Browsing Centre for Humanities by Title
Now showing items 1-20 of 115
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1978: Language escapes: Italian-Canadian authors write in an official language and not in Italiese
(2014)The important year for Italian-Canadian literature is 1978-1979, the year in which three writers separately and simultaneously made conscious decisions to write in a standard official language of Canada rather than in ... -
A. L. Lloyd and the English Folk Song Revival, 1934-44
(Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, 1997)F. David Gregory outlines the genesis and contents of A.L. Lloyd's 1944 history of English folk song,The Singing Englishman. Focusing on Lloyd's working-class childhood, subsequent jobs in Australia, London and Antarctica, ... -
Alan Lomax: A Life in Folk Music
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)Alan Lomax's career was long, almost seventy years, and his interests many and varied. He achieved so much in those seventy years that it is impossible for any short account of his life and work to be comprehensive. ... -
Alberta : A Community Development Heritage Alternative
(ICOMOS Canada, 1996)Since 1980, twelve new heritage attractions have been constructed by the Province of Alberta with three new facilities opening since 1990 despite a major recession. All but the Royal Tyrrell Museum and its Field Station ... -
Andromeda (disambiguation)
(Heartlines Spec, 2023-02)A personal essay on fandom, love, and friendship, prompted by reading and watching The Expanse. Originally published by Heartlines Spec, 16 Feb. 2023; open access at https://www.heartlines-spec.com/andromeda-disambiguati ... -
The Anglican Church and the disintegration of Red River society, 1818-1870.
(McLellan and Stewart Limited, 1976)In 1821 Red River was desolate, destitute and barbarous. The uncompromising struggle of the Hudson's Bay Company and the North West Company for control of the British North American Fur trade bred ruthlessness and violence. ... -
An Apocalyptic Moment: Mackenzie King and the Bomb
(Canadian Committee for the History of the Second World War, 1997) -
Arguments for a Comparative Literature Book Project
(Lexington Books, 2020-03-01) -
Atwood’s Survival: A Critique
(University of Ottawa, 2016) -
Ballad of the Month/A Ballad Revisited
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2003) -
Before Newfoundland: Maud Karpeles in Canada
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2003) -
Canada and the Far East during the 1930s
(Toronto, Oxford University Press, 1991, 1991) -
Canada and the Far East in 1939
(Ottawa, Canadian Committee for the History of the Second World War, 1996, 1996) -
Canadian memory institutions and the digital revolution : the last five years
(1998)Three American companies carry 80 per cent of Internet traffic. America Online has a large financial interest in two of these companies. Today there are about 1.5 million connections to the Internet; by 2010 there will be ... -
The Cento, Romanticism, and Copyright
(English Studies in Canada, 2013)This article excavates the obscure literary genre of the cento – a genre of poetry defined by its wholly derivative composition from quotations of other works – and its supplementary relation to Romantic literature and the ... -
A Close Reading of Part 5 of Robert Kroetsch’s 1977 long poem SEED CATALOGUE
(The Explicator, 2017)A close reading of Part 5 of Robert Kroetsch's 1977 long poem Seed Catalogue -
"Come on back to the war": Germany as the Other National Other in Canadian Popular Literature
(University of Toronto Quarterly, 2009)This essay argues for bringing the methodology of post-colonial studies to bear on mainstream Canadian popular culture, towards a rethinking of Canada's ideological affinities with nations traditionally considered as ... -
A Conversation with Kiran Ahluwalia
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2003) -
'Corruption' at Moose
(The Beaver, 1979)On the cold, desolate, wind-swept shore of Hudson Bay, winters were long and there was nothing but brandy and talk to relieve the boredom of the endless ice and the interminable meals of salt geese and dried pease. Tempers ... -
Cosmic Ear: Calabrian Writers in Canada
(Australasian Canadian Studies, 2005)"Our House is in a Cosmic Ear" is the title of a poem by Antonino Mazza, a poet and translator who epitomizes Calabrian writers in Canada. Calabrians constitute a very large proportion of the Italians in Canada. There are ...