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Matthew Bellamy, Carleton University
80. Experts, Expertise, and Authority / Experts, expertise et autorité Tory 213
80.1 Andrew Paul Burtch, Canadian War Museum
A Little Knowledge is a Dangerous Thing: Canadian Defence Scientists and Disarmament, 1958-196380.2 Rick Murray Fehr, York University
Subsurface Narratives: The Unearthing of Canadian Identity by Amateur Archeologists at the Turn of the Twentieth Century80.3 Liza Piper, University of Alberta
State and Science in Shaping Community Life in Canada’s North, 1900-1975
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : John Walsh, Carleton University
81. Gendered Ways of Knowing the Past: Challenging the ‘Authority’ of the Discipline of History (Roundtable) / L’équilibre des sexes dans la connaissance du passé : Contester « l'autorité » de la discipline de l'histoire (Table ronde) Tory 210
(Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women's History)
(Séance coparrainée par le Comité canadien de l'histoire des femmes)
Lisa Helps, University of Toronto, Denyse Baillargeon, Université de Montréal, Elise Chenier, Simon Fraser University, Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto, Pamela Sugiman, Ryerson University, and Sharon Reilley, The Manitoba Museum
82. Governance and Capital / La gouvernance et le capital Tory 208
82.1 David Tough, Carleton University
"The rich … should give to such an extent that it will hurt": Working-Class Militancy and the Radical Rhetoric surrounding the 1917 Income War Tax82.2 Bettina Lynn Liverant, University of Alberta
Paradoxes of Philanthropy: Capitalism and Moral Authority
82.3 Pierrick Labbé, University of OttawaLes limites de l’interventionnisme gouvernementales : le cas de la gestion des ressources humaines pour le travail industriel durant la Deuxième Guerre mondialeFACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Jarrett Rudy, McGill University
83. The State and the Social / L'État et le social Tory 340
83.1 Cheryl DesRoches, Queen’s University
From County Poor Farms to State Funded Nursing Homes for Nova Scotia’s Indigent Aged83.2 Ryan Eyford, University of Manitoba
From Barbadian Slave-trader to Canadian Icelandic Agent: the Strange Career of John Taylor83.3 Mark Kuhlberg, Laurentian University
The Indians, if located on this Reserve, could in time become self-supporting: J.G. Burk and the Drive to Help the Anishinabe of Northwestern Ontario, 1920-1940
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Hugh Shewell, York University
84. Not Backing Down: Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Interpretations of Authority in “Race" / Sans vouloir en démordre : Interprétations de l'autorité dans la « race » aux XIXe et
XXe siècles. Tory 447
84.1 Lorene Bridgen, University of Waterloo
Making a Choice?: Temperance as Authority in Southwestern Ontario’s Black Community,1830-189084.2 Nicole Butzke, University of Waterloo
British Representation in Panama; The Forgotten People, the West Indian Labourers84.3 Ryan Kirkby, University of Waterloo
The Silent Rebellion: The Black Panther Party and Community Activism, 1966-1971
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Andrew Johnston, Carleton University
85. Negotiators of Change: Wendat Leaders and the Redefinitions of Wendat Identity, 1600-1850 / Négociateurs de changement : Les leaders wendats et les redéfinitions de l'identité wendate, 1600-1850 Tory 446
85.1 Andrew Keith Sturtevant, College of William and Mary
Une "mauvaise trompette": Michipichy and Huron Diplomacy
85.2 Kathryn Magee, Ohio State University Aenon’s Vision: Wendat Diplomacy in the 1630s
85.3 Thomas Peace, York University
European Education/Aboriginal Activism: Cultural Métissage in the Late-eighteenth and Early-nineteenth CenturiesCommentator: Jonathan Lainey, Library and Archives Canada
Commentateur : Jonathan Lainey, Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Georges Soui, University of Ottawa
86. Institutional Authority and the Authority of Science in Alchemical, Medical and Political Contexts / Autorité institutionnelle et autorité de la science dans des contextes alchimique, médical et politique A720 Loeb
(Co-sponsored with and hosted by the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science)
(Séance coparrainée et présidée par la Société canadienne d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences)
86.1 Victor Boantza, University of Toronto
Alchemical Agendas, the New Science, and Institutional Authority at the Early Académie Royale des Sciences86.2 Erich Weidenhammer, University of Toronto
Reputation, Patronage and Natural Knowledge: John Pringle and the Royal Society86.3 Jaipreet Virdi, University of Toronto
Medical Authority and Medicalized Institutions: John Harrison Curtis & the London Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb
87. Interviewing Survivors of War and Genocide: Reflections from the Montreal Life Stories CURA Project / Entrevues avec des survivants de guerre et de génocide : Réflexions découlant du projet de l’ARUC, Histoires de vie des Montréalais Tory 342
(Sponsored by the Canadian Oral History Association)(Séance parrainée par l'Association canadienne d'histoire orale)
87.1 Afsenah Hojabri, Independent ScholarInterviewing Survivors of War and Genocide: Methodology, Ethics and Training87.2 Anna Sheftel, University of OxfordPsychosocial Support and Large-scale Oral History Projects: Lessons Learned from the Montreal Life Stories CURA Project87.3 Davith Bolin, L'Université du Québec à MontréalInterviewing Cambodian-Montréalais for the Montreal Life Stories CURA Project
87.4 Stacey Zembrzycki, Concordia UniversityHolocaust Testimonials: Bearing Witness in Holocaust Education87.5 Gracia Jalea, Concordia UniversityReflections on the Côte des Neiges Refugee Youth Workshops
FACILITATOR / ANIMATEUR : Steven High, Concordia University1700-1900 / 17 h 00 – 19 h 00
88. Keynote Address – Discours Southam Theatre B
(Co-sponsored with Canadian Association of Geographers, Network in Canadian History and Environment (NiCHE), and Environmental Studies Association of Canada)
(Parrainé par l'Association canadienne des géographes, Nouvelle initiative en histoire de l'environnement (NiCHE) et l'Association canadienne des études environnementales)
88.1 Hugh Raffles, New School of Social Research
Transdisciplines, Translocalities, Transpecies: Ethnographies of Categories and Scale in the Human Sciences
Fur Trade and Metis History: Patterns of Ethnogenesis
A Mini-Conference, organized by Nicole St.-Onge, Carolyn Podruchny, Brenda Macdougall, and Heather Devine, hosted by the Canadian Historical Association (CHA) at the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences Congress (CFHSS). Session Four is sponsored by Network in Canadian History and Environment (NiCHE).
Carleton University, Ottawa, May 25-26, 2009
La traite des fourrures et l'histoire des Métis :
Modèles d'ethnogénèse
Une mini-conférence organisée par Nicole St-Onge, Carolyn Podruchny, Brenda Macdougall et Heather Devine sous les auspices de la Société historique du Canada (SHC) durant le Congrès de la Fédération canadienne des sciences humaines (FCSS). La séance 4 est parrainée par la Nouvelle initiative canadienne en histoire de l'environnement (NiCHE)
Université Carleton, Ottawa, 25-26 mai 2009
PROGRAM / PROGRAMME
All sessions, save the keynote address, will be in room ME 3165. The keynote address will be in ME 4499 / Toutes les séances, sauf le discours-programme, se dérouleront dans la salle ME 3165. Le discours aura lieu dans la salle ME 4499.
MONDAY, MAY 25, 2009 / LUNDI 25 MAI 2009 ROOM ME 3165
8:25: Welcome by Nicole St.-Onge, University of Ottawa / 8 h 25 : Mot de bienvenue de Nicole St-Onge, Université d'Ottawa
8:30 – 10:45: SESSION 1, Languages and Labels / 8 h 30 – 10 h 45: SÉANCE 1 : Langues et étiquettes
Chair / Présidence : Carolyn Podruchny, York University
1.1. Peter Bakker, Institute for Anthropology, Archaeology and Linguistics, Aarhus University
Ethnogenesis and the Creation of New Languages
1.2. Tim Foran, University of Ottawa
From “chasse d’été” to “chasteté”: The Oblate Struggle for Language Proficiency in the Northwest, 1845-1890
1.3. Philip Wolfart, University of Manitoba
An Alternative to Ethnic Categories
9:50 - 10:00 BREAK / 9 h 50 – 10 h 00 PAUSE
1.4. Nelly Laudicina, University of Ottawa
Attributing Ethnic Labels During the Free Trade Movement: A Look at Métis Legal Ethnogenesis, 1845-1858"
1.5. Hartmut Lutz, Ernst Moritz Arndt University Greifswald (Germany)
We Can Only See What We Already Know: Metis Stereotypes
10:45 – 11:10 BREAK / 10 h 45 – 11 h 10 PAUSE
11:10 - 12:10 SESSION 2, French Canadians and Indigenous Peoples in Colonial America / 11 h 10 – 12 h 10 : Séance 2, Les Canadiens-français et les peuples autochtones en Amérique coloniale
Chair / Présidence : Jean François Belisle, University of Ottawa
2.1. Louis-Pascal Rousseau, Université Laval
Approche en histoire comparée: Métis et Mestizos. Ressemblances et différences
2.2. Robert Englebert, University of Saskatchewan
Making New Indians in the American Backcountry: French Travelers and Perceptions of Indigenous Knowledge in the Late Eighteenth Century
12:10 - 1:40 LUNCH / 12 h 10 – 13 h 40 LUNCH
1:40 - 3:20: SESSION 3, Narratives of Identity /
13 h 40 – 15 h 20 : SÉANCE 3, Récits d’identité
Chair / Présidence : Heather Devine, University of Calgary
3.1. Lia Ruttan, University of Alberta
“I Know you’re a Frenchman but…”; Narratives of Identity in the Slave River Region
3.2. Daniel Laxer, University of Toronto
Music and Métis ethnogenesis: the songs of Pierre Falcon
3.3. Judy Iseke-Barnes, Lakehead University
Grandmothers of the Metis Nation: Stories of Community and Archival Research with Dorothy Chartrand
3:20 - 3:30 BREAK / 15 h 20 – 15 h 30 PAUSE
3:30 - 5:00: SESSION 4, Land: Possession, Dispossession, and Reconstruction / 15 h 30 – 17 h 00 : SÉANCE 4, Terre : Possession, dépossession et reconstruction
Chair / Présidence : Brenda Macdougall, University of Saskatchewan
4.1. Glenn Walker, McGill University
The Curve Lake Ojibwas and the Fur Trade
4.2. Victor Lytwyn, Historical and Geographical Consulting
In the Shadows of the Honourable Company: The Usurpation of Métis Lands in the Upper Great Lakes and Petit Nord in the 19th Century
4.3. James R. Dragon and Peter Fornta, Fort McMurray Metis Local 1935
Athabasca River Voyage: Applied Métis Environmental and Historical Research
5:00 - 7:00 DINNER / 17 h 00 – 19 h 00 - DÎNER
7:00 - 8:30 KEYNOTE SPEAKER / 19 h 00 – 20 h 30 - DISCOURS DE LA CONFÉRENCIÈRE ROOM ME 4499
Maria Campbell
"The Michif?" Hmm, said Elder Brother, "Let Me Think."
TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2009 / MARDI 26 MAI 2009 ROOM ME 3165
8:40 - 10:10 SESSION 5, Metissage in the North /
8 h 40 – 10 h 10 – SÉANCE 5, Métissage dans le Nord
Chair / Présidence: Richard Connors, University of Ottawa
5.1. Daniel Blumlo, Florida State University
The Creoles of Russian America
5.2. Glenn Iceton, University of Calgary
On the other side of the “long chalk”: Intersecting Fur Trading Dynasties in Russian America
5.3. Albert J. Lafferty, Fort Providence Metis Council
Since 1921: The Relationship between Dehcho Métis and Canada
10:10 - 10:30 BREAK / 10 h 10 – 10 h 30 PAUSE
10:30 - 12:30 SESSION 6, Networks in the West / 10 h 30 – 12 h 30 SÉANCE 6, Réseaux dans l'Ouest
Chair / Présidence : Nicole St.-Onge, University of Ottawa
6.1. Lee Marmon, Independent Researcher
The Mobilization of the Bois Brûlé on the Path to Seven Oaks
6.2. Alison Mercer, Queen’s University
Half-Hitches, Dressed Leather, and Nice Easy Long Strides - Métis Horsemanship in the Mounted Buffalo Hunt
6.3. Mike Evans, University of British Columbia – Okanogan and Jean Barman, University of British Columbia – Vancouver
Métis Networks in BC: An Example from the Central Interior
6.4. Denis Wall, D. Wall Research Group
Identity Boundary: Alberta Métis in the 1930's
12:30 - 2:00 LUNCH / 12 h 30 – 14 h 00 LUNCH
2:00 - 3:50: SESSION 7, Control and Colonialism / 14 h 00 – 15 h 30 : SÉANCE 7, Contrôle et colonialisme
Chair: Galen Perras, University of Ottawa
7.1. Jean Teillet, Law Firm Pape Salter Teillet
Understanding the Métis of the Northwest
7.2. Signa A. Daum Shanks, University of Western Ontario
Labour Changes as a Form of Dependency: Post-1821 Trends at One Post in Saskatchewan
7.3. Jonathan Anuik, University of Saskatchewan
The Early History of Church-State Collaboration for Saskatchewan’s Métis Schools: A Tale of Cognitive Imperialism, 1884-1918
7.4. Andrew R. Graybill, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Helen P. Clarke and the Racial Transformation of Late-Nineteenth-Century Montana
3:50 - 4:20 BREAK / 15 h 50 – 16 h 20 PAUSE
4:20 - 5:50: SESSION 8, The Métis Nation Re-Interrupted: Ethnogenesis, Eugenics and Other White Fantasies / 16 h 20 – 17 h 50 : Séance 8, La nation métis ré-interrompue : Ethnogénèse, eugénisme et autres fantaisies des Blancs
Roundtable Discussion / Table ronde
Moderator / Modérateur : Clement Chartier, President, Métis National Council
Discussants / Participants :
Frank Tough, University of Alberta
Meika Taylor, University of Alberta
Chris Anderson, University of Alberta
Arthur J. (Skip) Ray, University of British Columbia