PROGRAMME FINAL

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Des copies imprimées du guide du délégué seront disponible au bureau de la SHC. Le samedi 29 mai, 2010, le bureau de la SHC sera dans l'aire de réception du département d'histoire au dixième étage du 'Library Building' (LB-1000).
Du dimanche 30 mai 2010 au 1er juin 2010, le bureau de la SHC sera au quatrième étage du 'Hall building' où la plus grande partie de la conférence aura lieux (H-400-01)
 

VENDREDI, 28 MAI 2010
SAMEDI 29 MAI 2010
DIMANCHE 30 MAI 2010
LUNDI, 30 MAI 2010
MARDI 1er JUIN 2010


VENDREDI, 28 MAI 2010 (top of page)


14:00 – 17:00                Salle LB-1042.03
 
Réunion de l’exécutif de la SHC

SAMEDI 29 MAI 2010 (top of page)

9:00 – 17:00                Salle LB-1014.00
 
Réunion du Conseil d’administration de la SHC
 
16:00 – 19:00                Salle H-767.00
 
Réunion des directeurs de départements d'histoire
 
19:30 – 23:30                  Brutopia, 1215 Crescent Blvd 
 
Activité de bienvenue pour les étudiantes et étudiants des cycles supérieurs

Tous les étudiants diplômés et chercheurs postdoc sont invités au Brutopia, un des meilleurs bistros de Montréal, situé au 1215, boul. Crescent, à quelques minutes de marche de Concordia. En plus d’amuse-gueule inspirés et de bières brassées sur place (dont une ou deux seront à nos frais), il y aura un spectacle, une foule nombreuse et beaucoup de plaisir. Soyez des nôtres! 


DIMANCHE 30 MAI 2010 (top of page)

9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-423.00
 
1.         L'histoire japonaise devient populaire : récits historiques, changement historique et culture populaire  japonaise
 
1.1       Thomas Lamarre, McGill University
            The Child Bomb: How Japanese Comics “Atomicized” Histories of Childhood
 
1.2       Matthew Penney, Concordia University
            Arguing On War – Kobayashi Yoshinori, Civic Engagement and Historical Debate
 
1.3       Marc Steinberg, Concordia University
            From Narrative Marketing to Narrative Worlds: Japanese Media and Marketing             Practice from the 1980s to the Present           
 
Animatrice: Livia Monnet, Université de Montréal
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
2.         L'art de conter et histoire éducative sur Internet : Les grands mystères de l'histoire québécoise et acadienne
 
2.1     paper  Peter Gossage, Concordia University
              Le Québec et le Canada français dans le cadre des Grands Mystères de l’histoire               canadienne
 
2.2       Annmarie Adams, McGill University / Valerie Minnett, Carleton University /               Mary Anne Poutanen, Concordia University / David Theodore, Harvard                           University
              paper‘She Must Not Stir out of a Darkened Room’: The Redpath Mansion              Mystery
 
2.3     paper Caroline-Isabelle Caron, Queen’s University
              Raconter la légende, révéler les faits: Stratégies de jumelages des légendes                           communautaires avec une base documentaire contradictoire dans Jérôme, l’inconnu               de la Baie Sainte-Marie  
 
Animateur: Léon Robichaud, Université de Sherbrooke
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-403.00
 
3.         Construire des identités de groupe dans les communautés transnationales
 
Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l'ethnicité et le transnationalisme
 
3.1       Maddelena Marinari, American University
            Assimilated but Undigested: Italian Americans and American Jews in the United             States in the 1930s
 
3.2      paper Aya Fujiwara, McMaster University
            The Transformation of Japanese-Canadian Homeland Symbol, 1919-1950
 
3.3     paper  Royden Loewen, University of Winnipeg
            A Transitional Border Zone: Host Society Newspapers and Canadian-Descendent Low             German Mennonites from Mexico in British Honduras and Bolivia, 1954-1978
 
3.4       Rhonda Hinther, Canadian Museum for Human Rights
            Stories of the Prairie Black Pioneers of Amber Valley: Place, Race, and Memory
 
Animatrice: Sonia Cancian, Concordia University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-420.00
 
4.         Narrer la classe sociale : Histoire orale et les études de la classe ouvrière
 
4.1       Robert Storey, McMaster University
            Through No Fault of Their Own: Injured Workers Accident Stories from the Point of             Production
 
4.2     paper  Jordan Stanger-Ross, University of Victoria
            Remembering Mean Streets in Philadelphia
 
4.3       Joyce Pillarella, Concordia University
            Behind the Tanks: The Italians of Ville-Émard, Montréal
 
4.4      High Paper Steven High, Concordia University
            Mapping Memories of Work and Displacement: The Sturgeon Falls Memoryscape
 
Animatrice: Katrina Srigley, Nipissing University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1019.00
 
5.         Affrontements de culture
 
5.1     High Paper Susan Brown, University of Prince Edward Island
            Making Ends Meet in London’s Eighteenth-Century Theatres:
            Performers’ Survival Strategies for Age, Illness and Poverty

 
5.2     paper  Makaela Mahoney, Memorial University
            Telling Our Story: The Evolution of Theatre in Newfoundland, 1965-1983
 
5.3       Stephen Henderson, Acadia University
            The Counter-Counterculture: Protesting the Cancellation of The Don Messer Jubilee
 
            Animatrice: Angela Bartie, University of Strathclyde
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-411.00
 
6.         Les Grandes Antilles : les liens transcoloniaux entre les Caraïbes britanniques et le Canada de l'émancipation à la décolonisation
 
6.1     High Paper  Ryan Eyford, University of Manitoba
            Slave Owner, Missionary, and Colonization Agent: Tracing Patterns of Paternalism             from Barbados to the North-West Territories
 
6.2       Robin Grazley, Queen’s University
              Military Migration and Cultural Transfer between British North America and the               West Indies, 1840s-1860s
 
6.3       Paula Hastings, Duke University
            West Indians in Canada during the First World War: Organization, Protest, and the             Global Struggle for Racial Justice
 
6.4       Erin Mandzak, Queen’s University
            Commercial Visions of Tropical Horizons: Canadian Business Interest in the British             Caribbean, 1925-1970
 
Animatrice: Adele Perry, University of Manitoba
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-407.00
 
7.         Narrer la masculinité et la jeunesse au Canada  au début du XXe siècle
 
7.1       Kristine Alexander, York University
            “This War is a Young Man’s Job”: Youth and Masculinity in the First World War               Novels of L.M. Montgomery and Ralph Connor
 
7.2    paper  Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University
            Narrating the Modern Man: Beauty Culture and Masculinity in early twentieth-century             Canada

 7.3     paper Nic Clarke, University of Ottawa
              Northern Supermen or Average Canucks?: The General Health of Canadian                           Expeditionary Force Recruits, 1914-1918

7.4       Heidi MacDonald, Lethbridge University
              On Hold?: Three Male Youths Tell Their Stories of Coming of Age during the Great               Depression
 
 
Animatrice: Mavis Reimer, University of Winnipeg
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-401.00
 
8.         Anges et démons : Images religieuses dans l'art élitiste et populaire russe
 
Séance conjointe avec l’Association canadienne des slavistes  
 
8.1       Roy R. Robson, University of the Sciences in Philadelphia
            Devils in the World: Old Believer Images of Demonic Influence in Russian Society
 
8.2       Kristi A. Groberg, NDSU Division of Fine Arts
            Fin-de-Siècle Russian Images of Crucified Women: What the Included Demons                         Suggest
 
8.3     High Paper  Connie Wawruck-Hemmett, University of Winnipeg
            Angels and Atheists: Illustrative Religious Themes in Komsomol’skaya Pravda,                         1929-36
 
Animatrice: Alison Rowley, Concordia University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-427.00
 
9.         Réflexions critiques sur les documents coloniaux

  Parrainée par la Société Champlain

9.1    paper and powerpoint  Germaine Warkentin, University of Toronto
            Trusting Radisson

9.2     paper  Carolyn Podruchny, York University & Kathryn Magee Labell, Ohio State               University
            ‘Onontio, lend me your ear’: Wendat Voices in the Jesuit Relations

9.3       Cassandra Bernard, History, University of Ottawa.
              The Baby Collection and Corresponding Elites: Montreal Fur Merchants in Their Own               Words, 1798 – 1804.

Animatrice: Nicole St-Onge, University of Ottawa
 
10:30 – 11:00
 
Pause-santé
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-423.00
 
10.      Table ronde sur Death by a Thousand Cuts Lauréat du prix Wallace K. Ferguson 2009
 
            Participants:
 
                        Emily Hill, Queen’s University
                        Jean-François Lozier, University of Toronto
                        Johanna Ransmeier, McGill University
                        Gregory Blue, University of Victoria

Animateur: Frank Chalk, Concordia University

11:00 – 12:30                                           LB-1014.00

11.      Revendiquer l'espace publique

11.1     Dan Horner, York University
            “L’ordre le plus parfait a régné partout”: The Fête-Dieu Procession and the Contested             Use of Public Space in Nineteenth-Century Montreal

11.2     Robert Cupido, Mount Allison University
             Réinventer la Fête nationale, Re-imagining La Patrie

11.3     Diane Joly, Université Laval
            Les processions de la Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Montréal: une histoire énigmatique du             patrimoine

Animateur: Alan Gordon, University of Guelph

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-420.00

12.      Chercheurs, nouveau média et les archives : Études de cas de subjectivité immigrante
             Parainée par le Comité Canadien sur la migration, l'ethnicité et le transnationalisme

12.1     Justin Schell, University of Minnesota
              612 to 651 and Beyond: Online Video Archives as Site, Process, and Product of             Research

12.2     Stacey Zembryzcki, Concordia University
              What Happens After the Interview?: Using New Media to Understand the               Experiences of Sudbury’s Ukrainians

12.3     Sonia Cancian, Concordia University & Donna Gabaccia, University of                            Minnesota
  Old Archives Respond to New Media: The Immigrant Letters Project

12.4     Elena Razlogova, Concordia University
  Storytelling in the Digital Age

Animatrice: Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-403.00

13.     Histoire publique de la classe ouvrière

13.1     Jessica Mills, Concordia University
  What’s the Point?: Storytelling, Place and Community

13.2     Nicole Lang, Université de Moncton à Edmundston
              Donner la parole aux travailleuses et aux travailleurs: le projet des lieux historiques             ouvriers au Nouveau-Brunswick

13.3     Shauna Janssen, Concordia University
              Quartier Ephémère: Indeterminate Territories and Curatorial Practice in the               Industrial Space

13.4     William Hamilton, Concordia University
              Controversies and Consequences: Working Class Public History and Kirkland Lake,             Northern Ontario

Animateur: David Frank, University of New Brunswick

11:00 – 12:30                Salle LB-1019.00

14.      Canadiens radicaux

14.1     Barbara Freeman, Carleton University
            My body belongs to me, not the government: The Feminist Media Strategy Behind the             Abortion Caravan Campaign of 1970

14.2    Milligan Paper Ian Milligan, York University
            Growing Up on the Line: Leftists, Labour and the Artistic Woodwork Strike, 1973

14.3   paper  Kevin Brushett, Royal Military College of Canada
            We Should Blow Our Own Stories: The Company of Young Canadians, the New Left,             and the Canadian Media, 1965-1975

14.4     Nancy Janovicek, University of Calgary
            Slocan Man vs. Beer Can Man: Self-representations of Back-to-the-Land Movement in             the Radical Press in the West Kootenays, 1973-1991

Animateur: Sean Mills, New York University

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-411.00


15.            Narrer l'esclavage et l'émancipation : Histoires des asservis en Nouvelle-Écosse et en Jamaïque, 1780-1805

15.1     Elizabeth Vibert, University of Victoria
            Free Men Contained: Gender and the Meaning of Freedom in Late Eighteenth-Century             Nova Scotia

15.2     H. Amani Whitfield, University of Vermont
            From Slavery to Slavery: African Americans in Nova Scotia during the Age of Loyalty

15.3    Ono-George Meleisa Ono-George, University of Victoria
            Mistress of Prospect Pen: Intimacy, Power and Fiction in Early Nineteenth-Century             Jamaica

Facilitator / Animatrice: Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-407.00

16.      (Re) narrer et perturber les masculinités iconiques

16.1     Jeffery Vacante, University of Western Ontario
Saint-Denys Garneau and the Idea of Manhood in Interwar Quebec

16.2     Mary-Ellen Kelm, Simon Fraser University
Embodying manhood: Rodeo Stories and Rodeo Masculinities

16.3     Willeen Keogh, Simon Fraser University
            (Re-)Telling Newfoundland Sealing Masculinities: Narrative and Counter-Narrative

16.4    paper Bonnie Schmidt, Simon Fraser University
            (Re)Telling and Disrupting Iconic Masculinities: Female Police Officers and the                 Subversion of the Masculine Police Culture of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police

Animateur: Christopher Dummitt, Trent University

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-401.00

17.      (Re) construire un sentiment d'appartenance : Frontières contestées en Europe centrale de l'est et en Union soviétique


17.2  paper  Svetlana Frunchak, University of Toronto
              Imagining the (Non)existing City: Official Cultural Representations of the Borderland             in Late-Stalinist Ukraine

17.3   paper  Michael Kasprazak, University of Toronto
              Against the Imperial Republic: The communist Perceptions of Poland’s Eastern             Borderlands in the Interwar Years

17.4  High Paper  Michael Szala Newmark, University of Toronto
  Polish Conceptions of Kiev in the 19th Century

Animateur: Andrew Wise, Daemen College

11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-427.00

18.      Anxiétés coloniales

18.1 High Paper Maxime Dagenais, University of Ottawa
            “My acts have been despotic, because my delegated authority was despotic:” Lord             Durham and the Special Council of Lower Canada, June to November 1838

18.2   High Paper  Kenton Scott Storey, University of Otago, New Zealand
            ‘Fire,’ ‘Murder,’ and ‘Indian Invasion’: Interpreting a Manifestation of Colonial                         Anxiety in Victoria’s British Colonist
 
18.3     Megan Harvey, John Lutz and Kate Martin, University of Victoria
            Telling Stories about Race: Tracking ‘The Yellow Peril’ in Victoria, B.C., 1861-1910
 
18.4     Victoria Freeman, University of Toronto
            Toronto Has No History!: Indigeneity, Settler Colonialism and Historical Memory in             Canada’s Largest City
 
Animatrice: Cecilia Morgan, University of Toronto
 
12:30 – 14:00
 
Séances de travail
 
- Comité canadien  sur l’histoire des femmes                Salle H-407.00
- Groupe d’étude en histoire autochtone                Salle H-411.00     
- Groupe d’histoire des affaires                Salle H-423.00
- Histoire Engagée                 Salle H-427.00
- Le travail,Réunion de la rédaction                Salle LB-1042.03
- Groupe d’histoire orale                Salle LB-1019.00
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-420.00
 
19.      BAC et la Loi sur l'accès : Révélation, restriction et litige – Table ronde
 
            Participants:
 
Amir Attaran, University of Ottawa
Jim Bronskill, Canadian Press, Ottawa
Larry Hannant, Camosun College
Steven Hewitt, University of Birmingham
 
            Animateur: Craig Heron, York University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-423.00
 
20.      La mémoire en marche

 
20.1     Alan Gordon, University of Guelph
            Walking and Talking: The Emergence of the Walking Tour as Ideological Narrative,             Quebec City in the 19th Century
 
20.2     Jack Little, Simon Fraser University
            Like a Fragment of the Old World: The Historical Regression of Quebec City in Travel             Narratives and Tourist Guidebooks, 1799-1913
 
20.3     Kathryn Harvey, Independent Scholar
            The Nun’s Walk
 
Animateur: Alan Stewart, Dawson College
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-403.00
 
21.      L'engagement de l'État à la périphérie : Histoires d'inclusion, d'exclusion et d'activisme de la citoyenneté au Canada
 
21.1   paper  Julie Gilmour, McMaster University
            Canadian Citizenship Performed: Canadian Citizenship Ceremonies, 1946-7
 
21.2     Cara Spittal, University of Toronto
             Tory Women: Feminism and Conservatism from Suffrage to the
             Rise of the New Right

 
21.3     Nadia Lewis, University of Toronto
            Becoming American and Canadian: Iraqi Community Activism and Claims to                         Citizenship in Toronto and Detroit, 1970 to 2000
 
21.4     Adam Chapnick, Canadian Forces College
            Telling Canada’s National Story: The Evolution of Citizenship and Immigration                         Canada’s A Look at Canada
 
Animatrice: Aya Fujiwara, McMaster University
 
14:00 – 15:30 / 14 h 00 – 15 h 30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
22.      Le passé illustré
 
22.1     Alyson E. King, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
            Cartooning History: Canada’s Stories in Graphic Novels
 
22.2   High Paper Sean Carleton, Trent University
             Getting Graphic with the Past: ‘May Day’ and Graphic History as a New Method              of Historical Storytelling
 
22.3     Jessica van Horssen, University of Western Ontario
            Telling Stories Graphically
 
Animateur: Matthew Penney, Concordia University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle LB-1019.00
 
23.      Reconsidérer la réforme et les industries de ressources

 
23.1     Robert McDonald, University of British Columbia
            Our Local New Deal: Harry Cassidy and 'Intellectual Reformism in 1930s British             Columbia
 
23.2    paper Ben Bradley, Queen’s University
            Can’t See the Forestry for the Trees: Hiding Logging Operations in British Columbia’s             Provincial Parks, 1940-1970
 
23.3     Eryk Martin, Simon Fraser University
            Class Politics, the Communist Left, and the (Re)Shaping of the Environmental                         Movement in B.C., 1973-1978
 
23.4     Benjamin Isitt, University of Victoria
            “Out of the Kitchen, Into the Fight!”: The Women’s Auxiliary of the United Fishermen             and Allied Workers’ Union in British Columbia
 
Facilitator / Animateur: Andrew Perchard, University of Strathclyde
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-401.00
 
24.      Histoires du Sud pécheur

 
24.1   paper  Lynn Kennedy, University of Lethbridge
            Telling Stories, Salacious & Salutary: Gossiping in the Antebellum South
 
24.2     Marise Bachand, University of Western Ontario
            How Overspending Ladies Challenged Southern Patriarchy
 
Animateur: Gavin Taylor, Concordia University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-407.00
 
25.      Des on-dit, action incertaine : La promesse et le péril de l'histoire orale              queer
             Parainée par le Comité Canadien sur l'histoire de la sexualité
 
25.1     David Churchill, University of Manitoba
            Vampires, Grave Robbers, and the Queer Politics of Oral History
 
25.2     Patrizia Gentile, Carleton University
            Excavating Queer “Stories”: Archiving Oral History and Memory Studies
 
25.3     Elise Chenier, Simon Fraser University
            Hidden from Historians: A Status Report on Lesbian Oral History in Canada

25.4     Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University    
 
Animatrice: Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-411.00
 
26.      Raconter l'histoire de l'Union soviétique vingt ans après la Guerre                         froide

 
26.1     David Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, Brock University
            The Continued Importance of Russian History at Canadian Universities
 
26.2     Paul Robinson, University of Ottawa
            New Perspectives
 
26.3     Alison Rowley, Concordia University
            The Cultural Turn
 
 
Animateur: Valentin Boss, McGill University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-427.00
 
27.      Raconter nos histoires : Narrations indigènes

 
27.1     Susan Neylan, Wilfrid Laurier University
            Two Roads Inside: Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Narratives of Being Aboriginal             and Being Christian on British Columbia’s North Coast
 
27.2     Peggy Brock, Edith Clowan University
            Keeping Account: The Diary of Tsimshian, Arthur Wellington Clah
 
27.3   paper  Liam Haggarty, University of Saskatchewan
            Storytelling Economics: Historical Knowledge and Social Connectedness in Aboriginal             and Métis Communities
 
Animateur : John Lutz, University of Victoria
 
15:30 – 16:00 / 15 h 30 – 16 h 00
 
Pause-santé
 
16:00 – 17:30                              D.B. Clarke Theatre    Hall Building
 
28.         DISCOURS-PROGRAMME DE LA SOCIÉTÉ HISTORIQUE DU CANADA
 
Joy Parr, University of Western Ontario
            “Don’t Speak For Me”: Oral History Amongst Vulnerable Populations
 
17:30 – 19:00                Salle TBA
 
Réception offerte par la présidente de l'Université Concordia, Judith Woodsworth

LUNDI, 31 MAI 2010 (top of page)

9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-420.00
 
29.      Rencontres coloniales, performance et narration dans le monde transatlantique au XVIIIe siècle et début du XIXe siècle

 
29.1     Coll Thrush, University of British Columbia
            The Iceberg and the Cathedral: Wonder, Nature, Artifice, and Encounter in London             and the Inuit World, 1576-1772
 
29.2     Elizabeth Elbourne, McGill University
            Ambiguous Alliance: Joseph Brant’s Performance of Identity and Allegiance in Britain             and on the American Frontier
 
29.3    Cecilia Morgan, University of Toronto
            Travel, Celebrity, and Narrative in the Transatlantic World: The Case of John Norton,             1804-1816
 
29.4     Gabrielle Parent, Hebrew University
            Subjects of Interpretation: Second Language Acquisition by Jesuit Missionaries in             Northeastern Ontario, 1842-1880
 
Animateur: Keith Thor Carlson, University of Saskatchewan
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-401.00
 
30.      Voix revendicatrice

 
30.1     Laurie Bertram, University of Toronto
            Fylgia/the fetch: Marginalized Narratives, Power, and Superstition in Icelandic                         Canadian Oral Traditions, 1875-1975
 
30.2   paper  Sarah Bassnett, University of Western Ontario
            Photographic Narratives of Immigrants in Toronto, 1905-1915
 
30.3     Noula Mina, University of Toronto
            Hellenic Heroes and Greek-Canadian Identity: The Greek War Relief Fund of the             1940s
 
Animatrice: Pamela Sugiman, Ryerson University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-427.00
 
31.      Raconter des histoires dans les cours médiévales d'Europe

 
Séance conjointe avec la Société canadienne de médiévistes
 
31.1     Steven Bednarski, University of Waterloo
            “To Tell the Truth and Diligently Explain it”: Deposition Tales in Late Medieval                         Provençal Courts
 
31.2     Alexandra Guerson, University of Toronto
            Manipulating the Courts: Christians and Jews in late fourteenth-century Catalonia
 
31.3     Shannon McSheffrey, Concordia University
            Telling Stories About Sanctuary in Late Medieval English Courts
 
Animatrice: Cynthia Neville, Dalhousie University
 
9:00 – 10:30                 Salle H-423.00
 
32.     Histoires de déplacement et de recommencement

 
32.1     Hourig Attarian, McGill University
            storying memory: narrating the family album
 
32.2     Stacey Zembrzycki and Anna Sheftel, Concordia University
            We Started Over Again, We Were Young: Postwar Social Worlds of Child Holocaust             Survivors in Montreal
 
32.3     Yolande Cohen and Linda Guerry, UQAM
            Who are displaced persons marrying?: The Case of Morrocan Jews in Montreal
 
32.4     Erin Jessee, Concordia University
            Difficult Narratives: Negotiating Survivor, Perpetrator and Ex-Combatant Life                         Histories in Rwanda and Bosnia-Hercegovina
 
Animateur: Lisa Ndejuru, Isangano
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-411.00
 
33.      Histoires de la frontière canado-américaine

 
33.1     Susan E. Gray, Arizona State University
            One Border, Two Cousins, and the Writing of Odawa History
 
33.2     Carolyn Podruchny, York University
            From the Other Side of the Line: a French Catholic Priest Minister to his Métis Flock at             Pembina, 1840s-50s
 
33.3     Yukari Takai, York University
            Transpacific and Transborder Migration of Japanese in Early Twentieth-Century             Pacific Northwest
 
33.4     Sasha Mullally, University of New Brunswick
            Bordering on Bad Medicine: Policing the “Medical Borderlands” between New                         Brunswick and Maine, 1920-1936
 
Animateur - Scott See, University of Maine
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-403.00
 
34.      Politiques populaires

 
34.1     Kelly Bennett, Queen’s University
            The Cumings Sisters’ Loyalists Sewing Shop: A Busy Site of Exchange and Popular             Meeting Spot
 
34.2   paper  Jarett Henderson, York University
            Much to be thankful for [in Bermuda]: Negotiating Exile, British Subjectness, and             Conditional Loyalty in Lower Canada
 
34.3     Janet Miron, Trent University
            Classes That Ought Not to Carry Them: Firearm Discussions in Nineteenth-Century             Canada
 
34.4     Bradley Miller, University of Toronto
            State Power and Community Justice on the Border, 1842-1910
 
Animatrice: Shirley Tillotson, Dalhousie University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1019.00
 
35.      L'histoire est importante

 
35.1     Laura Suchan and Melissa Cole, Oshawa Community Museum
            “If history were told in the form of stories it would never be forgotten": Telling                         History One Story at a Time
 
35.2   High Paper Bronwyn Bragg, OISE
            Exploring the Role of Oral History in Documenting Canada’s Second Wave Feminist             Movement (1960-1990)
 
35.3     Roderick MacLeod, Research Consultant and Writer
            “I was there and I don’t remember it that way!”: Evidence and Historical Memory in             Writing the History of Communities and Community Organizations
 
35.4     Paul Marsden, Senior Military Archivist, Government Records Branch
            Public History, Public Policy and Public Archives
 
Animateur: Lyle Dick, Parks Canada
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-407.00
 
36.      Construire un Québec moderne

 
36.1     Peter Bischoff, University of Ottawa
            La réception de Rerum novarum dans un sol préparé d’avance: la ville de Québec
 
36.2    High Paper Magda Fahrni, UQAM
            "Tramways et enfants imprudents": Risk, Accidents, and the Early Twentieth-Century             Safety Movement" 

36.3    High Paper Nicolas Kenny, Simon Fraser University
            Telling Fin-de-siècle Montreal: A Story of Affect
 
36.4     Jarrett Rudy, McGill University
            Do you have the time?: Modernity, Democracy, and Beginning of Daylight Saving             Time in Montreal
 
Animateur: Brian Young, McGill University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
37.      Histoires de guerre

 
37.1     Terry Bishop Stirling, Memorial University
            “Such Sad Sights One Will Never Forget”: Newfoundland Women and Overseas                         Nursing in World War One
 
37.2     Vicki Hallett, Memorial University
            Verses in the Darkness: A Newfoundland Poet Responds to the First World War
 

37.3  High Paper  Amy Shaw, University of Lethbridge
            Creating Heroes for the Story: Canadian Soldiers in the Boer War
 

37.4     Amy Bell, Huron University College
            Murder and the Microscope: The 1942 Dobkin Case
 

Animatrice: Linda Quiney, University of British Columbia
 
10:30 – 11:00
 
Pause-santé
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-420.00
 
38.      Le récit en histoire indigène, méthode et pédagogie
 
38.1     Winona Wheeler, University of Saskatchewan
              Teachings from Early World Indigenous Resistance Writing in the Americas: Warren               Standing Bear and Ahenakew
 
38.2     Brenda Macdougall, University of Ottawa
               The Written Tradition of Storytelling: Ella Cara Deloria’s Contribution to Sioux                            Cultural Preservation
 
38.3     Aroha Harris, Auckland University
              Theorize This: We Are What We Write
 
38.4     Mary Jane McCallum, University of Winnipeg
              Creation Stories and Canadian History
 
Animateur: Jim Miller, University of Saskatchewan
 
11:00 – 12:30                 Salle H-407.00
 
39.      Discours- programme du Comité canadien sur l'histoire des femmes

 
            Donna Gabaccia, University of Minnesota
            Intimate Talk Across Borders: Women and the Italian Nation
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-427.00
 
40.      Usage social et politique du récit et narration du social: l’exemple des archives judiciaires du Canada des XVII et XVIIIe siècles

 
40.1     Eric Debroise, Université de Montréal
            Publicité et histoire: Opinion populaire et faits judiciaires à Montréal de 1693 à 1760
 
40.2    paper Arnaud Bessière, Université de Montréal
            Raconter le social à travers les archives judiciaires: l’exemple de l’honneur des                         domestiques au Canada au XVIIe siècle
 
40.3     Nancy Christie, University of Western Ontario
            Narrating the Plebeian Body: Evidence from the Legal Archives, 1760-1810
 
Animateur: Thierry Nootens, UQTR
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-423.00
 
41.     Leçons du terrain: Prévenir les atrocités de masse futures au Burundi, Rwanda, Bosnie et Kosovo

 
41.1     Frank Chalk and Kyle Matthews, Concordia University
            Mobilizing the Domestic Will to Intervene: Lessons from Canadian and United States             Policies Towards Rwanda’s Genocide of 1994 and Kosovo’s Events of 1999
 
41.2     Erin Jessee, Concordia University
            From Symbolic Violence to Social Death: Healing the Wounds of Genocide in Rwanda             and Bosnia-Hercegovina
 
41.3     Philippe Rieder, Concordia University
            Approaches Towards Post-Conflict Resolution, Democratization and Reconciliation:             Genocide Prevention in Rwanda and Burundi
 
Animateur: Graham Carr, Concordia University
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-411.00
 
42.      Enseigner l’histoire de frontières de territoire – Table ronde

 
            Participants:
 
Colin Coates, York University
Susan Elizabeth Gray, Arizona State University
Carolyn Podruchny, York University
 
Animateur: Scott See, University of Maine
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-403.00
 
43.      Culture et politique dans le monde d’après-guerre

 
43.1   paper George Buri, University of Regina
            Selling Confidence in the Face of Nuclear Annihilation: Civil Defense Propaganda in             Canada, 1948-1963
 
43.2     Olivier Coté, Université Laval
            John F. Kennedy, président canadien: le traitement médiatique et l'inscription                         mémorielle de son assassinat (novembre 1963)
 
43.3     Jessica Squires, Library and Archives Canada
            Shaping the Story of Canada the Good: Writing About War Resisters
 
Animatrice: Nancy Janovicek, University of Calgary
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
44.      Raconter l’histoire avec des partenaires du milieu: l’expérience du Laboratoire d’histoire et de patrimoine de Montréal

 
44.1     Joanne Burgess, UQAM
            Le Laboratoire d’histoire et de patrimoine de Montréal: un partenariat pour raconter             l’histoire
 
44.2     Paul-André Linteau and Jean-Claude Robert, UQAM
              Partenaires: Service de la mise en valeur du territoire et du patrimoine et                           Service des archives, Ville de Montréal.
            Raconter l’histoire des grandes rues de Montréal
 

44.3     Dominique Marquis, UQAM
               Partenaire: Musée McCord d'histoire canadienne
            Raconter l’histoire et découvrir une collection d’artefacts
 

44.4     Michelle Comeau, INRS-Urbanisation
               Partenaire; Écomusée du fier monde
            Raconter l’histoire d’un siècle de vie commerciale dans un quartier ouvrier
 

Animatrice: Jarrett Rudy, McGill University
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle H-401.00
 
45.     Voix religieuses dans le Canada d’après-guerre
 
45.1   paper  Julia Rady-Shaw, University of Toronto
            The Reconstruction Narrative: Canadian Churches and the Future of Religious Life,             1940-1950
 
45.2     Michael Gauvreau, McMaster University
            Stories of Dechristinization: Voices of Ordinary Quebecers and the Dumont                         Commission, 1968-1971
 
45.3   paper  Marylin Bernard, Concordia University
            Être juive à Québec: Huit femmes juives – et une étudiante en histoire – racontent
 
45.4     Catherine Foisy, Concordia University
            Haven’t You Heard?: Quebec’s Deafness to Missionary Stories
 
Animateur: Chris Miller, Concordia University
 
11:00 – 12:30                Salle LB-1019.00
 
46.      Narrations de perpétreurs dans les deux dictatures allemandes : Histoire, biographie et la loi

 
46.1     Gary Bruce, University of Waterloo
            Post-War Perpetrators?: In the Service of the Stasi
 
46.2     Stephen Connor, Nipissing University
            Greasing the Wheels of Genocide: The German Civil Administration, Intention and             Initiative in the Occupied Soviet Union, 1942-1943
 
46.3     Hilary Earl, Nipissing University
            Tales of Horror: Stories of Atrocities Committed by the SS on the Eastern Front
 
Animatrice: Rosemarie Schade, Concordia University
 
12:30 – 14:00                Salle H-420.00
 
47.      Projection du film “How I Filmed the War,” par Yuval Sagiv, cinéaste indépendant

           
12 h 30 – 14 h 00
 
Séances de travail
 
- Comité canadien sur l'histoire du travail                 Salle LB-1042.03
- Comité canadien d'histoire de la sexualité                 Salle H-407.00
- Groupe d'histoire politique                  Salle H-411.00
- Réunion de la Société canadienne d'histoire urbaine & du comité de rédaction de la Revue d'histoire urbaine                 Salle LB-1014.00
- Comité sur la Seconde Guerre mondiale                 Salle H-427.00
- Comité des étudiants diplômés                 Salle H-423.00
- Comité international                 Salle H-403.00
- Comité canadien sur l'histoire militaire                 Salle LB-1019.00
- Comité de rédaction, Histoire sociale                 Salle H-401.00

 
 
14:00 – 15:30                            H-407.00
 
48.     Raconter des histoires indigènes et conteurs d’histoire à travers les                         disciplines – Table ronde

 
            Participants
Keith Thor Carlson, University of Saskatchewan
            Memory and Meaning: Coast Salish Transformer Stories in a Transforming World
Jonathan Hill, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
            Amazonian Trickster Myths as Folk Psychological Narratives: Some Implications of             Storytelling and Theories of Mind
Edward Chamberlin, University of Toronto
            Convenants and Claims: The Forms and Functions of Storytelling Land Claims
Kristina Fagan, University of Saskatchewan
            A Literary Critic in the Field: Community-Based Approaches to Storytelling
Dennis Tedlock, SUNY at Buffalo
             Mayan Hieroglyphic and Alphabetic Stories
 

Animatrice: Jean Manore, Bishops University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
49.      Conversation de cuisine : Nourriture, histoire et identité

 
49.1     Andrea Eidinger, University of Victoria
            “Chinese Food on Christmas”: Telling Stories about Jewish Foods in Montreal
 

49.2    paper Jennifer Evans, University of Toronto
            “She never did cook the Canadian way”: Immigrant Women’s Changing Relationship             with Food and Cooking in Postwar North Bay, Ontario
 
49.3   High Paper  Anne Clendinning, Nipissing University
            “Putting English Cookery on the Map”: Interwar Food Narratives and the Search for             England’s National Cuisine           
 
Animatrice: Franca Iacovetta, University of Toronto
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-427.00
 
50.      En cour

 
50.1     Mima C. Petrovic, University of Toronto
             Reading Litigants’ Stories in Annulment Trials Judged by the Paris Officialité in the               17th and 18th Centuries: An Historical Assessment
 
50.2     Jean-Philippe Garneau, UQAM
              Les usages judiciaires du passé: la Nouvelle-France sous la plume des juges bas-              canadiens
 
50.3     Thierry Nootens, UQTR
              “She Was a Very Young Girl, Quite Ignorant of Law …”: les magistrats québécois et               les droits financiers des femmes mariées au début du 20e siècle
 
Animateur: Eric Reiter, Concordia University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-423.00
 
51.      Réfugiés politiques et les politiques de réfugiés après la deuxième Guerre mondiale : Migration à l’ère des personnes déplacées, étrangers ennemis et alliances de la Guerre froide

 
Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur la migration, l'ethnicité et le transnationalisme
 
51.1     Laura Madokoro, University of British Columbia
            Lost in the “national interest”: Canada and refugees from Communist China (1949)
 

51.2     Tina Mai Chen, University of Manitoba
            Storied Lives: Migration, Repatriation, and the Politics of Moving Home for Chinese             Residents of Burma, 1937-1947
 

51.3  High Paper  Christian Lieb, University of Victoria
            Refugees, Displaced Persons, and the Limits of Political Recognition
 

51.4     Nino A. Scavello, University of Guelph
            Pawns in the Cold War: Canadian Public Policy and Displaced Persons,
            1950-1957
 

Animatrice: Lisa Chilton, University of Prince Edward Island
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-401.00
 
52.      Construire un lieu

 
52.1     Elizabeth Jewett, University of Toronto
              Slicing the Course: Understanding Landscapes of Golf in Canada, 1873-1945.
 
52.2     Krista Weger, York University
             Mountain Memories: Narrating the Local and Regional Along Ontario's Niagara              Escarpment
 
52.3     Bogumil Jewsiewicki, Université Laval
             Images et performances narratives dans la culture urbaine congolaise: des récits du              plein au récit de l’absence

Animateur: Patrick Dramé, Bishop’s University
 
14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-411.00
 
53.      Histoire politique : Nouveaux développements et fondations solides –             Table ronde

Parrainée par le Groupe d'histoire politique de la SHC            

Participants
Christopher Dummitt, Trent University
Larry Glassford, University of Windsor
Shirley Tillotson, Dalhousie University
Matthew Hayday, University of Guelph

Animateur : Marcel , York University

14:00 – 15:30                Salle LB-1019.00

54.      Écrire l’histoire des communautés anglophones du Québec


Participants
Lorraine O’Donnell, Concordia University
Patrick Donovan, Université Laval
Kevin O’Donnell, Quebec Anglophone Heritage Network
Roderick MacLeod, Research Consultant and Writer

Animateur: Brian Young, McGill University

14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-420.00

55.      Frères, sœurs et cousins laïques : Missions et développement en Amérique centrale et en Afrique

Séance conjointe avec la Société canadienne d’histoire de l’Église

55.1     Catherine LeGrand, McGill University
            Development, Liberation Theology and the Peasant Movement of Agrarian Reform:             Quebec Catholic Missionaries in Honduras, 1955-1975

55.2     Susan Fitzpatrick Behrens, California State University of Northridge
            Cross-Cultural Catholic Cooperative Development: From Antigonish to Guatemala

55.3     Ruth Compton Brouwer, Professor Emerita, King's University College
              University of Western Ontario
            “Reason over Passion”: CUSO’s Divided Response to the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-            1970

Animatrice: Rhonda Semple, St. Francis Xavier

14:00 – 15:30                Salle H-403.00

56.      Rapports hommes-femmes,  guerre, consommation


56.1     Helen Smith and Pamela Wakewich, Lakehead University
            “Telling” Connections: Negotiating Inclusion/Exclusion in Narratives about Women’s             Wartime Work

56.2     Ian Mosby,York University
            Mrs. Consumer and Canada’s Housesoldiers Go to War: Food, Gender and the                         Politics of Consumption During Canada’s Second World War

56.3   High Paper  Christine McLaughlin,York University
            Kitchen Stories: Ladies’ Auxiliary 27 of UAW Local 222 in 1940s Oshawa, Ontario

56.4   paper  Martin Weger,York University
            Rationalizing Shopping in Postwar Canada: Canadian Tire ‘Money” and the Origins of             Canada’s First Customer Loyalty Program

Animatrice: Magda Fahrni, UQAM

15:30 – 16:00

Pause-santé

16:00 – 17:30

ASSEMBLÉE GÉNÉRALE                 Salle H-110.00


18:00 – 20:30           Montefiore Club, 1195 Rue Guy

GALA DE LA PRÉSIDENTE DE LA SHC

20:00 – 23:00                Montefiore Club, 1195 Rue Guy                

  CLIO-PALOOZA! – ACTIVITÉ SOCIALE DE LA SHC – DANSE avec Dave Gossage et Celtic Mindwarp

MARDI 1er JUIN 2010 (top of page)

9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-401.00
 
57.      Conserver un savoir difficile : Violence, mémoire et patrimoine
 
57.1    
Heather Igloliorte, Carleton University
            We were so far away: Sharing the Difficult Histories of Inuit Residential Schools
 

57.2     Cynthia Milton, Université de Montréal
            Public spaces, contestation and conflict over Peru’s recent past
 

57.3     Monica E. Patterson, Concordia University
            Teaching Tolerance Through Objects of Hatred: The Jim Crow Museum of Racist             Memorabilia
 
Animatrice: Erica Lehrer, Concordia University
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-411.00
 
58.     Les histories inattendues de l’histoire indigène

 
58.1     Robert A. Innes, University of Saskatchewan
            Customary Kinship Practices and Tribal History
 

58.2     Susan M. Hill, Wilfrid Laurier University at Brantford
            The Woodland Cultural Centre: 40 years in the telling of Eastern Woodlands                         Indigenous History
 

58.3     Aroha Harris, University of Auckland
            Sharing Our Differences Together: whakapapa of experience in post-war Auckland
 

Animatrice: Mary Jane McCallum, University of Winnipeg
 
9:00 – 10:30                 Salle H-407.00
 
59.      Théâtre, histoire et l’art de conter – Table ronde

 
            Participants
Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto
David Fennario, Playwright
Edward (Ted) Little, Concordia University, Department of Theatre
David Dean, Carleton University, Company Historian, National Arts Centre Ottawa
Milena Buziak, Director and Producer      
 
Animatrice: Susan Brown, University of Prince Edward Island
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1014.00
 
60.      Donner une voix

 
60.1    paper Chris Dooley, York University
            “The older staff, myself included, we were pretty institutionalized ourselves”:                         Authority and insight in practitioner narratives of psychiatric deinstitutionalization in             Prairie Canada
 
60.2     Jason Ellis, York University
            Telling Stories about Disabled Identities: Approaches to the Social History of                         Disability in Interwar Canada
 
60.3     David Hood,  Saint Mary's University
            The Poor and Homeless: We Can Best Remember Them With Stories
 
Animatrice: Denyse Baillargeon, Université de Montréal
 
9:00 – 10:30                                         H-420.00
 
61.      Le (re)tour bibliographique I : Bibliographies de politiques et les politiques de bibliographie

 
61.1    paper Roderick J. Barman, University of British Columbia
            Biography as ‘Against the Grain’ History
 

61.2     David S. Churchill, University of Manitoba
            Personal Memoir and the Politics of Sexuality: Paul Goodman, John Rechy and                         Biography in the History of Sex Trade
 
61.3     Veronica Strong-Boag, University of British Columbia
            Running Rapids: Cynicism and Sympathy in the Writing of Feminist Biography
 
Animatrice: Adele Perry, University of Manitoba
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1042.03
 
62.      Fictions et contes fantaisistes de la vie universitaire, 1910-1950

 
62.1     Paul Stortz, University of Calgary
            ‘How I Killed my English Prof’: Stories of Professors as the Intellectual Embodiment             on Canadian Campuses, 1910-1950
 
62.2     Lisa Panayotidis, University of Calgary
            To Say Farewell: Valedictory Addresses in University Yearbooks, 1915-1930

62.3     Elizabeth Smyth, University of Toronto
            Facts and Fiction in Catholic Higher Education: The Case of St. Michael’s College,             University of Toronto

Animatrice: Katharine Rollwagen, University of Ottawa
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-403.00
 
63.      Guerre et propagande

 
63.1     Peter Mersereau, University of Toronto
            ‘The Right Films for the Right Time’: The German Film Industry and the Spirit of 1914
 
63.2     Alison Rowley, Concordia University
            Stories of the Powerless: Photojournalism and Russian Picture Postcards in World             War I
 
63.3  High Paper  Paul Baxa, Ave Maria University
            Palladian Settings and the Shaping of the Axis Narrative in Fascist Propaganda during             the Second World War
 
Animateur: Jeff Webb, Memorial University of Newfoundland
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle H-423.00
 
64.      Se souvenir de la Conquête

 
64.1     Michel Ducharme, University of British Columbia
            Remembering Defeat: The Paradox of French Canadian Historical Thought
 
64.2   paper  Alexis Lachaine, York University
            Our History has not even yet begun: Why Quebecois nationalists of the 1960s                         downplayed the Conquest of 1759
 
64.3     Nicole Neatby, Saint Mary’s University
            Re-enacting a Defeat: Mission Impossible
 
Animateur: Donald Fyson, Université Laval
 
9:00 – 10:30                Salle LB-1019.00
 
65.      Déterrer les biographies en histoire environnementale : Un engagement méthodologique

 
65.1     Kirsten Greer, Queen’s University
            Birds and Biography: Writing the “life geography” of military surgeon Andrew Leith             Adams (1827-1882), 22nd Regiment of Foot
 
65.2   High Paper Jennifer Bonnell, University of Toronto
            A Sensuous Understanding of Place: Charles Sauriol and the Fight to Protect Toronto’s             Don River Valley, 1946-1989
 
65.3     Jim Clifford, York University
            Using Working-Class Autobiographies and Oral Histories to Write Environmental             History from Below
 
65.4   paper  Carla Hustak, University of Toronto
            The Stories Rocks Can Tell: Marie Stope’s Evolutionary Narratives of Plant Sex in New             Brunswick’s ‘Fern Ledges’

Animateur: Alan MacEachern, University of Western Ontari0

10:30 – 10:45

Pause-santé

10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-411.00

66.      Film et mémoire publique


66.1     Bruno Ramirez, Université de Montréal
            Filmic Narration as a Way of Revealing the Unknown Past

66.2     Ronald Rudin, Concordia University and Robert McMahon, Royal Ontario                            Museum
            Film Screening: “Remembering a Memory”

Animatrice: Suzanne Langlois, York University

10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-401.00

67.      Action aborigène – Histoires de résistance


67.1     Mark Kuhlberg, Laurentian University
            Tragedy or Progress: The Flooding of Lac Seul, 1915-1934

67.2     Stephen Dutcher, University of New Brunswick
            Aboriginal Agency, State Control, and ‘Local Power Contests’ at the Six Nations of the             Grand River Reserve, 1939-41

67.3     Robert L.A. Hancock, University of Western Ontario
            Towards a Genealogy of Aboriginal Rights, 1965-1982

Animateur: Daniel Rueck, McGill University

10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-407.00

68.      Quelle EST donc l’histoire? Explorer la fragmentation et la synthèse             dans l’historiographie canadienne actuelle


Participants:
Peter Baskerville, University of Alberta
          High Paper  The Commonality of Counting
Lyle Dick, Parks Canada
          Paper  Fragmentation and Synthesis from the Standpoint of Critical History
Steven High, Concordia University
            Canadian History from the Inside-Out
Alan MacEachern, University of Western Ontario
            Of Parliament and Owls
Adele Perry, University of Manitoba
            Destabilization and National History
Ruth Sandwell, University of Toronto
           paper Microhistory, Macro-history and Historians as Teachers

Animateur: Chad Gaffield, SSHRC President

10:45 – 12:15                Salle LB-1042.03

69.      Lire l’histoire des femmes


69.1     Laurie Marhoefer, Syracuse University
            What Slumbered Within Her?: Media, Censorship, and Stories of Lesbian Sexuality in             Weimar-era German, 1918-1933

69.2     Holly Karibo, University of Toronto
            Motor City Memoirs: Sex Work, Race, and Memory in McGowan’s Motor City                         Madam

69.3   High Paper Jane Nicholas, Lakehead University
            “I was a 555-pound freak”: Celesta ‘Dolly Dimples’ Geyer and the Autobiography of             Diet

Animatrice: Lara Campbell, Simon Fraser University

10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-403.00

70.      Biographie et identité


70.1     Colleen Gray, McGill University
            Changed in the Telling: Biography, History and Identity in Eighteenth-Century                         Canada

70.2     Susan Dalton, Université de Montréal
            Collective biographies in Italy, 1800-1840

70.3   paper Tom Mole, McGill University
            Nineteenth-Century British Pantheons as Collective Biography

70.4     Eve-Marie Lampron, Université de Montréal
            Des biographies aux identités, de l’individuel au collectif: les femmes de lettres                         françaises et italiennes en quête de leur histoire (1770-1845)

Animatrice: Shannon McSheffrey, Concordia University

10:45 – 12:15                Salle LB-1014.00

71.      Consommateurs croissants : Examiner la culture de la consommation dans l’histoire de l’enfance et de la jeunesse


71.1     Katharine Rollwagen, University of Ottawa
            From Ingenuity to Homogeneity: Dressing the Teenager in the Pages of Chatelaine,             1954-1964

71.2     Jason Reid, Ryerson University
            “Sitting Pretty In Your Room”: The Rise and Fall of Decoration Expertise in the                         Bedrooms of America’s Teens, 1900-1985

71.3     Jo-Anne McCutcheon, Canadian Development Consultants International Inc.
            Hairstyles, Gender, and Generations in Canada: Combing Through the Evidence

71.4   High Paper  Angela Rooke, York University
           Come and join us in our fun': Children, Christian Consumerism, and Lessons in the            Spiritual Value of Money, 1880-1930

Animateur: Paul Stortz, University of Calgary

10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-420.00

72.      Le reportage de guerre – D’hier à aujourd’hui


72.1     Beatrice Richard, Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean
            Raconter la guerre ou “Raconter sa guerre”?: Le dilemme du légionnaire Paul Caron

72.2     Geoff Hamm, University of Toronto
            Intelligence as Storytelling, Storytelling as Intelligence: British Military Intelligence             and the Ottoman Empire, 1895-1914

72.3     Jean Martin, Department of National Defense
            L’histoire en direct: l’historien militaire, témoin des opérations canadiennes actuelles,             en Afghanistan et ailleurs

72.4     Gillian Steward, University of Calgary
            Factualized Narrative Fiction by War Journalists as a Critique of Journalistic Practice
 
Animatrice: Susan Mann, York University
 
10:45 – 12:15                Salle H-423.00
 
73.      Raconter la Conquête à partir des sources

 
73.1   High Paper  François Cartier, Musée McCord, Montréal
            Le journal de James Wolfe devant Québec: controverses autour d’une source majeure             de notre histoire
 
73.2   High Paper  Helene Quimper, Commission des champs de bataille nationaux, Québec
            Québec, ville assiégée 1759-1760 ou Le désir de rendre la parole aux acteurs et                         témoins des événements
 
73.3     Laurent Turcot, UQTR
            The Surrender of Montreal to General Armherst, (1760) de Francis Hayman: raconter             et représenter la victoire anglaise en terre canadienne
 
73.4     Jeffers Lennox, Dalhousie University
            L’Acadie Trouvée: The Search for Boundaries and Imperial Conflict, 1750-1756
 
Animatrice: Catherine Desbarats, McGill University
 
 
10:45 – 12:15                Salle LB-1019.00

74.      Histoire environnementale de la région de l’Atlantique
 
74.1     Mark J. McLaughlin, University of New Brunswick
            Green Shoots: Environmental Awareness in New Brunswick prior to the                                     Environmental Movement
 
74.2     Rainer Baehre, Sir Wilfred Grenfell College Memorial University
            The Story of Crow Gulch: Resettling an Outport Ghetto in Corner Brook,                                     Newfoundland during the 1960s
 
74.3     Dean Bavington, Nipissing University
            Fishing, Farming and the Blue Revolution: An Aqua-Cultural History of Newfoundland             & Labrador Cod Fisheries
 
Animateur: Colin Duncan, Queen’s University
 
12:15 – 13:15                Salle H-411.00
 
75.      Projection du film “Remembering a Memory” par Ronald Rudin, Université Concordia et Robert McMahon, Musée royal de l'Ontario

 
12:15 – 13:15
 
Séances de travail
 
- Groupe d'histoire politique                Salle H-401.00
- Histoire de l'enfance et de la jeunesse                 Salle H-423.00
- Comité de l'histoire des médias et de la communication                 Salle H-403.00
- Comité canadien sur la migration, l'ethnicité et le transnationalisme                  Salle H-407.00
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-423.00
 
76.     Lieux de mémoire

 
76.1     Geneviève Susemihl, Greifswald University (Germany)
            Heritage Sites as Keepers of Stories and History
 

76.2   paper Pamela Peacock, Queen’s University
            “It’s all about the customer’: How Perceptions of Audience Expectation Shape the             Presentation of Women’s History at Fort William, Fort Henry and Upper Canada             Village
 

76.3     Rose Fine-Meyer, University of Toronto
            Including Women: The Development and Integration of Canadian Women’s History             Narratives into Toronto Ontario Classrooms and Historic Sites, 1971-2001
 
Animatrice: Julie Perrone, Concordia University
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-411.00
 
77.      Déplacé par l’État : Relocalisations forcées et le pouvoir de l’État dans le Canada d’après-guerre

 
77.1     Martha Walls, St Francis Xavier
            Colonialism, Resistance and the Relocation of the Mi’kmaq from Sydney, Nova Scotia,             1899-1926
 
77.2     James Kenny, Royal Military College
            New Brunswick’s Modernization Moment: The Mactaquc and Northestern New                         Brunswick Relocation Plans, 1960-75
 
77.3     Tina Loo, University of British Columbia
            Razing Africville: The Dynamics of State Power in Postwar Canada
 
Animatrice: Suzanne Morton, McGill University
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-429
 
78.      Histoires et miracles

 
Séance conjointe avec la Canadian Catholic Historical Association  

Allan Greer, McGill University
From Teenage Runaway in Europe to Missionary in Canada: A Jesuit Story

Jacalyn Duffin, Queen’s University
Miracles and Wonders: Finding Canadian Medical History in the Vatican Archives

 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-407.00
 
79.      Narrer l’irlandais au pays et à l’étranger

 
79.1     Gavin Foster, Concordia University
            Lemass is gone, and the earlier he is forgotten the better: An Irish Civil War Story
 
79.2     Michael Kenneally, Concordia University
            Mapping Private Geographies in Contemporary Canadian Historical Fiction

79.3     Rhona Richman Kenneally, Concordia University
            Telling Stories: Irish Food, Culture, and Identity
 
79.4     Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin, Concordia University
            Fiddling Devils and Ranting Priests: Contesting Musical Space and Moral Hegemony             in Rural Ireland and Rural Quebec
 
 
Animateur: Jordan Stanger-Ross, University of Victoria
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-420.00
 
80.      Le (re)tour biographique II : Biographie et méthodologie historique

 
80.1     Jean Barman, University of British Columbia
            Taking everyday people seriously, but how? Tracking French Canadians in the early             Pacific Northwest
 
80.2     Esyllt Jones, University of Manitoba
            The Passion of Policy: History, Biography and Affect in Canada’s Transnational                         Movement for Socialized Medicine, 1930s-1940s
 
80.3     Stephen J. Brooke, York University
            Subjects of Interest: Biography, Politics and Gender History?
 
Animatrice: Adele Perry, University of Manitoba
 
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-403.00
 
81.      Histoires de famille

 
81.1     Forrest Pass, Saguenay Herald and Assistant Registrar,
              Office of the Secretary to the Governor General
            The “Family Crest Craze” and the Democratization of Genealogy in the United States             and Canada, 1880-1902
 
81.2     Gillian Poulter, Acadia University
            Telling Family Tales: Scrapbooks, Albums and Memory
 
81.3     Sharon Murray, Concordia University
            Telling Pictures: A Mission Family’s Story of India
 
81.4  paper  Valentin Boss, McGill University
            Telling Wartime Stories: The Vanishing British Embassy
 
Animatrice: Martha Langford, Concordia University
 
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle H-401.00
 
82.      Encadrer l’histoire? Commissionner et collectionner les séquences de film en temps de guerre

 
82.1     Yuval Sagiv, Independent Filmmaker
            The (hi)stories of the Battle of the Somme
 
82.2   paper  Suzanne Langlois, York University
            The case of UNRRA filming in the Ukraine and Byelorussia (1947)
           
Animateur: Jean Lévesque, UQAM
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle LB-1019.00
 
83.      Temporalité, mémoire et récit: Enjeux historiques et théoriques dans l’espace Canado-Québécois
 
83.1   paper  Patrick-Michel Noël, Université Laval
            Du récit en discipline historique: entre enjeu épistémologique et vecteur identitaire
 
83.2  High Paper  Judith Dubois, UQAM
            Les événements internationaux racontés dans le journal  La Presse au tournant du             XXe siècle: des choix liés aux attentes des lecteurs
 
83.3   paper  Alexandre Turgeon, Université Laval
            Savoir se passer du présent, savoir ce passé du future: la temporalité chez le                         caricaturiste Robert La Palme: le cas du 29 mai 1956
 
83.4   High Paper  Valérie Lapointe-Gagnon, Université Laval
            La temporalité de la conflictualité canado-québécoise: esquisse d’une histoire compare             de la mémoire
 
Animateur: Martin Pâquet, Université Laval
 
13:15 – 14:45                Salle LB-1014.00  

84.     Cartographier le passé : Collaborations interdisciplinaires dans les systèmes informatiques de géographie historique

84.1     Jennifer Bonnell and Marcel Fortin, University of Toronto
            Envisioning Watershed History: The Don Valley Historical Mapping Project

84.2     Stephen Bocking, Trent University
            Stories of People and the Land: Exploring Regional Environmental History using GIS

84.3   paper  Sherry Olson, McGill University
            Horizons of the Past, Horizons of the Future: Rebuilding a Neighbourhood in Montreal

84.4     John Lutz, University of Victoria / Patrick Dunae, Vancouver Island University               / Jason Gilliland, University of Western Ontario
            Turning Space Inside Out – HIGS and Race in Victorian Victoria

Animatrice: Ruth Sandwell, University of Toronto

14:45 – 15:00

Pause santé 

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-423.00

85.      Raconter des histoires par le biais de personnes, lieux et choses : Culture matérielle et la dissémination du savoir


85.1     Elsa Olu
            Néo-Muséologie

85.2     Jennifer Anderson, Library and Archives Canada
            Making Labour History: Archive Stories

85.3     Anthony Di Mascio, Museum of Civilizations
            The Material Culture of Classrooms in Nineteenth-Century Canada

85.4     John Willis, Museum of Civilizations
            The Story of Anita Shapiro

Animateur: Jean Martin, ministère de la Défense nationale

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-411.00

86.      Réconciliation – Table ronde


Parrainée par le Groupe d’étude en histoire autochtone

Participants
Jane McMillan, St. Francis Xavier University
            Reconciling Recognition: The Mi'kmaq Rights Initiative
Kenny Blacksmith, Founder/Executive Director, Gathering Nations
International
Victoria Freeman, University of Toronto
            History and Community-Based Reconciliation Processes: Reconciling Historical                         Discourse and Practices Inside and Outside of the Academy
Cecil Chabot, University of Ottawa
            Beware the Windigo: Reflections on Truth and Reconciliation
Jim Miller, University of Saskatchewan

Animatrice: Jean L. Manore, Bishop’s University

15.00 – 16:30                         H-415.00

87.      Raconter nos histoires, raconter leurs histoires dans l’histoire des rapports hommes-femmes et de la famille – Table ronde


Parrainée par le Comité canadien sur l’histoire de la femme

Participants
High Paper Sandra Borger, Simon Fraser University
            Overcoming Trauma and Fear through Story-Telling
paper Peter Gossage, Concordia University
            Doing History and Telling Stories: Some Thoughts
Sharon Myers, University of Prince Edward Island
            Keeping Secrets: Reflections on Silence and Storytelling
Katrina Srigley, Nipissing University
            The Stories We Tell: Storytelling and Family Identity

Animatrice: Julia Smith, Simon Fraser University

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-420.00

88.      Le (re)tour biographique III : Empires, géographies de la vie et diasporas


88.1     Laila Parsons, McGill University
            Biographies and the Historiography of the 20th-Century Arab World

88.2     Alan Lester, Sussex
            Relational Space and Life Geographies in Imperial History

88.3     Camilla Schofield, Balliol College, Oxford University
            Shared History: Biography, Populism and the Generational Perspective in Postwar             Europe

Animateur: Brian Lewis, McGill University

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-407.00

89.      Biographie politique : l’État de l’art – Table ronde

Parrainée par le Groupe d'histoire politique de la SHC

Participants:
Peter C. Newman, Journalist and Author
John English, University of Waterloo
Adam Chapnick, Canadian Forces College
Cara Spittal, University of Toronto

Animateur: Stephen Henderson, Acadia University

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-403.00

90.     Histoires d’enseignants : Histoires sur les écoles


90.1     Paul Axelrod, York University
            No longer a ‘Last Resort’: The End of Corporal Punishment in the Schools of Toronto

90.2     R.D. Gidney and W.P.J. Millar, University of Western Ontario
            Pre-Modern High: Secondary Education in English Canada, 1900-1940

90.3     Helen Raptis, University of Victoria
            Amy Brown and the Development of Teacher Identity in British Columbia

Animatrice: Jo-Anne McCutcheon, Canadian Development Consultants International Inc.

15.00 – 16:30                Salle CJ 5-306 (Loyola Campus)

91.      Média et politique


Séance conjointe avec l’Association canadienne de communication
Une navette gratuite sera disponible pour transporter les délégués du campus du centre ville au campus Loyola.

91.1     Duncan Koerber, University of Toronto Mississauga
            Style over Substance: Newspaper Coverage of Early Election Campaigns in Canada

91.2   High Paper James Cairns, Wilfrid Laurier University (Brantford)
            “A parliament of man become a parliament of women”: Constructing femininity             through mass mediated civic rituals, 1900-1945

91.3     Suzanne Bowness, University of Ottawa
            Tracking Editorial Relationships Through the Correspondence Corners of
            Nineteenth-Century Canadian Magazines

91.4   High Paper  Gene Allen, Ryerson University
            The (Bi)National News: Canadian Press and the Service français in the 1960s

Animateur: Mary Vipond, Concordia University

15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-401.00

92.      Calendriers pour témoins contradictoires : Trois études de cas historiques


92.1     Stan Ruecker (University of Alberta), Johanna Drucker (University of                             California, Los Angeles) and Susan Brown (University of Guelph and University               of Alberta)
            Introduction

92.2     Megan Meredith-Lobay, University of Alberta
            Conflicting Origin Myths of the Argyll DálRíata in early Medieval Texts

92.3     Geoffrey Rockwell, Sean Gouglas, Harvey Quamen, Victoria Smith and Sophia               Hoosein, University of Alberta
            The History of Humanities Computing in Canada  

92.4     Bethany Nowviskie, Scholars’ Lab, University of Virginia Library
            The Production and Reception History of Swinburne’s 1866 ‘Poems and Ballads’

Animateur: Eric Sager, University of Victoria


15.00 – 16:30                Salle H-771.00

93.      Dissension dans les rapides : La voie maritime du St-Laurent d’hier à aujourd’hui


93.1     Rosemary O’Flaherty, Concordia University
            Community Legacies: 50th Anniversary Seaway Celebrations

93.2     Daniel MacFarlane, University of Ottawa
            Productive Disagreement: The Rise and Fall of an All-Canadian Seaway

93.3     Maggie Wheeler, Carleton University
            The Damming Silence: Eradication and Reconstruction of Memory, Story and                         Community in the Seaway Valley

93.4  High Paper   Claire Frances Parham, Siena College, Loudonville, New York
            Beyond the Interview: How One Oral Historian Became a Storyteller

Animatrice: Joy Parr, University of Western Ontario

15:45 – 16:45        Salle MB 3-210

94. Conférence Porter
Coparrainée par la Société canadienne de sociologie et la Société historique du Canada

Le prix du livre dans la tradition d'excellence de John Porter

Dominique Clément, University of Alberta
Canada's Rights Revolution: Social Movements and Social Change, 1937-1982

 

L’étude des populations du passé:

Nouveaux développements et regards interdisciplinaires

Une mini-conférence organisée par Danielle Gauvreau, Université Concordia 

Toutes les sessions aurons lieux dans la salle H-435.00.  

 

MARDI 1er JUIN 2010  

8:45 – 9:00

      Mot d’ouverture

9:00 – 10:00

      Conférence d’ouverture  - Chad Gaffield, Université d’Ottawa

10:00 – 10:15              Pause 

10:15 – 11:45

Séance 1 - Une histoire à découvrir: les données du recensement au service de l’étude des populations du passé   

1.1     Claude Bellavance et France Normand, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
            La population de Trois-Rivières à l'aube de la seconde industrialisation, 1901-1911 

1.2     Lisa Dillon, Université de Montréal
            Aging and social reproduction in 1911 Canada 

1.3     Patricia Thornton and Danielle Gauvreau, Concordia University 
            A Geography of Encounter: Immigration and Cultural Diversity within Quebec, 1881-            1911 

1.4     Marc St-Hilaire, Université Laval
            La franco-canadianisation de la ville de Québec et son impact sur les destins             individuels : une  comparaison hommes-femmes 

      Animateur: Gordon Darroch, York University 

11:45 – 12:30

Séance 2 - L’histoire sociale et spatiale de trois villes canadiennes : exemples d’utilisation du SIG  

    2.1     Patrick Dunae (Vancouver Island University), Jason Gilliland (University                       of Western Ontario) and John Lutz (University of Victoria)
               Dangerous Places? Mapping « Chinese Space » in 1891 Victoria, BC 

    2.2     Jason Gilliland and Don Lafrenière (University of Western Ontario),                                  Sherry Olson (McGill University), John Lutz (University of Victoria) and                       Patrick Dunae (Vancouver Island University)  
                Residential Segregation and the Built Environment in Three Canadian Cities,            1881-1961 

      Animatrice: Patricia Thornton, Concordia University  

12:30 – 13:30        

Dîner

13:30 – 15:00

Séance 3 - Veuvage et cycle de vie

3.1     Guy Brunet, Université Lyon 2
           La veuve, le veuf et l'orphelin. Ruptures d'union et réseaux familiaux dans un contexte            de forte mortalité. L'exemple de la Dombes (France) du milieu du XVIII° siècle au            milieu du XIX° siècle 

3.2     Marie-Ève Harton, Université Laval
           Demeurer en état de viduité ou se remarier? Le cas des habitants et habitantes âgé(e)s            entre 50 et 59 ans de la ville de Québec à la fin du XIXe siècle 

3.3     Gail Campbell, University of New Brunswick
           Till Death Us Do Part: Widows and Widowers in Charlotte County, New Brunswick,              1845-75 

3.4     Hannah M. Lane, Mount Allison University
           Wealth-holding in St. Stephen, New Brunswick, and Calais, Maine, 1841-1881  

      Animateur: Peter Gossage, Concordia University

15:00 – 15 :15         

Pause 

15:15 – 16:45

Séance 4 - Les défis posés par les sources : conservation, jumelage et exploitation 

4.1     Svenja Weise, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
           Sex, survival and subsistence – A mediaeval Danish perspective 

4.2     Mikolaj Szoltysek, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
           Rethinking Eastern Europe: household formation patterns in the Polish-Lithuanian            Commonwealth and European family systems 

4.3     Sherry Olson, McGill University
           Two by two: tracking personal identities in Montreal, 1881-1901 

4.4     Richard Marcoux, Université Laval  
            Les risques de l’oubli de l’histoire démographique récente en Afrique francophone 

      Animateur: Bertrand Desjardins, Université de Montréal