This striking collection of quotes by and pictures of Canadian prairie women resulted from several years of research by two of the authors for their film on pioneer women, Great Grand Mother. When that project successfully terminated, Anne wheeler and Lorna Rasmussen faced the prospect of seeing a myriad of unused photographs, diaries, and other documents return to oblivion. Instead, they joined with Linda Rasmussen and Candace Savage to arrange a selection of these sources in one volume. The result of their labors is a valuable, graphic view of the experiences of white women on the Canadian prairies between the 1890s and the 1920s. But while the compilers demonstrate a certain deftness in selecting and arranging the materials, they fall pr...
Capturing Women, an extended essay examining the role of Indian captivity narratives in racializing ...
The book is disappointing, however, in at least two respects. Although Cordier asserts that the wome...
When do the prairies begin in history? And are they now in danger of ending? Jenny Kerber notes that...
This striking collection of quotes by and pictures of Canadian prairie women resulted from several y...
Review of: A Harvest Yet to Reap: A History of Prairie Women. Rasmussen, Linda; Rassmussen, Lorna; S...
In Prairie Women: Images in American and Canadian Fiction, Carol Fairbanks has taken materials suita...
Review of: Prairie Women: Images in American and Canadian Fiction. Fairbanks, Carolyn
You\u27ve seen her in a hundred books, movies, and television programs: the madonna of the prairie....
In Looking Back, Leigh Matthews, a literary scholar, argues that memoirs written by white, English-s...
Glenda Riley\u27s book offers the reader an absorbing account of the life-styles of Iowa frontierswo...
This is a book divided-almost against itself. The first half consists of a series of brief essays, t...
Unsettled Pasts: Reconceiving the West Through Women\u27s History arose out of the same-named confer...
Despite over thirty years having elapsed since Joan Jensen and Darlis Miller, in The Gentle Tamers ...
According to a widely used, recently published college survey text about westward expansion in the U...
Review of: "Women of the Northern Plains: Gender and Settlement on the Homestead Frontier, 1870–1930...
Capturing Women, an extended essay examining the role of Indian captivity narratives in racializing ...
The book is disappointing, however, in at least two respects. Although Cordier asserts that the wome...
When do the prairies begin in history? And are they now in danger of ending? Jenny Kerber notes that...
This striking collection of quotes by and pictures of Canadian prairie women resulted from several y...
Review of: A Harvest Yet to Reap: A History of Prairie Women. Rasmussen, Linda; Rassmussen, Lorna; S...
In Prairie Women: Images in American and Canadian Fiction, Carol Fairbanks has taken materials suita...
Review of: Prairie Women: Images in American and Canadian Fiction. Fairbanks, Carolyn
You\u27ve seen her in a hundred books, movies, and television programs: the madonna of the prairie....
In Looking Back, Leigh Matthews, a literary scholar, argues that memoirs written by white, English-s...
Glenda Riley\u27s book offers the reader an absorbing account of the life-styles of Iowa frontierswo...
This is a book divided-almost against itself. The first half consists of a series of brief essays, t...
Unsettled Pasts: Reconceiving the West Through Women\u27s History arose out of the same-named confer...
Despite over thirty years having elapsed since Joan Jensen and Darlis Miller, in The Gentle Tamers ...
According to a widely used, recently published college survey text about westward expansion in the U...
Review of: "Women of the Northern Plains: Gender and Settlement on the Homestead Frontier, 1870–1930...
Capturing Women, an extended essay examining the role of Indian captivity narratives in racializing ...
The book is disappointing, however, in at least two respects. Although Cordier asserts that the wome...
When do the prairies begin in history? And are they now in danger of ending? Jenny Kerber notes that...