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Now showing items 31-40 of 115
Starting Over: A. L. Lloyd and the Search for a New Folk Music, 1945-49
(Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, 2000)
In a previous article in this Journal (1997), the
author has outlined Lloyd's early involvement with
folk music during the decade 1934-1944 and
analyzed the significance of The Singing
Englishman. Here he continues the ...
The Songs of the People for Me’: The Victorian Rediscovery of Lancashire Vernacular Song
(Canadian Folk Music/Musique folklorique canadienne, 2006)
Some Other Field Recordings by Alan Lomax
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)
Review of Songs of the Sea: Traditional Folk Songs and Narratives from the Dr. Helen Creighton Collection (Dartmouth, NS: Helen Creighton Folklore Society, 2003)
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2004)
Cyberimperialisme et marginalisation des autochtones au Canada
(Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique INRS Urbanisation, Culture et Société, 2000)
Les populations indigènes du Canada seraient-elles sujettes, comme les. autres populations du Canada, à un « cyberimpérialisme » insidieux, qui menace de dénaturer et de marginaliser leurs cultures, voire de les éliminer ...
A Probe Into the Demographic Structure of Nineteenth Century Red River
(University of Alberta Press, 1976)
To the casual observer in 1830 Red River appeared a picturesque rural backwater dotted with church steeples and numerous windmills. The impression would not have been inaccurate. By 1830 the settlement had recovered from ...
Vernacular Song, Cultural Identity, and Nationalism in Newfoundland, 1920-1955
(Canadian Folk Music/Musique folklorique canadienne, 2006)
Although a force in Newfoundland politics and culture, nationalist sentiment was not strong enough in 1948 to prevent
confederation with Canada. The absence among many Newfoundlanders of a strong sense of belonging to an ...
The Fur Trade and Western Canadian Society, 1670-1870
(The Canadian Historical Association, 1987)
The political, economic, and social history of present day Northwest Territories, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, was, for the first two hundred years of European contact, a product of the fur trade. At various posts ...
The Historiography of the Red River Settlement, 1830-1868
(Prairie Forum, 1981)
In the many studies of the Red River Settlement written since 1856, the prime factors affecting the Settlement have been variously conceived as economic, geographic or political. In contrast to the traditional historical ...
Some comments on the social origins of the Riel Protest of 1869
(1979)
The English-speaking folk of Red River looked with excitement and hope on the debates that surrounded the confederation of the eastern provinces. The Protestant Canadians, arriving in vocal and visible numbers in the 1860s ...