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L’Oganisation pour l’histoire du Canada annonce un séminare sure les nationalismes canadiens au cours du vingtième siècle. L’événement se déroulera les 16, 17 et 18 mars à Masse College, un établissement situé sur le campus de l'université de Toronto. Tous sont les bienvenus au séminaire. L'inscription est de 75$ et est gratuite pour les étudiants. Plus de détails sur l'événement se trouvent à l'adresse suivante: www.chass.utoronto.ca~chapnick/nationalism.
The Organization for the History of Canada announces a conference on Twentieth Century Canadian Nationalisms. The event will take place from March 16th through March 18th at Massey College, University of Toronto. All are invited. Registration is $75 and is free for students. For more details, and for registration information, please see:
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca~chapnick/nationalism/index.htm
Twentieth Century Canadian Nationalisms Program
Jackman Lecture
Canadian Identity and Canadian History
Professor Jack Granatstein* "Canadian Identity and Canadian History"
Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus, York University
Sheraton Hall, Wycliffe College
5, Hoskin Avenue, Toronto.
8.00 pm
Saturday and Sunday: breakfast will be at 9:00 in the Junior Common Room {Student Lounge], Massey College.
Panel Program
All session in Upper Library, Massey College
Saturday, March 17 - 09:30
Session 1: Opening Panel: The Nature of the Problem
Chair: Serge Bernier (Défense Nationale)
David Newhouse (Trent University)
Patricia Roy (University of Victoria)
Robert Wright (Trent University)
Adam Chapnick (University of Toronto)
Saturday, March 17 - 11:15
Session 2: Dualities
Chair-Commentator: Marie-Josée Thérrien (Ontario College of Art & Design)
Alan Gordon (McGill University), Lest We Forget: Two Solitudes in War and Memory
Aureliano Maria DeSoto (California State University), Scary Monsters: The Figuration of the Metropolis in Chicana/o and Québécois Cultural Nationalism
Daniel Machabée, La Commission Laurendeau-Dunton, Pierre-Elliott Trudeau, et la tombe de la dualité canadienne
Saturday, March 17 - 13:45
Session 3: Interwar Communications and Technology
Chair-Commentator: Raymond Blake (University of Regina)
Marc R. Sykes (Rutgers University), "A National Trust": Class, Nationalism, and Broadcast Policy in Canada, 1920 - 1945
Robert MacDougall (Harvard University), The All-Red Dream: Technological Nationalism and the Trans-Canada Telephone System
Saturday, March 17 -16:00
Session 4: Communications and Technology after the Second World War
Chair-Commentator: Penny Bryden (Mount Allison University)
Ira Wagman (McGill University), Culture, Numerically: The Fowler Commission, Canadian Content and Transformations in Policy Practice, 1956 - 1961
John Smart (Carleton/Queen's University), Canadian Nationalism Meets High Technology: The Department of Industry and the Search for a National Computer Policy after 1963
Sunday, March 18 - 09:30
Session 5: The North
Chair-Commentator: Jonathan Vance (University of Western Ontario)*
Janice Cavell (Carleton University), Comparing Mythologies: An Examination of Canadian Views of Arctic Exploration in the Twentieth Century
Edward Jones-Imhotep (Harvard University), Inscribing the North: Scientific Representation and Canadian Nationalism in the Early Cold War.
Sunday, March 18 - 11:00
Session 6: First Nations Nationalism
Chair-Commentator: James R. Miller (University of Saskatchewan)*
Don Smith (University of Calgary), The Contribution to First Nations Nationalism of Onondeyoh (Fred Loft) in the l920s and early l930s
Michael Behiels (University of Ottawa), The Assembly of First Nations Campaign to Entrench the Inherent Right to Self-Government, 1968-1987
Sunday, March 18 - 12:30
Session 7: Thinkers
Chair-Commentator: John English (University of Waterloo)
Michel Sarra-Bournet (Université du Québec à Montréal), L'importance de la langue dans le nationalisme contemporain au Québec
Peter Henshaw (Queen's University), John Buchan and the British Imperial Origins of Canadian Multiculturalism
* Invited Speaker
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