the canadian historical association 2007
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PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME OF THE 86th ANNUAL MEETING OF
THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN IN SASKATOON, 28 - 30 MAY
2007
In recognition of the University of Saskatchewan centennial, there will
be two special events during the Canadian Historical Association
conference in Saskatoon.
On Tuesday, May 29, at 3:30 p.m, just before the annual general
meeting, there will be a brief ceremony to recognize the naming of Arts
241 as the Neatby-Timlin Theatre. Mabel Timlin was a prominent
member of the Department of Political Economy, while Hilda Neatby
was the first female president of the Canadian Historical Association
and the first female head of a History Department in Canada.
The second ceremony, Wednesday, May 30 at 5:00 p.m. in 301 Murray
Library, will recognize the contributions of economist and historian
Adam Shortt to the university archives and special collections. A
reception will follow.
Before the official start of the CHA conference, there will be a choice of
three local tours on the afternoon of Sunday, May 27. All start at 2:30
p.m and will run for about two hours..
Wanuskewin Heritage Park features First Nations displays and a
number of Plains Indian archeological features. The return bus fare (to
and from campus) is $15. There will also be a modest admission charge.
The Western Development Museum has a replica, full-size streetscape
(Boomtown 1910) and a new “Winning the Prairie Gamble” exhibit. The
return bus fare (to and from campus) is $15. There is a modest
admission charge.
Two members of the Saskatoon Heritage Society will be offering walking
tours of early Saskatoon and the boom years when the city grew from a
hamlet of 113 in 1901 to 12,000 ten years later. The tours will start
downtown. The cost is $15.
These tours are offered on a cost-recovery basis and will run only if
there is sufficient interest. Please send your cheque (payable to the
CHA) to Bill Waiser, Department of Histoy, 9 Campus Drive, University
of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SASK, S7N 5A5.
The University of Saskatchewan has the best collection of Collegiate
Gothic Architecture on any university campus in Canada.
There will be free, guided tours of the university bowl and renovated
College Building each day of the CHA conference over the lunch break.
Please reserve your space by contacting Bill Waiser
at bill.waiser@usask.ca
TWO NEW SPECIAL EVENTS AT THIS YEAR'S SASKATOON CHA
There will be a pre-conference reception at Boffins Club on Sunday, May
27 from 7:30 to 10:00 p.m. Several former CHA presidents will serve as
co-hosts of the event. Tickets are $10 per person. Please confirm your
attendance by sending your cheque (payable to the CHA) to Bill Waiser,
Department of History, 9 Campus Drive, University of Saskatchewan,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5.
There will also be a beer-and-pizza night at Saskatoon's own Great
Western Brewery on Wednesday, May 30 from 7:00 to 8:30. Seating in
the hospitality room is limited. Please reserve your space by sending
your $10 cheque (payable to the CHA) to Bill Waiser.
Many of the papers are now available on-line in PDF format. To access
them, click on the underlined title of paper in the preliminaryprogram.
You will then be prompted to provide a password: sask-07
SATURDAY 26 MAY 2007SAMEDI 26 MAI 2007
2:00-5:00 / 14 h - 17 h ARTS 298
CHA Executive Meeting
Réunion de l’exécutif de la SHC
SUNDAY 27 MAY 2007DIMANCHE 27 MAI 2007
9:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h ARTS 298
CHA Council Meeting
Réunion du Conseil d’administration de la SHC
2:00 - 5:00 / 14 h - 17 h
LOCAL TOURS / TOURS DE LA RÉGION
Western Development Museum
Wanuskewin Heritage Park
Boomtown Saskatoon
4:00 - 7:00 / 16 h - 19 h COMM 18
Meeting of Chairs of History Departments
followed by dinner, 7:00-8:30
Réunion des directeurs des départements d’histoire
Suivie d’un dîner de 19 h à 20 h 30
7:30 - 10:00 / 19 h 30 - 22 h BOFFINS CLUB, INNOVATION PLACE
Presidents’ Reception
Réception des présidents, Boffins Club, place Innovation
MONDAY 28 MAY 2007LUNDI 28 MAI 2007
8:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h
Coffee, juice, etc.
Café, jus, etc.
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12
1. Local Knowledge, Professional Expertise, Political Context: Public
History as Interactive Process / Savoir régional, expertise
professionnelle et contexte politique : l’histoire publique en tant que
processus interactif
1.1 Danielle Hamelin, Parks Canada
Memorials, Sites of Inspiration, and Symbolic Places: Capturing the
Significance of the Intangible
1.2 Paul Litt, Carleton University
The Unbearable Loopyness of Being a Public Historian: Towards a
Shared Conceptualization of the Practice of Public History
1.3 Alexandra Mosquin, Parks Canada
Engaging the Ethnocultural: Past and Current Directions in Historical
Research Prepared for the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of
Canada
Chair / Commentatrice : Margaret Conrad, University of New
Brunswick
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263
2. Encountering the Digital Archive / De l’utilisation des archives
numériques
2.1 James Opp, Carleton University
The Colonial Legacy of the Digital Archive: The Arnold Lupson
Photographic Albums
2.2 Victoria Dickenson, McCord Museum
How Many Is Enough? Feeding the Insatiable Digital Archive
2.3 William J. Turkel, University of Western Ontario
Methodology for the Infinite Archive: Introducing Public History
Students to Digital History
Chair / Commentateur : Kevin Kee, Brock University
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16
3. Northerness and Northerners / La nordicité et les habitants du Nord
3.1 Peter V. Krats, University of Western Ontario
Northness Notwithstanding: Recognizing the Northness of Provincial
Resource Canada
3.2 P. Whitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s University
The Canadian Rangers and Northern Security: A Living History
3.3 David P. King, University College of the North
Francophone Nationalism, Inuit and the Role of the Anglican Church: A
Study of the Transfer of Northern Quebec from Federal to Provincial
Jurisdiction and its Resistance by Inuit, 1960-1970
Chair / Commentateur : Bill Morrison, University of Northern British
Columbia
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103
4. Colonialism in its Many Manifestations / Les nombreuses facettes du
colonialisme
4.1 Julien Vernet, University of British Columbia Okanagan
The Establishment of British Imperial Rule in Quebec and American
Territorial Rule in Louisiana: A Comparison
4.2 Helena Nunes Duarte, University of Calgary
‘Civilizing’ the Amazon: Amerindians in the Portuguese Empire, 1750-
1777
4.3 Andrew D. Smith, Institute of Historical Research, London
Thomas Bassett Macaulay: The Intersection of Business and Race in the
History of Canadian Imperialism
Chair / Commentateur : John Reid, St. Mary’s University
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 112
5. Diefenbaker and Canadian Nationalism / Diefenbaker et le
nationalisme canadien
5.1 Cara Spittal, University of Toronto
‘A new hope, a new soul’: The Rhetorical Diefenbaker
5.2 Craig G. Greenham, University of Western Ontario
Centre of Attention: The Diefenbaker Centre’s Opening in Saskatoon
5.3 Edward MacDonald, University of Prince Edward Island
Cradling Confederation: Nationalism, Centennialism, and the Founding
of the Confederation Centre of the Arts in 1964
Chair / Commentateur : Bill Brennan, University of Regina
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 116
6. Making Meaning of Aboriginal Stories / Le sens des histoires
autochtones
6.1 Susan Elaine Gray, University of Winnipeg
Pâkwaciskwew: A Re-acquaintance with the Wilderness Woman
6.2 Keith N Goulet, University of Regina
The Cree Historical Narrative
6.3 Katrina Srigley, Nipissing University
‘The North was always part of me’: Anishinaabe and Inninu Women in
Ontario’s North
Chair / Commentatrice: Patricia McCormack, University of Alberta
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18
7. Contested Commemorations in Twentieth-Century Canada /
Controverses autour de certaines commémorations du XXe siècle au
Canada
7.1 Cecilia Morgan, University of Toronto
History and the Six Nations, 1890s-1960s: Commemoration and
Colonial Knowledge
7.2 Lyle Dick, Parks Canada
Sergeant Masumi Mitsui and the Japanese Canadian War Memorial:
Intersections of National, Cultural, and Personal Memory
7.3 Frances Wright, Famous 5 Foundation
The Famous 5 Foundation and the Commemoration of the Famous 5
Chair / Commentatrice : Nicole Neatby, Saint Mary’s University
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition break
Pause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18
8. Forum on Women and Global Histories: Representation and
Resistance / Forum sur les femmes dans l’histoire mondiale :
représentation et mouvements de résistance
Micheline Lessard, University of Ottawa
Vietnamese Women on Strike: Broadening the Concept of Political
Activism in French Colonial Indochina, 1858-1945
Joy Chadya, University of Manitoba
Voting with their Feet: Rural Women’s Internal Displacement to Harare
during the Zimbabwean Liberation Struggle, 1974-1980
Tina Chen, University of Manitoba
International and Transnational Circuits of Gender in the Making of
Socialism: The Roles of Women in Sino-Soviet Film Exchange during
the Maoist Period
Mary Lynn Stewart, Simon Fraser University
A Frenchwoman Writes about Indochina, 1931-1949: Andrée Viollis and
the Changing Face of Anti-colonialism in France
Chair / Commentatrice : Joan Sangster, Trent University
Special Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale présentée par la
Revue de la SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12
9. Craftworkers, les pharmaciens, and les arrimeurs / Les artisans, les
pharmaciens et les arrimeurs
9.1 Robert B. Kristofferson, Wilfrid Laurier University
Craftsworker Self-Improvement in Mid-Nineteenth Century Ontario:
The Diaries of Andrew McIlwraith
9.2 Stéphanie Tésio, Université Laval
Exemple de transmission du savoir : les pharmaciens au XVIIIe siècle
Chair / Commentateur : David Frank, University of New Brunswick
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16
10. Indigenous Peoples and Christianity / Les peuples indigènes et le
christianisme
10.1 Susan Neylan, Wilfrid Laurier University
Aboriginal Missionaries, Spiritual Borderlands: Cultural Exchange on
the Northwest Coast
10.2 Derek Whitehouse-Strong, Grant MacEwan College
Institutions and Empire: The Shifting Dynamics Behind the Identity
and Relationships of CMS Native Agents in 19th Century Canada
10.3 Tolly Bradford, University of Alberta
‘Valuable Information’: Indigenous Missionaries and British Mission
Networks
Chair / Commentateur : Don Smith, University of Calgary
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103
11. Making Knowledge about Aboriginal History in Canada / Pour mieux
connaître l’histoire autochtone au Canada
11.1 Gerard Hartley, Public History Inc.
The Search for Consensus: Legislative History of Bill C-31, 1969-1985
11.2 Sarah Bonesteel, Public History Inc.
The History of Program and Policy Development for Inuit
Chair / Commentateur : Alvin Finkel, Athabasca University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112
12. Professors, University Research, and Constructions of the Canadian
State and Society / Le rôle des professeurs et de la recherche
universitaire dans l’édification de la société et de l’État canadiens
12.1 Paul Stortz, University of Calgary
Faculty of Arts Professors and Community Development in Toronto,
1930-1945
12.2 James Hull, University of British Columbia Okanagan
The Expert Professor: Scientific Research and the Public Role of
Canadian Universities, 1890-1920
12.3 E. Lisa Panayotidis, University of Calgary
Contesting Narratives of Public Knowledge in Communities: Frank
Underhill’s Vision of a Political Education Through the Arts
Chair / Commentateur : Paul Litt, Carleton University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116
13. Justifying Repression: Differing Perspectives on North American
Anarchism / La justification de la répression : aspects de l’anarchisme
en Amérique du Nord
13.1 Marc Roy, Simon Fraser University
Sexual Deviants and Craven Anarchists or the History of Class in Gilded
Age America
13.2 Travis Tomchuk, Queen’s University
The Limits of Political Citizenship: The Canadian State, Anarchists, and
Arab Nationals
13.3 Paul Burrows, University of Manitoba
Anarchism, Colonialism, and Aboriginal Dispossession in the Canadian
West
Chair / Commentateur : Bryan Palmer, Trent University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263
14. Forum on Teaching the History of the Canadian North / Forum sur
l’enseignement de l’histoire du Nord canadien
Brenda Mcdougall, University of Saskatchewan
David Neufeld, Parks Canada, The Challenges of Northern History
Amanda Graham, Yukon College, Northern History
Philip Goldring, Consultant, Teaching Northern History on a Southern
University Campus
Chair / Commentateur : Bill Waiser, University of Saskatchewan
12:15-1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGS
SÉANCES DE TRAVAIL
Historical Geographic Information Systems (HGIS) Demonstration
COMM 16
Une démonstration des systèmes d’information géographique
historique
Canadian Committee on History and Computing ARTS 263
Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique
Native History Study Group COMM12
Groupe d’étude en histoire autochtone
Canadian Committee on Women’s History COMM 18
Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
Business History Group COMM 103
Groupe d’histoire en affaires
Editorial Board, Labour / le Travail COMM 112
Comité de redaction, Labour / le Travail
Committee on the Second World War COMM 116
Comité sur la Seconde Guerre mondiale
University Bowl Tour
Visite commentée de l’université et de son architecture
1:00 - 5:00 / 13 h - 17 h 710 ARTS
Editorial Board, Canadian Historical Review
Comité de rédaction, Canadian Historical Review
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 12
15. Engendering Rebellion: Challenging the Constraints of Community /
Rébellion et rejet des contraintes sociales
15.1 Daniel Horner, York University
An Avalanche of Men: The Nocturnal Spectacle of Montreal’s Rebellion
Losses Riot
15.2 Lynn Kennedy, University of Lethbridge
Belle or Rebel? Gendering Conformity and Defiance in the Antebellum
South
15.3 Amy Shaw, University of Lethbridge
Reluctant Rebels: Masculinity and Conscientious Objection in the First
World War
15.4 Ryan O’Connor, University of Western Ontario
Gender Roles and Agrarian Protest: A Case Study of the 1971 National
Farmers Union Demonstration on Prince Edward Island
Chair / Commentateur : Greg Kealey, University of New Brunswick
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 18
16. Doing History on Television [Round Table] / L’histoire télévisée
[Table ronde]
John Thompson, Duke University
Scholarship vs. Stimulation: Must an Academic Historian Concede to
Needs of the Producer, Screen Writer, and Director?
Paul Dederick, CBC Television
Is Truth the First Casualty of Doing History on Television?
Sharon Riis, Screen Writer
Never Let the Facts Get in the Way of the Truth
Guy Vanderhaeghe, Novelist
Unreasonable Expectations vs. Historical Drama
Chair / Commentateur : Chad Gaffield, University of Ottawa
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 16
17. Education Contestation / La contestation étudiante
17.1 George Buri, University of Manitoba
‘Between Education and Catastrophe’: The Battle over Public Education
in Canada 1942-1960
17.2 Sara Burke, Laurentian University
Revisiting the Great Divide: World War I and Women’s Higher
Education in Ontario
17.3 Kristina Llewellyn, University of Ottawa
Too Much a Woman, Too Little a Mother: The Public Making of the
Female Secondary School Teacher
17.4 Stefan Jensen, Memorial University of Newfoundland
The Education Student Movement at the Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Chair / Commentatrice : Kate McCrone, University of Windsor
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 ARTS 263
18. Governing Bodies, Health Care in Aboriginal Communities / Les
institutions administratives et les soins de santé dans les communautés
autochtones
18.1 Lesley McBain, University of Saskatchewan
‘Better, Worse or Dead by Now’: Jurisdictional Divisions and Providing
Healthcare in Northern Saskatchewan
18.2 Laurie Meijer Drees, Malaspina University College
Indian Hospitals and Aboriginal Nurses: Canada and Alaska
18.3 Myra Rutherdale, York University
DEW Line Doctors and Alaska Highway Nurses: Medical Encounters in
Canadian Arctic Communities, 1945-70
18.4 Mary Jane McCallum, University of Manitoba
Twentieth Century Aboriginal Nursing History
Chair / Commentatrice : Maureen Lux, Brock University
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 103
19. Aboriginal Identity and Agency / Agence et identité autochtones
19.1 Susan M. Hill, Wilfrid Laurier University
Through a Haudenosaunee Lens: An Examination of Sally Weaver’s Six
Nations Historical Publications
19.2 Larry Grant and Susan Roy, University of British Columbia
Writing Ethnicity and Identity into Community History: The Chinese
Market Garden Leases on the Musqueam Indian Reserve
19.3 Stephen Dutcher, University of New Brunswick
Deconstructing Colonialism: Agency and Behaviouralism in Late 20th
Century Analyses of Aboriginal-Settler Society Relations in ‘Canada’
19.4 Michelle A. Hamilton, University of Guelph
‘Anyone not on the list might as well be dead:’ First Nations and the
Censuses of Canada
Chair / Commentateur: Arthur Ray, University of British Columbia
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 112
20. L’Histoire, Heritage, and Public Memory / Histoire, patrimoine et
mémoire publique
20.1 John C. Walsh, Carleton University
Re-Placing Home: Forests, Rivers, and Public Memory
20.2 Alan Gordon, University of Guelph
History for Tourists: History, Tourism, and Regional Diversity in 20th
Century Ontario
20.3 Claire Campbell, Dalhousie University
Hinge of a Nation or Bone of Contention: The Battle over
Reconstructing Old Fort William
Chair / Commentatrice : Jean Manore, Bishop’s University
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 116
21. Ecology and Imperialism in the Canadian North / Écologie et
impérialisme dans le Nord canadien
21.1 Liza Piper, University of British Columbia
Death in a Northern Town: The Role of Disease in Northern Ecological
Imperialism
21.2 John Sandlos, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Where the Reindeer and Inuit Should Play: Animal Husbandry and
Ecological Imperialism in Canada’s North
21.3 Arn Keeling, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Towards a Historical Political Ecology of Uranium Mining in the
Canadian North
Chair / Commentateur : Geoff Cunfer, University of Saskatchewan
3:15 - 4:00 / 15 h 15 - 16 h
Nutrition Break
Pause santé
4:00 - 6:00 / 16 h - 18 h COLLG 120
[CONVOCATION HALL]
Jennifer Welsh, Oxford University
Connecting the Public to Foreign Policy
Chair / Commentrice: Janice MacKinnon, University of Saskatchewan
Followed by public reception at 5:00 / Une réception suivra à 17 h
TUESDAY 29 MAY 2007MARDI 29 MAI 2007
8:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h
Juice, coffee, etc.
Jus, café, etc.
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12
22. Canadian Public Policy during the 1960s and 1970s / La politique
publique canadienne pendant les années 1960 et 1970
22.1 Stéphane Savard, Université Laval
Quand l’histoire donne sens aux représentations symboliques: Manic-V,
Hydro-Québec et la société québécoise
22.2 Penny Bryden, University of Victoria
The Contributions of Historians to Public Policy Development in
Canada in the 1960s
22.3 Raymond Blake, University of Regina
Social Policy and Constitutional Negotiations: The Case of Family
Allowances in the 1970s
Chair / Commentateur : Dominique Clément, University of Victoria
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16
23. Bâtir des ponts à l’extérieur du milieu universitaire : l’expertise et
l’élaboration des politiques / Building Bridges Outside the Academic
Milieu: Expertise and Policy Development
23.1 Marcel Martel, York University
Les experts au service de l’État ontarien : le cas de l’Ontario Advisory
Committee on Confederation
23.2 Martin Pâquet, Université Laval
Guérir le mal linguistique : les experts et leur participation aux débats
linguistiques dans les années 1960
23.3 Julien Massicotte, Université Laval
Chronique d’un mouvement social acadien : le comité pour le
bilinguisme à Moncton, 1972
Chair / Commentateur : John Willis, Canadian Museum of Civilization
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263
24. Making Knowledge Public: Solving Three Mysteries of Canadian
Discovery / La découverte du Canada : trois mystères à élucider
24.1 Birgitta Wallace, Parks Canada
Where is Vinland?, A Great Unsolved Mystery in Canadian History
24.2 Bill Morrison, University of Northern British Columbia
Discovery! Public History and the Origins of the Klondike Gold Rush
24.3 Caroline-Isabelle Caron and Lise Robichaud, Queen’s University
Jérôme, Mystery Man of Baie Sainte-Marie
Chair / Commentateur : Pierre Lanthier, Université du Québec à Trois-
Rivières
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18
25. Historical Representation and Memory in Settler Colonialism /
Colonisalisme, représentation historique et devoir de mémoire
25.1 Jean Barman, University of British Columbia
Erasing Indigenous Indigeneity in Vancouver
25.2 Victoria Freeman, University of Toronto
People Without History / A City Without Roots: Indigeneity, Settler
Colonialism, and Historical Memory in Toronto
25.3 Robin Jarvis Brownlie, University of Manitoba
The Impact of Aboriginal Interventions into Historical Thought and
Writing in Canada
Chair / Commentatrice : Sarah Carter, University of Alberta
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103
26. The Royal Navy / La Marine royale
26.1 William Roy Miles, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Sea Officers and the Mentality of the Newfoundland Convoy,1660-1729
26.2 Keith Mercer, Dalhousie University
On the Impress Service: The History of Guard Boats in St. John’s
Newfoundland, 1775-1815
26.3 George Young, St. Mary’s University
The Royal Navy, the Raid on Washington, and the Wreck of the HMS
Fantome, 1814
Chair / Commentateur : Chris Kent, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 112
27. Aboriginal Policy through Time / L'évolution de la politique
autochtone
27.1 Michael Behiels and Robert Talbot, University of Ottawa
Aboriginal Organizations and the Process of Constitutional
Reform,1968-1982
27.2 Theodore Binnema, University of Northern British Columbia
A Look at Two Crucial Documents in the Development of Canadian
Indian Policy
27.3 Bonny Ibhawoh, McMaster University
Negotiating Domination and Resistance: Indigenous People and
Colonial Treaty Making in West Africa and Upper Canada 1840-1900
Chair / Commentateur : Jim Miller, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 116
28. Women, Property, and Labour in Louisiana, Tennessee, and Lower
Canada / Femmes, propriété et travail en Louisiane, au Tennesse et
dans le Bas-Canada
28.1 Sara Sundberg, University of Central Missouri
Under Her Authority: Women and Property in Early Louisiana
28.2 Jan Noel, University of Toronto
Discrediting Dowagers in Lower Canada
28.3 Nelson Ouellet, Moncton University
The War on Dependency in Tennessee during Reconstruction (1865-
1869)
Chair / Commentatrice : Bettina Bradbury, York University
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition break
Pause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18
29. Many Tender Ties: A Forum in Honour of Sylvia Van Kirk [Round
Table] / Plein de tendresse : forum en hommage à Sylvia Van Kirk
[Table ronde]
Patricia McCormack, University of Alberta
‘A World We Have Lost’: The Plural Society of Fort Chipewyan
Valerie Korinek, University of Saskatchewan
Daring to write a history of western Canadian women’s experiences:
Assessing Sylvia Van Kirk’s Feminist Scholarship
Mary-Ellen Kelm, Simon Fraser University
Riding into Place: Rodeo, Masculinity, and ‘Mixed-Blood’ Men
Anthony Hall, University of Lethbridge
Decolonization, the Non-Aligned Movement, and the Enigma of the
Indigenous Peoples in the Western Hemisphere
Chair / Commentatrice : Jennifer Brown, University of Winnipeg
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263
30. Beyond Borders: Regions in Global History / Au-delà des frontières
: histoires régionales mondiales
30.1 Eric Tagliacozzo, Cornell University
Thinking Marginally: Ethno-Historical Notes on the Nature of
Smuggling in Human Societies
30.2 Leo Shin, University of British Columbia
The Politics of Identity on a Chinese Borderland
30.3 Adeeb Khalid, Carleton
Being Muslim in Soviet Central Asia, or an Alternative History of
Muslim Modernity
Chair / Commentateur : Steve Lee, University of British Columbia
Special Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale organisée par la
Revue de la SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12
31. Indigenous Boundaries Meet Settler Spaces / Autochtones et colons :
le choc des frontières
31.1 Natasha Simon, University of Victoria
The Formation of Reserve and Settlement Conceptions in 18th century
Nova Scotia: Elsipogtog as a Case Study
31.2 Robert Diaz, University of Victoria
Tuutuuchpiika: The Last Thunderbird
31.3 John Gow, University of Saskatchewan
Mapping the Prairie River Cree / Comanche Borderlands of the Mid-
1800s
Chair / Commentatrice : Nicole St. Onge, University of Ottawa
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16
32. The Great War: Memory and Mythology / La Grande Guerre :
mémoire et mythologie
32.1 Robert J. Harding, Dalhousie University
Myth, Memory, and Applicability: Newfoundland’s Cultural Memory of
the Attack at Beaumont Hamel, 1916-1945
32.2 Nathan Smith, University of Toronto
‘We say to you men of Toronto:’ Great War Veterans Propaganda in 1917
Toronto
32.3 James M. Pitsula, University of Regina
Manly Heroes: The University of Saskatchewan and World War I
Chair / Commentateur : Philip Buckner, University of London
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103
33. Accessing, Organizing, and Analyzing Digitized Evidence [Round
Table] / Le document numérique : comment l’obtenir, l’organiser et
l’analyser [Table ronde]
Geoffrey Martin Rockwell, McMaster University
From Personal to Community Computing: The TAPoR Portal
Raymond G. Siemens, University of Victoria
Modelling and Knowledge [Re]Presentation as a Context for the
Contemporary Editor of Earlier Textual Materials
Melissa Terras, University College London
Digital Papyrology: Building A System to Aid in Reading Ancient
Documents
Bruce Robertson, Mount Allison University
The Historical Event Markup and Linking Project: Status and
Opportunities
Chair / Commentateur : John Bonnett, Brock University
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing
and the Society for Digital Humanities / Séance parrainée par le Comité
canadien d’histoire et d’informatique et la Société pour l’études des
médias interactifs
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112
34. The Immigrant Experience in Canada and Australia / L’expérience
des immigrants au Canada et en Australie
34.1 Ashleigh Androsoff, University of Toronto
From the Private Sphere to the Public Eye: ‘Redressing’ the Image of
Doukhobor-Canadian Women in the Twentieth Century
34.2 Ikuko Asaka, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Ex-Slaves or Immigrants?: The Gender and Racial Politics of Belonging
among the Self-Emancipated People in Canada
34.3 Lisa Chilton, University of Prince Edward Island
Made to Feel at Home? Accommodating Immigrants at Ports of Entry in
early Twentieth-Century Canada and Australia
Chair / Commentatrice : Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116
35. Workplace Unrest across North America / Les conflits de travail en
Amérique du Nord
35.1 Cynthia Loch-Drake, York University
‘A special breed’: Packing Men and the Class and Racial Politics of
Manly Discourses in Post-1945 Edmonton, Alberta
35.2 Jeffery Taylor, Athabasca University
The Struggle for Rights at Work: Electrical Workers, Shop-Floor Action
and Industrial Legality, 1940s-1960s
35.3 Brian Froese, Canadian Mennonite University
‘Is Anabaptism here a joke?’: California Mennonite Farmers, Labour
Tensions, and Visitors from Eastern States, 1974
Chair / Commentatrice : Suzanne Morton, McGill University
12:15 - 1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGS
SÉANCES DE TRAVAIL
Canadian Committee on Labour History COMM 12
Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travail
Canadian Committee on Military History COMM 16
Comité canadien sur l’histoire militaire
Public History Group COMM 103
Groupe d’études en histoire publique
Graduate Students Committee COMM 18
Comité des étudiants gradués
Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality COMM 112
Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la sexualité
Economic Historians in Canada COMM 116
Groupe d’étude en histoire économique du Canada
University Bowl Tour
Visite commentée de l’université et de son architecture
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 18
36. New Research on Canadian First Wave Feminism / Recherches
récentes sur les premières générations de féministes au Canada
36.1 Nancy Forestell, St. Francis Xavier University
Transnational Citizenship in a Post-Suffrage Era: Canadian First Wave
Feminism, 1920-1939
36.2 Kelly Mitchell, University of Western Ontario
‘To Hell with Women Magistrates’: An Examination of the Legal and
Social Precursors to the Persons Case of 1929
36.3 Katherine M.J. McKenna, University of Western Ontario
‘Maternity was not the first and only office of womanhood’: E. Cora
Hind, First Wave Feminist, 1861-1942
Chair / Commentatrice : Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British
Columbia
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 12
37. Gender and Gendered Discourse / Discussions sur les genres
37.1 Allan Rowe, University of Alberta
Gender and Irish Associational Culture in Western Canada, 1874-1930
37.2 Damien-Claude Bélanger, Trent University
Anti-Americanism in Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century
Canada: A Gendered Discourse
37.3 Josette Brun, Université Laval
Genre et presse québécoise à la fin du XVIIIe siècle: public, production
et contenu de la Gazette de Québec et de la Gazette de Montréal
Chair / Commentateur : Michael Cottrell, University of Saskatchewan
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 16
38. Historians at Work / Les historiens à l’œuvre
38.1 Scott W. See, University of Maine
Historians, Public Memory, and the Construction of Canada’s ‘Peaceable
Kingdom’ Myth
38.2 Daryl White, Nipissing University
Reviewing the Review: Professionalization, Objectivity, and Canada’s
History Journal
38.3 Kenneth C. Dewar, Mount Saint Vincent University
Frank Underhill: Intellectual in Search of a Role
Chair / Commentatrice : Molly Ungar, University College of the Fraser
Valley
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 103
39. The Challenge of Family Finances / Le difficile équilibre du budget
familial
39.1 Shirley M. Tillotson, Dalhousie University
The Bugbear of Direct Taxation: the Revenue Side of the Maritime
Rights Claims
39.3 Robert Dennis, Queen’s University
Depression-Era Roman Catholicism in Toronto: the Case of Catherine
de Hueck and Friendship House
Chair / Commentateur : Doug McCalla, University of Guelph
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h ARTS 263
40. Doing Aboriginal History / Écrire l’histoire des autochtones
40.1 Keith Thor Carlson, University of Saskatchewan
Making Sense of Memory: Indigenous Dreams, Historical Evidence, and
the Little Matter of Footnotes
40.2 John S. Lutz, University of Victoria
Lazy Indians or Lazy Scholars? Problems in Ethnohistory
40.3 Jon Clapperton, University of Saskatchewan
Balancing the Past: Authority, Postmodernity, and doing Oral History
Chair / Commentatrice : Mary-Ellen Kelm, Simon Fraser University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 112
41. Repercussions of Revolution: Ireland and Canada in the 1920s / Les
répercussions d’une révolution en irlande et au Canada dans les années
1920
41.1 Mark McGowan, University of Toronto
The King, the Kaiser, and Canada
41.2 Kyla Madden, Queen’s University
Interrogating the Witness Statements: South Armagh and the Bureau of
Military History
41.3 David A. Wilson, University of Toronto
‘Giving the Orange Tory Bigots Something to Think About’: T he D’Arcy
McGee Centennial Celebration of 1925
Chair / Commentatrice : Martha Smith-Norris, University of
Saskatchewan
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 116
42. CANCELLED / ANNULÉE
3:00 - 3:30 / 15 h - 15 h 30
Nutrition break
Pause santé
3:30 / 15 h 30 ARTS 241
Neatby-Timlin Ceremony
Chair: Jo-Anne Dillon, University of Saskatchewan
3:45 - 5:15 / 15 h 45 - 17 h 15 ARTS 241
CHA ANNUAL MEETING
RÉUNION ANNUELLE DE LA SHC
5:30 - 7:30 / 17 h 30 - 19 h 30 FACULTY CLUB
CHA PRESIDENT’S GALA
GALA DE LA PRÉSIDENTE DE LA SHC
WEDNESDAY 30 MAY 2007MERCREDI 30 MAI 2007
8:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h
Coffee, juice, etc.
Café, jus, etc.
9:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h ARTS 710
“The Policy History of Canadian Medicare” Workshop
Atelier sur l’histoire du régime d’assurance-maladie au Canada
Sponsored by the Canadian Society of the History of Medicine / Séance
parrainée par la Société canadienne de l’histoire de la médecine
9:00 -12:00 / 9 h - 12 h ARTS 298
CHA Council Meeting
Réunion du Conseil d’administration de la SHC
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18
43. The Body and Family in Question / La remise en question de la
famille et des canons de la beauté
43.1 Jennifer Ellison, York University
Oppression, Acceptance, and Liberation: Fat Women Organizing in
Canada, 1978-1988
43.2 Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University
The World ‘broke loose from its moral mooring’: The Public Contest
Between Pleasure and Destruction in Canadian Culture, 1927
43.3 Ryan Eyford, University of Manitoba
Lucifer Comes to New Iceland: Margret Benedictsson’s Radical Critique
of Marriage and the Family
Chair / Commentatrice : Linda Kealey, University of New Brunswick
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12
44. Youth Must be Served / Au service de la jeunesse
44.1 Helen Brown, Malaspina University-College
A Message from Washington –Then Business as Usual: Parents’
Magazine in World War II
44.2 Dominique Clément, University of Victoria
An Anachronism Failing to Function Properly: How the Baby Boom
Generation Transformed Social Movements in Canada
44.3 Roberta Lexier, University of Alberta
The Sixties in Canada: Student Movements at English-Canadian
Universities
Chair / Commentatrice : Valerie Korinek, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16
45. Issues in British Foreign Policy, 1919-1939 / Aspects de la politique
étrangère britannique, de 1919 à 1939
45.1 Keith Neilson, Royal Military College
Sir Orme Sargent, Appeasement, and Views of Europe, 1932-1941
45.2 Greg Kennedy, King’s College
British Views of the American Role in the Far East, 1932 -1941
45.3 G. Bruce Strang, Lakehead University
Anyone for Ice Cream?: British Official Perceptions of Italy, 1936-1940
Chair / Commentateur : John Ferris, University of Calgary
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263
46. Performativity for Historians and their Publics / Les exploits des
historiens et de leurs publics
46.1 Ariel Beaujot, University of Toronto
Can Objects Speak? The Glove and the Performance of Middle-Class
Womanhood, 1830-1920
46.2 Christopher Ernst, University of Toronto
Performing Politics: Public Entertainment and the Construction of
Political Discourse in Victorian Toronto
46.3 Kristina Guiguet, Carleton University
Mrs. Widder, is this yours? Recording an 1844 Concert Program:
Performance or Creation?
Chair / Commentateur : Gene Allen, Ryerson University
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103
47. Aboriginal Policy in Twentieth-Century Canada / La politique
autochtone canadienne au XXe siècle
47.1 Byron Plant, University of Saskatchewan
Social Science, Legal Rational Administration and Hawthorn’s 1954
Indian Research Project
47.2 Liam Haggarty, University of Saskatchewan
A History of Social Assistance Among the Sto:lo
47.3 Jordan Stanger Ross, University of Victoria
Urbanism and Colonialism: Vancouver City Planning and the
Dispossession of Native People
Chair / Commentatrice : Robin Jarvis Brownlie, University of Manitoba
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 112
48. The Regulation of Liquor, Guns, Animals, and Minds / La
réglementation de l’alcool, des armes à feu, des animaux et de l’esprit
48.1 Dan Malleck, Brock University
Deviance, Disorder, and Drunks: Liquor Control and the
Reconceptualization of Drinking: 1927-1944
48.2 Bob McMillan, McGill University
Animal Welfare and the Marginalization of Sentiment: Making Public
Knowledge Compatible with Expanding Capitalism
Chair / Commentateur : Tina Loo, University of British Columbia
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 116
49. Media, Religion, and Historical Revisionism in 20th Century
Germany and France / Les médias, la religion et le révisionnisme
historique en France et en Allemagne au XXe siècle
49.1 Mark Meyers, University of Saskatchewan
Mass Media and Cultural Crisis in Interwar France
49.2 Kyle Jantzen, Alliance University College
Enlisting the ‘Infantry of God’: Assessing Competition between Pro-Nazi
Protestants in the Third Reich
49.3 José R. Jouve-Martin, McGill University
Admiral der Weltmeere: Werner Egk’s Colombus and the Re-creation of
History on the German Opera Stage
Chair / Commentateur : Brett Fairbairn, University of Saskatchewan
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition break
Pause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18
50. First Nations and Global Colonialism / Les Premières Nations et le
colonialisme mondial
50.1 Kat Ellinghaus, Monash University
Strategies of Elimination: ‘Exempted’ Aborigines, ‘Competent’ Indians,
and Twentieth Century Assimilation Policies in Australia and the United
States
Chair / Commentateur : Keith Thor Carlson, University of
Saskatchewan
Special Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale de la Revue de la
SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12
51. Making Knowledge Public in Museum Exhibits / Les expositions
muséales et la diffusion du savoir
51.1 Michale Lang, Glenbow Museum
Mavericks: An Incorrigible History of Alberta–New Approaches to
Exhibit Development
51.2 Gayle Thrift, St. Mary’s University
Beyond Academia: History in the Public Marketplace
51.3 Aritha van Herk, University of Calgary
Strip Search: Finding Maverick Alberta
Chair / Commentatrice : Lisa Making, Royal Tyrrell Museum
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16
52. Learning from History / Les leçons de l’Histoire
52.1 Donald A. Bailey, University of Winnipeg
Bridging Communities: Sampling Precedents in European History for
the Interest of Specialists in Canadian History, Law, or Politics
52.2 Gene Allen, Ryerson University
News and National Identity in Canada, 1890-1930
Chair / Commentateur : Jean-Claude Robert, Université du Québec à
Montréal
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103
53. Labour: Challenges to a Maturing Movement / Problèmes de
croissance du mouvement ouvrier
53.2 Michel S. Beaulieu, Queen’s University
Spittoon Philosophers or Radical Revolutionaries? The Canadian
Administration of the Industrial Workers of the World, 1931-1935
53.3 Benjamin Isitt, University of New Brunswick
Working-Class Agency and the New Left in Cold War British Columbia,
1948-1972
Chair / Commentateur : Jeremy Mouat, University of Alberta
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112
54. Selling Rural Spaces: Shifting Land Use in Ontario and Manitoba /
Vente des zones rurales et évolution de leurs usages en Ontario et au
Manitoba
54.1 Heather E. Nelson, McMaster University
Coniferous Forests, Canoeing, and Campgrounds: Manitoba’s Forest
Reserve Policy
54.2 Gregory K.R. Stott, Nipissing University
Competing Interests and the Emergence of Summer Cottage
Communities in Ontario 1870 to 1920
54.3 Michelle L. Vosburgh, Brock University
For the Benefit of Agricultural Pursuits: The Canada Landed Credit
Company and Settlement in Canada West
Chair / Commentatrice : Shannon Stunden Bower, University of Alberta
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263
55. Women’s History as Public History [Round Table] / L’histoire des
femmes dans le contexte de l’histoire publique [Table ronde]
Rhonda Hinther, Canadian Museum of Civilization
Beyond the Compensatory” Gendering the Past in the Museum Context
Linda Ambrose, Laurentian University
Signs of Controversy: Remaking the Sites of Rural Women’s History
Dianne Dodd, Parks Canada
Commemorating Women’s History: Historic Sites, Historic Plaques
Chair / Commentatrice : Lisa Helps, University of Toronto
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116
56. Transitions in the Provincial North / Trois provinces et leur Nord en
phase de transition
56.1 David Quiring, University of Saskatchewan
The Pendulum Swings: The Thatcher Years in Northern Saskatchewan
56.2 Jean Manore, Bishop’s University
Treaty 9 and the Borderland of Northern Ontario: Liberalism,
Colonialism, and Native Resistance to State Expansion
56.3 Ken Coates
Battling for the North: The Kemano Project and Competing Visions of
Northern British Columbia
Chair / Commentatrice : Whitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s University
12:15 - 1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGS
SÉANCES DE TRAVAIL
Environmental History Group COMM 12
Groupe d’études en histoire de l’environment
Canadian Oral History Association COMM 16
Association canadienne d’histoire orale
History of Children and Youth Group COMM 103
Groupe d’études en histoire des enfants et de la jeunesse
Canadian Committee on Urban History COMM 112
Société canadienne d’histoire urbaine
Editorial Board, Histoire sociale / Social History COMM 116
Comité de redaction, Histoire sociale / Social History
University Bowl Tour
Visite commentée de l’université et de son architecture
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 18
57. The 2006 Macdonald Prize Book [Round Table] / Le prix John A.
Macdonald [Table ronde]
Nicole Neatby, St. Mary’s University
Jean-Claude Robert, Université du Québec à Montréal
Jean-Philippe Warren, Concordia University
Michael Gauvreau, McMaster University
Chair / Commentateur : Cornelius Jaenen, University of Ottawa
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 12
58. Critical Moments in Health Care / Les soins de santé à un tournant
critique
58.1 Rebecca Brain, University of Saskatchewan
Holy Healers: Missionary Response to Epidemic Disease on the Great
Plains, 1860-1871
58.2 Sharon Myers, University of Prince Edward Island
The August Migrations: Inventing and Resisting School Medical
Inspection in New Brunswick
58.3 Esyllt W. Jones, University of Manitoba
Rethinking the Birth of Medicare: a Radical Diaspora in Saskatchewan,
1944
Chair / Commentatrice : Myra Rutherdale, York University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h ARTS 263
59. Edible Histories, Cultural Politics: Towards a Canadian Food
History [Round Table] / Histoires comestibles et politiques culturelles :
pour une histoire de l’alimentation au Canada [Table ronde]
Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
Edible Histories: Exploring Food in the Canadian Past
Alison Norman, University of Toronto
Culinary Encounters and Exchanges between Natives and White Settler
Women in Mid-19th Century Upper Canada
Stacey Zembrzycki, Carleton University
We Didn’t Have a Lot of Money, But We Had Food: Region and the
Gendered Production and Consumption of Food in Ukrainian
Households
Cheryl Warsh, Malaspina University College
From Vim to Popeye: ‘Power’ Foods for Kids in Canadian Popular
Magazines, 1910s-1960s
Chair / Commentatrice : Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto
Co-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 103
60. Historians’ Role in the Creation and Management of Historic Sites
and Museums in Canada [Round Table] / Le rôle des historiens dans
l’établissement et la gestion des sites historiques et des musées au
Canada [Table ronde]
Andrée Gendreau, Musée de la civilization
What Role for Historians?
Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British Columbia
Struggling with the Hierarchy of Importance in Historical
Commemoration
John G. McAvity, Canadian Museums Association
Museums and Research
Larry Ostola, Parks Canada
The Practice of History in the Context of National Historic Sites
Chair / Commentateur : Frits Pannekoek, Athabasca University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 112
61. South Africa in British Imperial History / La place de l’Afrique du
Sud dans l’histoire de l’Empire britannique
61.1 Sarah Glassford, York University
‘…a great privilege to serve the Empire’: Female Imperialism and the
Canadian Red Cross during the Boer War
61.2 Chris Madsen, Royal Military College of Canada and Canadian
Forces College
From Paardeberg to Liliefontein: Major-General Smith-Dorrien and the
Canadians in South Africa
Chair / Commentateur : Tolly Bradford, University of Alberta
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 116
62. Interrogating Encounters / Au sujet des rencontres
62.1 Catherine Cavanaugh, Athabasca University
‘My Own Darling Mother’: Reading a Mother-Daughter Relationship in
the Letters of Gladys Arnold
62.2 Karen Routledge, Rutgers University
In These Latitudes: 19th Century Encounters Between Inuit and
American Whalers
62.3 John S. Long, Nipissing University
Private Fred Moore: A Cree in the Royal Canadian Service Corps during
World War Two
Chair / Commentatrice : Françoise Noël, Nipissing University
3:00 - 3:30 / 15 h - 15 h 30
Nutrition Break
Pause santé
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 12
63. Symbols of Construction and Deconstruction in Canadian History /
Symbolique de la construction et de la déconstruction dans l’histoire du
Canada
63.1 Kurt Korneski, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Newfoundland’s National Policy: A Case Study in Colonial Nationalism
63.2 Georgia Sitara, University of Victoria
The Wanton Destruction of the Buffalo in Canada: Rereading the
Historical Record
63.3 Lia Ruttan, University of Alberta
Some Say It’s the Best Life Ever: Lifeways of the York Boat Men
Chair / Commentatrice : Kate McPherson, York University
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 18
64. Equal Footing: Delgamuukw and Oral and Written Tradition from a
Historical Perspective / La tradition orale et écrite sur un pied d’égalité.
Perspectives historiques
64.1 J. Andrew Taylor, University of Ottawa
Have We Been Here Before? The Turn to Written Record in Medieval
England and Some Possible Contemporary Parallels
64.2 Gwynneth C. D. Jones, Independent scholar
Making Space in the Witness Box: Documents and Oral Evidence in
Litigation Histories
64.3 James [Sakej] Youngblood Henderson, University of Saskatchewan
Constitutional Conscience: First Nations Jurisprudence and Oral
Histories
Chair / Commentateur : Norman Zlotkin, University of Saskatchewan
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 16
65. Canadians and their Pasts / Les Canadiens face à leurs passés
65.1 Del Muise, Carleton University
Working with Partners in search of their Pasts
65.2 Kadriye Ercikan, University of British Columbia
Comparison of Language-Groups in the Canadians and Their Pasts
Survey
65.3 David Northrup, York University Institute
Engagement in the Past: Preliminary Findings from the Canadians and
Their Pasts Survey
Chair / Commentateur : Gerald Friesen, University of Manitoba
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 103
66. Archives: Why You Should Care / Pourquoi se soucier des archives
66.1 Marianne McLean, Library and Archives Canada
Strategic Choices at Library and Archives Canada
66.2 Cheryl Avery, University of Saskatchewan Archives
Archives, Universities and Public Policy
66.3 Fred Farrell, Provincial Archives of New Brunswick
The Changing Face of Archives: Will You Recognize Us?
Chair / Commentateur : Alan MacEachern, University of Western
Ontario
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 112
67. Post-War Canadian Foreign Policy / La politique étrangère
canadienne d’après-guerre
67.1 David Webster, University of Toronto
Modern Missionaries? Canadian Postwar Technical Advisers in Asia
67.2 Jennifer Anderson, Carleton University
Building Bridges across the Arctic? Canadian-Soviet ‘Friends’ and
Northern Neighbors (1956-1989)
67.3 Janice Cavell, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
Suez and After: Canada and British Policy in the Middle East, 1956-1960
Chair / Commentateur : Adam Chapnick, Canadian Forces College
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 116
68. Aboriginal People Captured on Film and the Web / Les peuples
autochtones tels que saisis sur films et dans le Web
68.1 Matt Dyce, University of British Columbia
Images, Narratives, and other Northern ‘Openings’: C.W. Mathers from
the Arctic Circle to Edmonton, 1871-1914
68.2 Beth Greenhorn, Library and Archives Canada
The Web Exhibition Project Naming
Chair / Commentatrice: Jean Friesen, University of Manitoba
5:00- 6:00 / 17 h -18 h MURRAY 301
Adam Shortt Ceremony
University Archives and Special Collections
7:00 - 9:00 / 19 h - 21 h 519 2ND AVENUE N
Great Western Brewery beer-and-pizza wind-up
Soirée de clôture bière-et-pizza à la Great Western Brewery
2007 CHA Annual Meeting - Saskatoon (University of Saskatchewan)
PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME OF THE 86th ANNUAL MEETING OF THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN IN SASKATOON, 28 - 30 MAY 2007
In recognition of the University of Saskatchewan centennial, there will be two special events during the Canadian Historical Association conference in Saskatoon.On
Tuesday, May 29, at 3:30 p.m, just before the annual general meeting, there will be a brief ceremony to recognize the naming of Arts 241 as the Neatby-Timlin Theatre.
Mabel Timlin was a prominent member of the Department of Political Economy, while Hilda Neatby was the first female president of the Canadian Historical Association
and the first female head of a History Department in Canada.The second ceremony, Wednesday, May 30 at 5:00 p.m. in 301 Murray Library, will recognize the
contributions of economist and historian Adam Shortt to the university archives and special collections. A reception will follow.
Before the official start of the CHA conference, there will be a choice of three local tours on the afternoon of Sunday, May 27. All start at 2:30 p.m and will run for about
two hours..Wanuskewin Heritage Park features First Nations displays and a number of Plains Indian archeological features. The return bus fare (to and from campus) is
$15. There will also be a modest admission charge.The Western Development Museum has a replica, full-size streetscape (Boomtown 1910) and a new “Winning the
Prairie Gamble” exhibit. The return bus fare (to and from campus) is $15. There is a modest admission charge.Two members of the Saskatoon Heritage Society will be
offering walking tours of early Saskatoon and the boom years when the city grew from a hamlet of 113 in 1901 to 12,000 ten years later. The tours will start downtown.
The cost is $15.These tours are offered on a cost-recovery basis and will run only if there is sufficient interest. Please send your cheque (payable to the CHA) to Bill
Waiser, Department of Histoy, 9 Campus Drive, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SASK, S7N 5A5.The University of Saskatchewan has the best collection of
Collegiate Gothic Architecture on any university campus in Canada.There will be free, guided tours of the university bowl and renovated College Bu ilding each day of the
CHA conference over the lunch break. Please reserve your space by contacting Bill Waiser at bill.waiser@usask.ca
TWO NEW SPECIAL EVENTS AT THIS YEAR'S SASKATOON CHAThere will be a pre-conference reception at Boffins Club on Sunday, May 27 from 7:30 to 10:00 p.m.
Several former CHA presidents will serve as co-hosts of the event. Tickets are $10 per person. Please confirm your attendance by sending your cheque (payable to the
CHA) to Bill Waiser, Department of History, 9 Campus Drive, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5.There will also be a beer-and-pizza night at
Saskatoon's own Great Western Brewery on Wednesday, May 30 from 7:00 to 8:30. Seating in the hospitality room is limited. Please reserve your space by sending your
$10 cheque (payable to the CHA) to Bill Waiser.
Many of the papers are now available on-line in PDF format. To access them, click on the underlined title of paper in the preliminary program. You will then be promp ted
to provide a password: sask-07
SATURDAY 26 MAY 2007SAMEDI 26 MAI 20072:00-5:00 / 14 h - 17 h ARTS 298 CHA Executive MeetingRéunion de l’exécutif de la SHC
SUNDAY 27 MAY 2007DIMANCHE 27 MAI 20079:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h ARTS 298 CHA Council MeetingRéunion du Conseil d’administration de la SHC
2:00 - 5:00 / 14 h - 17 h
LOCAL TOURS / TOURS DE LA RÉGIONWestern Development MuseumWanuskewin Heritage ParkBoomtown Saskatoon
4:00 - 7:00 / 16 h - 19 h COMM 18 Meeting of Chairs of History Departmentsfollowed by dinner, 7:00-8:30Réunion des directeurs des départements d’histoireSuivie d’un
dîner de 19 h à 20 h 30
7:30 - 10:00 / 19 h 30 - 22 h BOFFINS CLUB, INNOVATION PLACE Presidents’ ReceptionRéception des présidents, Boffins Club, place Innovation
MONDAY 28 MAY 2007LUNDI 28 MAI 2007
8:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h
Coffee, juice, etc.Café, jus, etc.
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12 1. Local Knowledge, Professional Expertise, Political Context: Public History as Interactive Process / Savoir régional, expertise
professionnelle et contexte politique : l’histoire publique en tant que processus interactif 1.1 Danielle Hamelin, Parks Canada Memorials, Sites of Inspiration, and Symbolic
Places: Capturing the Significance of the Intangible1.2 Paul Litt, Carleton University The Unbearable Loopyness of Being a Public Historian: Towards a Shared
Conceptualization of the Practice of Public History1.3 Alexandra Mosquin, Parks Canada Engaging the Ethnocultural: Past and Current Directions in Historical Research
Prepared for the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of CanadaChair / Commentatrice : Margaret Conrad, University of New Brunswick
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263 2. Encountering the Digital Archive / De l’utilisation des archives numériques 2.1 James Opp, Carleton Unive rsity The Colonial
Legacy of the Digital Archive: The Arnold Lupson Photographic Albums2.2 Victoria Dickenson, McCord Museum How Many Is Enough? Feeding the Insatiable Digital
Archive2.3 William J. Turkel, University of Western Ontario Methodology for the Infinite Archive: Introducing Public History Students to Digital HistoryChair /
Commentateur : Kevin Kee, Brock UniversityCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d’histoire et
d’informatique
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16 3. Northerness and Northerners / La nordicité et les habitants du Nord 3.1 Peter V. Krats, University of Western Ontario Northness
Notwithstanding: Recognizing the Northness of Provincial Resource Canada3.2 P. Whitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s University The Canadian Rangers and Northern
Security: A Living History3.3 David P. King, University College of the North Francophone Nationalism, Inuit and the Role of the Anglican Church: A Study of the Transfer
of Northern Quebec from Federal to Provincial Jurisdiction and its Resistance by Inuit, 1960-1970Chair / Commentateur : Bill Morrison, University of Northern British
Columbia
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103 4. Colonialism in its Many Manifestations / Les nombreuses facettes du colonialisme 4.1 Julien Vernet, University of British
Columbia Okanagan The Establishment of British Imperial Rule in Quebec and American Territorial Rule in Louisiana: A Comparison4.2 Helena Nunes Duarte, University of
Calgary ‘Civilizing’ the Amazon: Amerindians in the Portuguese Empire, 1750-17774.3 Andrew D. Smith, Institute of Historical Research, London Thomas Bassett
Macaulay: The Intersection of Business and Race in the History of Canadian ImperialismChair / Commentateur : John Reid, St. Mary’s University
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 112 5. Diefenbaker and Canadian Nationalism / Diefenbaker et le nationalisme canadien 5.1 Cara Spittal, University of Toronto ‘A new
hope, a new soul’: The Rhetorical Diefenbaker5.2 Craig G. Greenham, University of Western Ontario Centre of Attention: The Diefenbaker Centre’s Opening in
Saskatoon5.3 Edward MacDonald, University of Prince Edward Island Cradling Confederation: Nationalism, Centennialism, and the Founding of the Confederation Centre
of the Arts in 1964Chair / Commentateur : Bill Brennan, University of Regina
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 116 6. Making Meaning of Aboriginal Stories / Le sens des histoires autochtones 6.1 Susan Elaine Gray, University of
Winnipeg Pâkwaciskwew: A Re-acquaintance with the Wilderness Woman6.2 Keith N Goulet, University of Regina The Cree Historical Narrative6.3 Katrina Srigley,
Nipissing University ‘The North was always part of me’: Anishinaabe and Inninu Women in Ontario’s North Chair / Commentatrice: Patricia McCormack, University of
Alberta
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18 7. Contested Commemorations in Twentieth-Century Canada / Controverses autour de certaines commémorations du XXe siècle
au Canada 7.1 Cecilia Morgan, University of Toronto History and the Six Nations, 1890s-1960s: Commemoration and Colonial Knowledge7.2 Lyle Dick, Parks
Canada Sergeant Masumi Mitsui and the Japanese Canadian War Memorial: Intersections of National, Cultural, and Personal Memory7.3 Frances Wright, Famous 5
Foundation The Famous 5 Foundation and the Commemoration of the Famous 5Chair / Commentatrice : Nicole Neatby, Saint Mary’s University
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition breakPause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18 8. Forum on Women and Global Histories: Representation and Resistance / Forum sur les femmes dans l’histoire mondiale :
représentation et mouvements de résistance Micheline Lessard, University of Ottawa Vietnamese Women on Strike: Broadening the Concept of Political Activism in French
Colonial Indochina, 1858-1945Joy Chadya, University of ManitobaVoting with their Feet: Rural Women’s Internal Displacement to Harare during the Zimbabwean
Liberation Struggle, 1974-1980Tina Chen, University of ManitobaInternational and Transnational Circuits of Gender in the Making of Socialism: The Roles of Women in
Sino-Soviet Film Exchange during the Maoist PeriodMary Lynn Stewart, Simon Fraser UniversityA Frenchwoman Writes about Indochina, 1931-1949: Andrée Viollis and
the Changing Face of Anti-colonialism in FranceChair / Commentatrice : Joan Sangster, Trent UniversitySpecial Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale présentée
par la Revue de la SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12 9. Craftworkers, les pharmaciens, and les arrimeurs / Les artisans, les pharmaciens et les arrimeurs 9.1 Robert B.
Kristofferson, Wilfrid Laurier University Craftsworker Self-Improvement in Mid-Nineteenth Century Ontario: The Diaries of Andrew McIlwraith9.2 Stéphanie Tésio,
Université Laval Exemple de transmission du savoir : les pharmaciens au XVIIIe siècleChair / Commentateur : David Frank, University of New Brunswick
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16 10. Indigenous Peoples and Christianity / Les peuples indigènes et le christianisme 10.1 Susan Neylan, Wilfri d Laurier
University Aboriginal Missionaries, Spiritual Borderlands: Cultural Exchange on the Northwest Coast10.2 Derek Whitehouse-Strong, Grant MacEwan College Institutions
and Empire: The Shifting Dynamics Behind the Identity and Relationships of CMS Native Agents in 19th Century Canada10.3 Tolly Bradford, University of
Alberta ‘Valuable Information’: Indigenous Missionaries and British Mission NetworksChair / Commentateur : Don Smith, University of Calgary
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103 11. Making Knowledge about Aboriginal History in Canada / Pour mieux connaître l’histoire autochtone au Canada 11.1
Gerard Hartley, Public History Inc. The Search for Consensus: Legislative History of Bill C-31, 1969-198511.2 Sarah Bonesteel, Public History Inc. The History of Program
and Policy Development for InuitChair / Commentateur : Alvin Finkel, Athabasca University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112 12. Professors, University Research, and Constructions of the Canadian State and Society / Le rôle des professeurs et de la
recherche universitaire dans l’édification de la société et de l’État canadiens 12.1 Paul Stortz, University of Calgary Faculty of Arts Professors and Community
Development in Toronto, 1930-194512.2 James Hull, University of British Columbia Okanagan The Expert Professor: Scientific Research and the Public Role of Canadian
Universities, 1890-192012.3 E. Lisa Panayotidis, University of Calgary Contesting Narratives of Public Knowledge in Communities: Frank Underhill’s Vision of a Political
Education Through the ArtsChair / Commentateur : Paul Litt, Carleton University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116 13. Justifying Repression: Differing Perspectives on North American Anarchism / La justification de la répression : aspects
de l’anarchisme en Amérique du Nord 13.1 Marc Roy, Simon Fraser University Sexual Deviants and Craven Anarchists or the History of Class in Gilded Age America13.2
Travis Tomchuk, Queen’s University The Limits of Political Citizenship: The Canadian State, Anarchists, and Arab Nationals13.3 Paul Burrows, University of
Manitoba Anarchism, Colonialism, and Aboriginal Dispossession in the Canadian WestChair / Commentateur : Bryan Palmer, Trent University
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263 14. Forum on Teaching the History of the Canadian North / Forum sur l’enseignement de l’histoire du Nord canadien Brenda
Mcdougall, University of SaskatchewanDavid Neufeld, Parks Canada, The Challenges of Northern HistoryAmanda Graham, Yukon Coll ege, Northern HistoryPhilip Goldring,
Consultant, Teaching Northern History on a Southern University CampusChair / Commentateur : Bill Waiser, University of Saskatchewan
12:15-1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGSSÉANCES DE TRAVAILHistorical Geographic Information Systems (HGIS) Demonstration COMM 16Une démonstration des systèmes d’information
géographique historiqueCanadian Committee on History and Computing ARTS 263Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatiqueNative History Study Group COMM12Groupe
d’étude en histoire autochtoneCanadian Committee on Women’s History COMM 18Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmesBusiness History Group COMM 103Groupe
d’histoire en affairesEditorial Board, Labour / le Travail COMM 112Comité de redaction, Labour / le TravailCommittee on the Second World War COMM 116Comité sur la
Seconde Guerre mondialeUniversity Bowl TourVisite commentée de l’université et de son architecture1:00 - 5:00 / 13 h - 17 h 710 ARTS Editorial Board, Canadian
Historical ReviewComité de rédaction, Canadian Historical Review
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 12 15. Engendering Rebellion: Challenging the Constraints of Community / Rébellion et rejet des contraintes soci ales 15.1 Daniel
Horner, York University An Avalanche of Men: The Nocturnal Spectacle of Montreal’s Rebellion Losses Riot15.2 Lynn Kennedy, University of Lethbridge Belle or Rebel?
Gendering Conformity and Defiance in the Antebellum South15.3 Amy Shaw, University of Lethbridge Reluctant Rebels: Masculinity and Conscientious Objection in the
First World War15.4 Ryan O’Connor, University of Western Ontario Gender Roles and Agrarian Protest: A Case Study of the 1971 National Farmers Union Demonstration
on Prince Edward IslandChair / Commentateur : Greg Kealey, University of New Brunswick
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 18 16. Doing History on Television [Round Table] / L’histoire télévisée [Table ronde]John Thompson, Duke Univers ityScholarship
vs. Stimulation: Must an Academic Historian Concede to Needs of the Producer, Screen Writer, and Director?Paul Dederick, CBC TelevisionIs Truth the First Casualty of
Doing History on Television?Sharon Riis, Screen WriterNever Let the Facts Get in the Way of the TruthGuy Vanderhaeghe, Noveli stUnreasonable Expectations vs.
Historical DramaChair / Commentateur : Chad Gaffield, University of Ottawa
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 16 17. Education Contestation / La contestation étudiante 17.1 George Buri, University of Manitoba ‘Between Education and
Catastrophe’: The Battle over Public Education in Canada 1942-196017.2 Sara Burke, Laurentian University Revisiting the Great Divide: World War I and Women’s Higher
Education in Ontario17.3 Kristina Llewellyn, University of Ottawa Too Much a Woman, Too Little a Mother: The Public Making of the Female Secondary School Teacher17.4
Stefan Jensen, Memorial University of Newfoundland The Education Student Movement at the Memorial University of NewfoundlandChair / Commentatrice : Kate
McCrone, University of Windsor
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 ARTS 263 18. Governing Bodies, Health Care in Aboriginal Communities / Les institutions administratives et les soins de santé dans les
communautés autochtones 18.1 Lesley McBain, University of Saskatchewan ‘Better, Worse or Dead by Now’: Jurisdictional Divisions and Providing Healthcare in Northern
Saskatchewan18.2 Laurie Meijer Drees, Malaspina University College Indian Hospitals and Aboriginal Nurses: Canada and Alaska18.3 Myra Rutherdale, York
University DEW Line Doctors and Alaska Highway Nurses: Medical Encounters in Canadian Arctic Communities, 1945-7018.4 Mary Jane McCallum, University of
Manitoba Twentieth Century Aboriginal Nursing HistoryChair / Commentatrice : Maureen Lux, Brock University
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 103 19. Aboriginal Identity and Agency / Agence et identité autochtones 19.1 Susan M. Hill, Wilfrid Laurier University Through a
Haudenosaunee Lens: An Examination of Sally Weaver’s Six Nations Historical Publications 19.2 Larry Grant and Susan Roy, University of British Columbia Writing
Ethnicity and Identity into Community History: The Chinese Market Garden Leases on the Musqueam Indian Reserve19.3 Stephen Dutcher, University of New
Brunswick Deconstructing Colonialism: Agency and Behaviouralism in Late 20th Century Analyses of Aboriginal -Settler Society Relations in ‘Canada’19.4 Michelle A.
Hamilton, University of Guelph ‘Anyone not on the list might as well be dead:’ First Nations and the Censuses of CanadaChair / Commentateur: Arthur Ray, University of
British Columbia
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 112 20. L’Histoire, Heritage, and Public Memory / Histoire, patrimoine et mémoire publique 20.1 John C. Walsh, Carleton
University Re-Placing Home: Forests, Rivers, and Public Memory20.2 Alan Gordon, University of Guelph History for Tourists: History, Tourism, and Regional Diversity in
20th Century Ontario20.3 Claire Campbell, Dalhousie University Hinge of a Nation or Bone of Contention: The Battle over Reconstructing Old Fort WilliamChair /
Commentatrice : Jean Manore, Bishop’s University
1:30 - 3:15 / 13 h 30 - 15 h 15 COMM 116 21. Ecology and Imperialism in the Canadian North / Écologie et impérialisme dans le Nord canadien 21.1 Liza Piper,
University of British Columbia Death in a Northern Town: The Role of Disease in Northern Ecological Imperialism21.2 John Sandlos, Memorial University of
Newfoundland Where the Reindeer and Inuit Should Play: Animal Husbandry and Ecological Imperialism in Canada’s North21.3 Arn Keeling, Memorial University of
Newfoundland Towards a Historical Political Ecology of Uranium Mining in the Canadian NorthChair / Commentateur : Geoff Cunfer, University of Saskatchewan
3:15 - 4:00 / 15 h 15 - 16 h
Nutrition BreakPause santé
4:00 - 6:00 / 16 h - 18 h COLLG 120 [CONVOCATION HALL]Jennifer Welsh, Oxford UniversityConnecting the Public to Foreign PolicyChair / Commentrice: Janice
MacKinnon, University of SaskatchewanFollowed by public reception at 5:00 / Une réception suivra à 17 h
TUESDAY 29 MAY 2007MARDI 29 MAI 20078:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h Juice, coffee, etc.Jus, café, etc.
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12 22. Canadian Public Policy during the 1960s and 1970s / La politique publique canadienne pendant les années 1 960 et 1970 22.1
Stéphane Savard, Université Laval Quand l’histoire donne sens aux représentations symboliques: Manic-V, Hydro-Québec et la société québécoise22.2 Penny Bryden,
University of Victoria The Contributions of Historians to Public Policy Development in Canada in the 1960s22.3 Raymond Blake, University of Regina Social Policy and
Constitutional Negotiations: The Case of Family Allowances in the 1970sChair / Commentateur : Dominique Clément, University of Victoria
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16 23. Bâtir des ponts à l’extérieur du milieu universitaire : l’expertise et l’élaboration des politiques / Building Bridges Outside the
Academic Milieu: Expertise and Policy Development 23.1 Marcel Martel, York University Les experts au service de l’État ontarien : le cas de l’Ontario Advisory Committee
on Confederation23.2 Martin Pâquet, Université Laval Guérir le mal linguistique : les experts et leur participation aux débats linguistiques dans les années 196023.3 Julien
Massicotte, Université Laval Chronique d’un mouvement social acadien : le comité pour le bilinguisme à Moncton, 1972Chair / Commentateur : John Willis, Canadian
Museum of Civilization
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263 24. Making Knowledge Public: Solving Three Mysteries of Canadian Discovery / La découverte du Canada : trois mystères à
élucider 24.1 Birgitta Wallace, Parks Canada Where is Vinland?, A Great Unsolved Mystery in Canadian History24.2 Bill Morrison, University of Northern British
Columbia Discovery! Public History and the Origins of the Klondike Gold Rush24.3 Caroline-Isabelle Caron and Lise Robichaud, Queen’s University Jérôme, Mystery Man of
Baie Sainte-MarieChair / Commentateur : Pierre Lanthier, Université du Québec à Trois-RivièresCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing /
Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18 25. Historical Representation and Memory in Settler Colonialism / Colonisalisme, représentation historique et devoir de mémoire
25.1 Jean Barman, University of British Columbia Erasing Indigenous Indigeneity in Vancouver25.2 Victoria Freeman, University of Toronto People Without History / A
City Without Roots: Indigeneity, Settler Colonialism, and Historical Memory in Toronto25.3 Robin Jarvis Brownlie, University of Manitoba The Impact of Aboriginal
Interventions into Historical Thought and Writing in CanadaChair / Commentatrice : Sarah Carter, University of Alberta
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103 26. The Royal Navy / La Marine royale 26.1 William Roy Miles, Memorial Un iversity of Newfoundland Sea Officers and the
Mentality of the Newfoundland Convoy,1660-172926.2 Keith Mercer, Dalhousie University On the Impress Service: The History of Guard Boats in St. John’s
Newfoundland, 1775-181526.3 George Young, St. Mary’s University The Royal Navy, the Raid on Washington, and the Wreck of the HMS Fantome, 1814Chair /
Commentateur : Chris Kent, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 112 27. Aboriginal Policy through Time / L'évolution de la politique autochtone 27.1 Michael Behiels and Robert Talbot, University of
Ottawa Aboriginal Organizations and the Process of Constitutional Reform,1968-198227.2 Theodore Binnema, University of Northern British Columbia A Look at Two
Crucial Documents in the Development of Canadian Indian Policy27.3 Bonny Ibhawoh, McMaster University Negotiating Domination and Resistance: Indigenous People
and Colonial Treaty Making in West Africa and Upper Canada 1840-1900Chair / Commentateur : Jim Miller, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 116 28. Women, Property, and Labour in Louisiana, Tennessee, and Lower Canada / Femmes, propriété et travail en Louisiane, au
Tennesse et dans le Bas-Canada 28.1 Sara Sundberg, University of Central Missouri Under Her Authority: Women and Property in Early Louisiana28.2 Jan Noel, University
of Toronto Discrediting Dowagers in Lower Canada28.3 Nelson Ouellet, Moncton University The War on Dependency in Tennessee during Reconstruction (1865-1869)Chair
/ Commentatrice : Bettina Bradbury, York University
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition breakPause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18 29. Many Tender Ties: A Forum in Honour of Sylvia Van Kirk [Round Table] / Plein de tendresse : forum en hommage à
Sylvia Van Kirk [Table ronde]Patricia McCormack, University of Alberta‘A World We Have Lost’: The Plural Society of Fort ChipewyanValerie Korinek, University of
SaskatchewanDaring to write a history of western Canadian women’s experiences: Assessing Sylvia Van Kirk’s Feminist ScholarshipMary-Ellen Kelm, Simon Fraser
UniversityRiding into Place: Rodeo, Masculinity, and ‘Mixed-Blood’ MenAnthony Hall, University of LethbridgeDecolonization, the Non-Aligned Movement, and the Enigma
of the Indigenous Peoples in the Western HemisphereChair / Commentatrice : Jennifer Brown, University of WinnipegCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on
Women’s History / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263 30. Beyond Borders: Regions in Global History / Au-delà des frontières : histoires régionales mondiales 30.1 Eric
Tagliacozzo, Cornell University Thinking Marginally: Ethno-Historical Notes on the Nature of Smuggling in Human Societies30.2 Leo Shin, University of British
Columbia The Politics of Identity on a Chinese Borderland30.3 Adeeb Khalid, Carleton Being Muslim in Soviet Central Asia, or an Alternative History of Muslim
ModernityChair / Commentateur : Steve Lee, University of British ColumbiaSpecial Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale organisée par la Revue de la SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12 31. Indigenous Boundaries Meet Settler Spaces / Autochtones et colons : le choc des frontières 31.1 Natasha S imon,
University of Victoria The Formation of Reserve and Settlement Conceptions in 18th century Nova Scotia: Elsipogtog as a Case Study31.2 Robert Diaz, University of
Victoria Tuutuuchpiika: The Last Thunderbird31.3 John Gow, University of Saskatchewan Mapping the Prairie River Cree / Comanche Borderlands of the Mid-1800sChair /
Commentatrice : Nicole St. Onge, University of Ottawa
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16 32. The Great War: Memory and Mythology / La Grande Guerre : mémoire et mythologie 32.1 Robert J. Harding, Da lhousie
University Myth, Memory, and Applicability: Newfoundland’s Cultural Memory of the Attack at Beaumont Hamel, 1916-194532.2 Nathan Smith, University of Toronto ‘We
say to you men of Toronto:’ Great War Veterans Propaganda in 1917 Toronto32.3 James M. Pitsula, University of Regina Manly Heroes: The University of Saskatchewan
and World War IChair / Commentateur : Philip Buckner, University of London
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103 33. Accessing, Organizing, and Analyzing Digitized Evidence [Round Table] / Le document numérique : comment l’obtenir,
l’organiser et l’analyser [Table ronde]Geoffrey Martin Rockwell, McMaster UniversityFrom Personal to Community Computing: The TAPoR PortalRaymond G. Siemens,
University of VictoriaModelling and Knowledge [Re]Presentation as a Context for the Contemporary Editor of Earlier Textual MaterialsMelissa Terras, University College
LondonDigital Papyrology: Building A System to Aid in Reading Ancient DocumentsBruce Robertson, Mount Allison UniversityThe Historical Event Markup and Linking
Project: Status and OpportunitiesChair / Commentateur : John Bonnett, Brock UniversityCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee for History and Computing and the
Society for Digital Humanities / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien d’histoire et d’informatique et la Société pour l’études des médias interactifs
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112 34. The Immigrant Experience in Canada and Australia / L’expérience des immigrants au Canada et en Australie 34.1
Ashleigh Androsoff, University of Toronto From the Private Sphere to the Public Eye: ‘Redressing’ the Image of Doukhobor-Canadian Women in the Twentieth Century34.2
Ikuko Asaka, University of Wisconsin – Madison Ex-Slaves or Immigrants?: The Gender and Racial Politics of Belonging among the Self-Emancipated People in
Canada34.3 Lisa Chilton, University of Prince Edward Island Made to Feel at Home? Accommodating Immigrants at Ports of Entry in early Twentieth-Century Canada and
AustraliaChair / Commentatrice : Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116 35. Workplace Unrest across North America / Les conflits de travail en Amérique du Nord 35.1 Cynthia Loch -Drake, York
University ‘A special breed’: Packing Men and the Class and Racial Politics of Manly Discourses in Post-1945 Edmonton, Alberta35.2 Jeffery Taylor, Athabasca
University The Struggle for Rights at Work: Electrical Workers, Shop-Floor Action and Industrial Legality, 1940s-1960s35.3 Brian Froese, Canadian Mennonite
University ‘Is Anabaptism here a joke?’: California Mennonite Farmers, Labour Tensions, and Visitors from Eastern States, 1974Chair / Commentatrice : Suzanne Morton,
McGill University
12:15 - 1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGSSÉANCES DE TRAVAILCanadian Committee on Labour History COMM 12Comité canadien sur l’histoire du travailCanadian Committee on Military
History COMM 16Comité canadien sur l’histoire militairePublic History Group COMM 103Groupe d’études en histoire publiqueGradu ate Students Committee COMM
18Comité des étudiants graduésCanadian Committee on the History of Sexuality COMM 112Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la sexual ité Economic Historians in Canada
COMM 116Groupe d’étude en histoire économique du CanadaUniversity Bowl TourVisite commentée de l’université et de son architecture
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 18 36. New Research on Canadian First Wave Feminism / Recherches récentes sur les premières générations de féministes au Canada
36.1 Nancy Forestell, St. Francis Xavier University Transnational Citizenship in a Post-Suffrage Era: Canadian First Wave Feminism, 1920-193936.2 Kelly Mitchell,
University of Western Ontario ‘To Hell with Women Magistrates’: An Examination of the Legal and Social Precursors to the Persons Case of 192936.3 Katherine M.J.
McKenna, University of Western Ontario ‘Maternity was not the first and only office of womanhood’: E. Cora Hind, First Wave Feminist, 1861-1942Chair / Commentatrice :
Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British ColumbiaCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de
l’histoire des femmes
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 12 37. Gender and Gendered Discourse / Discussions sur les genres 37.1 Allan Rowe, University of Alberta Gender and Irish
Associational Culture in Western Canada, 1874-193037.2 Damien-Claude Bélanger, Trent University Anti-Americanism in Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century
Canada: A Gendered Discourse37.3 Josette Brun, Université Laval Genre et presse québécoise à la fin du XVIIIe siècle: public, production et contenu de la Gazette de
Québec et de la Gazette de MontréalChair / Commentateur : Michael Cottrell, University of Saskatchewan
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 16 38. Historians at Work / Les historiens à l’œuvre 38.1 Scott W. See, University of Maine Historians, Public Memory, and the
Construction of Canada’s ‘Peaceable Kingdom’ Myth38.2 Daryl White, Nipissing University Reviewing the Review: Professionalization, Objectivity, and Canada’s History
Journal38.3 Kenneth C. Dewar, Mount Saint Vincent University Frank Underhill: Intellectual in Search of a RoleChair / Commentatrice : Molly Ungar, University College of
the Fraser Valley
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 103 39. The Challenge of Family Finances / Le difficile équilibre du budget familial 39.1 Shirley M. Tillotson, Dalhousie University The
Bugbear of Direct Taxation: the Revenue Side of the Maritime Rights Claims39.3 Robert Dennis, Queen’s University Depression-Era Roman Catholicism in Toronto: the
Case of Catherine de Hueck and Friendship HouseChair / Commentateur : Doug McCalla, University of Guelph
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h ARTS 263 40. Doing Aboriginal History / Écrire l’histoire des autochtones 40.1 Keith Thor Carlson, University of Saskatchewan Making Sense
of Memory: Indigenous Dreams, Historical Evidence, and the Little Matter of Footnotes40.2 John S. Lutz, University of Victoria Lazy Indians or Lazy Scholars? Problems in
Ethnohistory40.3 Jon Clapperton, University of Saskatchewan Balancing the Past: Authority, Postmodernity, and doing Oral HistoryChair / Commentatrice : Mary-Ellen
Kelm, Simon Fraser University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 112 41. Repercussions of Revolution: Ireland and Canada in the 1920s / Les répercussions d’une révolution en irlande et au Canada
dans les années 1920 41.1 Mark McGowan, University of Toronto The King, the Kaiser, and Canada41.2 Kyla Madden, Queen’s University Interrogating the Witness
Statements: South Armagh and the Bureau of Military History41.3 David A. Wilson, University of Toronto ‘Giving the Orange Tory Bigots Something to Think About’: The
D’Arcy McGee Centennial Celebration of 1925Chair / Commentatrice : Martha Smith-Norris, University of Saskatchewan
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 116 42. CANCELLED / ANNULÉE
3:00 - 3:30 / 15 h - 15 h 30
Nutrition breakPause santé
3:30 / 15 h 30 ARTS 241 Neatby-Timlin CeremonyChair: Jo-Anne Dillon, University of Saskatchewan
3:45 - 5:15 / 15 h 45 - 17 h 15 ARTS 241 CHA ANNUAL MEETINGRÉUNION ANNUELLE DE LA SHC
5:30 - 7:30 / 17 h 30 - 19 h 30 FACULTY CLUB CHA PRESIDENT’S GALAGALA DE LA PRÉSIDENTE DE LA SHC
WEDNESDAY 30 MAY 2007MERCREDI 30 MAI 2007
8:30 - 9:00 / 8 h 30 - 9 h
Coffee, juice, etc.Café, jus, etc.
9:00 - 5:00 / 9 h - 17 h ARTS 710 “The Policy History of Canadian Medicare” WorkshopAtelier sur l’histoire du régime d’assurance-maladie au CanadaSponsored by the
Canadian Society of the History of Medicine / Séance parrainée par la Société canadienne de l’histoire de la médecine
9:00 -12:00 / 9 h - 12 h ARTS 298 CHA Council MeetingRéunion du Conseil d’administration de la SHC
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 18 43. The Body and Family in Question / La remise en question de la famille et des canons de la beauté 43.1 Jennifer Ellison, York
University Oppression, Acceptance, and Liberation: Fat Women Organizing in Canada, 1978-198843.2 Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University The World ‘broke loose from its
moral mooring’: The Public Contest Between Pleasure and Destruction in Canadian Culture, 192743.3 Ryan Eyford, University of Manitoba Lucifer Comes to New Iceland:
Margret Benedictsson’s Radical Critique of Marriage and the FamilyChair / Commentatrice : Linda Kealey, University of New Brunswick
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 12 44. Youth Must be Served / Au service de la jeunesse 44.1 Helen Brown, Malaspina University-College A Message from Washington
–Then Business as Usual: Parents’ Magazine in World War II44.2 Dominique Clément, University of Victoria An Anachronism Failing to Function Properly: How the Baby
Boom Generation Transformed Social Movements in Canada44.3 Roberta Lexier, University of Alberta The Sixties in Canada: Student Movements at English-Canadian
UniversitiesChair / Commentatrice : Valerie Korinek, University of Saskatchewan
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 16 45. Issues in British Foreign Policy, 1919-1939 / Aspects de la politique étrangère britannique, de 1919 à 1939 45.1 Keith Neilson,
Royal Military College Sir Orme Sargent, Appeasement, and Views of Europe, 1932-194145.2 Greg Kennedy, King’s College British Views of the American Role in the Far
East, 1932 -194145.3 G. Bruce Strang, Lakehead University Anyone for Ice Cream?: British Official Perceptions of Italy, 1936-1940Chair / Commentateur : John Ferris,
University of Calgary
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 263 46. Performativity for Historians and their Publics / Les exploits des historiens et de leurs publics 46.1 A riel Beaujot, University of
Toronto Can Objects Speak? The Glove and the Performance of Middle-Class Womanhood, 1830-192046.2 Christopher Ernst, University of Toronto Performing Politics:
Public Entertainment and the Construction of Political Discourse in Victorian Toronto46.3 Kristina Guiguet, Carleton University Mrs. Widder, is this yours? Recording an
1844 Concert Program: Performance or Creation?Chair / Commentateur : Gene Allen, Ryerson University
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 COMM 103 47. Aboriginal Policy in Twentieth-Century Canada / La politique autochtone canadienne au XXe siècle 47.1 Byron Plant,
University of Saskatchewan Social Science, Legal Rational Administration and Hawthorn’s 1954 Indian Research Project47.2 Liam Haggarty, University of Saskatchewan A
History of Social Assistance Among the Sto:lo47.3 Jordan Stanger Ross, University of Victoria Urbanism and Colonialism: Vancouver City Planning and the Dispossession
of Native PeopleChair / Commentatrice : Robin Jarvis Brownlie, University of Manitoba
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 112 48. The Regulation of Liquor, Guns, Animals, and Minds / La réglementation de l’alcool, des armes à feu, des animaux et de
l’esprit 48.1 Dan Malleck, Brock University Deviance, Disorder, and Drunks: Liquor Control and the Reconceptualization of Drinking: 1927-194448.2 Bob McMillan, McGill
University Animal Welfare and the Marginalization of Sentiment: Making Public Knowledge Compatible with Expanding CapitalismChair / Commentateur : Tina Loo,
University of British Columbia
9:00 - 10:30 / 9 h - 10 h 30 ARTS 116 49. Media, Religion, and Historical Revisionism in 20th Century Germany and France / Les médias, la religion et le révisionnisme
historique en France et en Allemagne au XXe siècle 49.1 Mark Meyers, University of Saskatchewan Mass Media and Cultural Crisis in Interwar France49.2 Kyle Jantzen,
Alliance University College Enlisting the ‘Infantry of God’: Assessing Competition between Pro-Nazi Protestants in the Third Reich49.3 José R. Jouve-Martin, McGill
University Admiral der Weltmeere: Werner Egk’s Colombus and the Re-creation of History on the German Opera StageChair / Commentateur : Brett Fairbairn, University
of Saskatchewan
10:30 - 10:45 / 10 h 30 - 10 h 45
Nutrition breakPause santé
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 18 50. First Nations and Global Colonialism / Les Premières Nations et le colonialisme mondial 50.1 Kat Ellinghaus, Monash
University Strategies of Elimination: ‘Exempted’ Aborigines, ‘Competent’ Indians, and Twentieth Century Assimilation Policies in Austral ia and the United States Chair /
Commentateur : Keith Thor Carlson, University of SaskatchewanSpecial Journal of the CHA Session / Séance spéciale de la Revue de la SHC
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 12 51. Making Knowledge Public in Museum Exhibits / Les expositions muséales et la diffusion du savoir 51.1 Michale Lang,
Glenbow Museum Mavericks: An Incorrigible History of Alberta–New Approaches to Exhibit Development51.2 Gayle Thrift, St. Mary’s University Beyond Academia: History
in the Public Marketplace51.3 Aritha van Herk, University of Calgary Strip Search: Finding Maverick AlbertaChair / Commentatrice : Lisa Making, Royal Tyrrell Museum
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 16 52. Learning from History / Les leçons de l’Histoire 52.1 Donald A. Bailey, University of Winnipeg Bridging Communities:
Sampling Precedents in European History for the Interest of Specialists in Canadian History, Law, or Politics 52.2 Gene Allen, Ryerson University News and National
Identity in Canada, 1890-1930Chair / Commentateur : Jean-Claude Robert, Université du Québec à Montréal
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 103 53. Labour: Challenges to a Maturing Movement / Problèmes de croissance du mouvement ouvrier 53.2 Michel S. Beaulieu,
Queen’s University Spittoon Philosophers or Radical Revolutionaries? The Canadian Administration of the Industrial Workers of the World, 1931-193553.3 Benjamin Isitt,
University of New Brunswick Working-Class Agency and the New Left in Cold War British Columbia, 1948-1972Chair / Commentateur : Jeremy Mouat, University of
Alberta
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 112 54. Selling Rural Spaces: Shifting Land Use in Ontario and Manitoba / Vente des zones rurales et évolution d e leurs usages
en Ontario et au Manitoba 54.1 Heather E. Nelson, McMaster University Coniferous Forests, Canoeing, and Campgrounds: Manitoba’s Forest Reserve Policy54.2 Gregory
K.R. Stott, Nipissing University Competing Interests and the Emergence of Summer Cottage Communities in Ontario 1870 to 192054.3 Michelle L. Vosburgh, Brock
University For the Benefit of Agricultural Pursuits: The Canada Landed Credit Company and Settlement in Canada WestChair / Commentatrice : Shannon Stunden Bower,
University of Alberta
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 ARTS 263 55. Women’s History as Public History [Round Table] / L’histoire des femmes dans le contexte de l’histoire publique [Table
ronde]Rhonda Hinther, Canadian Museum of CivilizationBeyond the Compensatory” Gendering the Past in the Museum ContextLinda Ambrose, Laurentian UniversitySigns
of Controversy: Remaking the Sites of Rural Women’s HistoryDianne Dodd, Parks CanadaCommemorating Women’s History: Historic Sites, Historic PlaquesChair /
Commentatrice : Lisa Helps, University of TorontoCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire
des femmes
10:45 - 12:15 / 10 h 45 - 12 h 15 COMM 116 56. Transitions in the Provincial North / Trois provinces et leur Nord en phase de transition 56.1 David Qui ring, University of
Saskatchewan The Pendulum Swings: The Thatcher Years in Northern Saskatchewan56.2 Jean Manore, Bishop’s University Treaty 9 and the Borderland of Northern
Ontario: Liberalism, Colonialism, and Native Resistance to State Expansion56.3 Ken Coates Battling for the North: The Kemano Project and Competing Visions of Northern
British ColumbiaChair / Commentatrice : Whitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s University
12:15 - 1:30 / 12 h 15 - 13 h 30
BUSINESS MEETINGSSÉANCES DE TRAVAILEnvironmental History Group COMM 12Groupe d’études en histoire de l’environmentCanadian Oral History Association COMM
16Association canadienne d’histoire oraleHistory of Children and Youth Group COMM 103Groupe d’études en histoire des enfants et de la jeunesseCanadian Committee on
Urban History COMM 112Société canadienne d’histoire urbaineEditorial Board, Histoire sociale / Social History COMM 116Comité de redaction, Histoire sociale / Social
HistoryUniversity Bowl TourVisite commentée de l’université et de son architecture
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 18 57. The 2006 Macdonald Prize Book [Round Table] / Le prix John A. Macdonald [Table ronde]Nicole Neatby, St. Mary’s
UniversityJean-Claude Robert, Université du Québec à MontréalJean-Philippe Warren, Concordia UniversityMichael Gauvreau, McMaster UniversityChair / Commentateur :
Cornelius Jaenen, University of Ottawa
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 12 58. Critical Moments in Health Care / Les soins de santé à un tournant critique 58.1 Rebecca Brain, University o f
Saskatchewan Holy Healers: Missionary Response to Epidemic Disease on the Great Plains, 1860-187158.2 Sharon Myers, University of Prince Edward Island The August
Migrations: Inventing and Resisting School Medical Inspection in New Brunswick58.3 Esyllt W. Jones, University of Manitoba Rethinking the Birth of Medicare: a Radical
Diaspora in Saskatchewan, 1944Chair / Commentatrice : Myra Rutherdale, York University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h ARTS 263 59. Edible Histories, Cultural Politics: Towards a Canadian Food History [Round Table] / Histoires comestibles et politiques
culturelles : pour une histoire de l’alimentation au Canada [Table ronde]Marlene Epp, University of WaterlooEdible Histories: Exploring Food in the Canadian PastAlison
Norman, University of TorontoCulinary Encounters and Exchanges between Natives and White Settler Women in Mid-19th Century Upper CanadaStacey Zembrzycki,
Carleton UniversityWe Didn’t Have a Lot of Money, But We Had Food: Region and the Gendered Production and Consumption of Food in Ukrainian HouseholdsCheryl
Warsh, Malaspina University CollegeFrom Vim to Popeye: ‘Power’ Foods for Kids in Canadian Popular Magazines, 1910s-1960s Chair / Commentatrice : Franca Iacovetta,
University of TorontoCo-sponsored by the Canadian Committee on Women’s History / Séance parrainée par le Comité canadien de l’histoire des femmes
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 103 60. Historians’ Role in the Creation and Management of Historic Sites and Museums in Canada [Round Table] / Le rôle des
historiens dans l’établissement et la gestion des sites historiques et des musées au Canada [Table ronde]Andrée Gendreau, Musée de la civilizationWhat Role for
Historians?Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British ColumbiaStruggling with the Hierarchy of Importance in Historical CommemorationJohn G. McAvity, Canadian
Museums AssociationMuseums and ResearchLarry Ostola, Parks CanadaThe Practice of History in the Context of National Historic SitesChair / Commentateur : Frits
Pannekoek, Athabasca University
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 112 61. South Africa in British Imperial History / La place de l’Afrique du Sud dans l’histoire de l’Empire britannique 61.1 Sarah
Glassford, York University ‘…a great privilege to serve the Empire’: Female Imperialism and the Canadian Red Cross during the Boer War61.2 Chris Madsen, Royal Military
College of Canada and Canadian Forces College From Paardeberg to Liliefontein: Major-General Smith-Dorrien and the Canadians in South AfricaChair / Commentateur :
Tolly Bradford, University of Alberta
1:30 - 3:00 / 13 h 30 - 15 h COMM 116 62. Interrogating Encounters / Au sujet des rencontres 62.1 Catherine Cavanaugh, Athabasca University ‘My Own Darling
Mother’: Reading a Mother-Daughter Relationship in the Letters of Gladys Arnold62.2 Karen Routledge, Rutgers University In These Latitudes: 19th Century Encounters
Between Inuit and American Whalers62.3 John S. Long, Nipissing University Private Fred Moore: A Cree in the Royal Canadian Service Corps during World War TwoChair /
Commentatrice : Françoise Noël, Nipissing University
3:00 - 3:30 / 15 h - 15 h 30
Nutrition BreakPause santé
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 12 63. Symbols of Construction and Deconstruction in Canadian History / Symbolique de la construction et de la déco nstruction dans
l’histoire du Canada 63.1 Kurt Korneski, Memorial University of Newfoundland Newfoundland’s National Policy: A Case Study in Colonial Nationalism63.2 Georgia Sitara,
University of Victoria The Wanton Destruction of the Buffalo in Canada: Rereading the Historical Record63.3 Lia Ruttan, University of Alberta Some Say It’s the Best Life
Ever: Lifeways of the York Boat MenChair / Commentatrice : Kate McPherson, York University
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 18 64. Equal Footing: Delgamuukw and Oral and Written Tradition from a Historical Perspective / La tradition orale et écrite sur un
pied d’égalité. Perspectives historiques 64.1 J. Andrew Taylor, University of Ottawa Have We Been Here Before? The Turn to Written Record in Medieval England and
Some Possible Contemporary Parallels64.2 Gwynneth C. D. Jones, Independent scholar Making Space in the Witness Box: Documents and Oral Evidence in Litigation
Histories64.3 James [Sakej] Youngblood Henderson, University of Saskatchewan Constitutional Conscience: First Nations Jurisprudence and Oral HistoriesChair /
Commentateur : Norman Zlotkin, University of Saskatchewan
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 16 65. Canadians and their Pasts / Les Canadiens face à leurs passés 65.1 Del Muise, Carleton University Working with Partners in
search of their Pasts65.2 Kadriye Ercikan, University of British Columbia Comparison of Language-Groups in the Canadians and Their Pasts Survey65.3 David Northrup,
York University Institute Engagement in the Past: Preliminary Findings from the Canadians and Their Pasts SurveyChair / Commentateur : Gerald Friesen, University of
Manitoba
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 103 66. Archives: Why You Should Care / Pourquoi se soucier des archives 66.1 Marianne McLean, Library and Archives
Canada Strategic Choices at Library and Archives Canada66.2 Cheryl Avery, University of Saskatchewan Archives Archives, Universities and Public Policy66.3 Fred Farrell,
Provincial Archives of New Brunswick The Changing Face of Archives: Will You Recognize Us?Chair / Commentateur : Alan MacEachern, University of Western Ontario
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 112 67. Post-War Canadian Foreign Policy / La politique étrangère canadienne d’après-guerre 67.1 David Webster, University of
Toronto Modern Missionaries? Canadian Postwar Technical Advisers in Asia67.2 Jennifer Anderson, Carleton University Building Bridges across the Arctic? Canadian-Soviet
‘Friends’ and Northern Neighbors (1956-1989)67.3 Janice Cavell, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada Suez and After: Canada and British Policy in the Middle
East, 1956-1960Chair / Commentateur : Adam Chapnick, Canadian Forces College
3:30 - 5:00 / 15 h 30 - 17 h COMM 116 68. Aboriginal People Captured on Film and the Web / Les peuples autochtones tels que saisis sur films et dans le Web 68.1 Matt
Dyce, University of British Columbia Images, Narratives, and other Northern ‘Openings’: C.W. Mathers from the Arctic Circle to Edmonton, 1871-191468.2 Beth
Greenhorn, Library and Archives Canada The Web Exhibition Project NamingChair / Commentatrice: Jean Friesen, University of Manitoba
5:00- 6:00 / 17 h -18 h MURRAY 301 Adam Shortt CeremonyUniversity Archives and Special Collections
7:00 - 9:00 / 19 h - 21 h 519 2ND AVENUE N Great Western Brewery beer-and-pizza wind-upSoirée de clôture bière-et-pizza à la Great Western Brewery
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