For Roman Paul Fodchuk the zhorna, or stone quem mills, symbolically represent the hardships early Ukrainian pioneers in Alberta experienced and successfully overcame while adapting to their new life. The book covers a broad range of the material culture topics-from pioneers\u27 clothing and house utensils to house building and agricultural technology. Throughout its six chapters, the author presents the pioneers\u27 chronological becoming through the lenses of material culture objects, both those brought with them at the end ofthe 19th century and also objects made in Canada
Swiss-born University of North Dakota anthropologist Felix Sebastian Braun focuses on the recent dev...
Review of: To Reap a Bountiful Harvest: Czech Immigration beyond the Mississippi, 1850-1900. Korytov...
The history of Ukrainian..Canadian women has never before been told so completely from the women\u27...
For Roman Paul Fodchuk the zhorna, or stone quem mills, symbolically represent the hardships early U...
Folk Furniture makes a fine coffee-table book, with its oversize format and more than one hundred go...
At first glance this slender volume appears to be nothing more than a study of one small and seeming...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
Belonging to the genre of local history, Trailblazers explores the lives of two Canadians in the pro...
The text is a review of the fourth volume of the publishing series The world of our ancestors, subti...
Hinther and Mochoruk offer the reader an interdisciplinary look at aspects of Canadian history throu...
This is a modest but invaluable introduction for a larger research problem that should be attacked s...
Though sporadic arrivals of Poles into the United States had started much earlier, it was onl y in 1...
The book provides an understanding of the role that soil management has played in the success or fai...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
With his latest book Meadows has made a significant contribution to our understanding of Native Amer...
Swiss-born University of North Dakota anthropologist Felix Sebastian Braun focuses on the recent dev...
Review of: To Reap a Bountiful Harvest: Czech Immigration beyond the Mississippi, 1850-1900. Korytov...
The history of Ukrainian..Canadian women has never before been told so completely from the women\u27...
For Roman Paul Fodchuk the zhorna, or stone quem mills, symbolically represent the hardships early U...
Folk Furniture makes a fine coffee-table book, with its oversize format and more than one hundred go...
At first glance this slender volume appears to be nothing more than a study of one small and seeming...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
Belonging to the genre of local history, Trailblazers explores the lives of two Canadians in the pro...
The text is a review of the fourth volume of the publishing series The world of our ancestors, subti...
Hinther and Mochoruk offer the reader an interdisciplinary look at aspects of Canadian history throu...
This is a modest but invaluable introduction for a larger research problem that should be attacked s...
Though sporadic arrivals of Poles into the United States had started much earlier, it was onl y in 1...
The book provides an understanding of the role that soil management has played in the success or fai...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
With his latest book Meadows has made a significant contribution to our understanding of Native Amer...
Swiss-born University of North Dakota anthropologist Felix Sebastian Braun focuses on the recent dev...
Review of: To Reap a Bountiful Harvest: Czech Immigration beyond the Mississippi, 1850-1900. Korytov...
The history of Ukrainian..Canadian women has never before been told so completely from the women\u27...