Unsettled Pasts: Reconceiving the West Through Women\u27s History arose out of the same-named conference held at the University of Calgary in 2002. This edited collection brings together a broad spectrum of contributors and a variety of modes of expression. The incorporation of region and gender is an ongoing theme; it is, as well, the glue that holds everything together throughout all of the articles. The major contribution of the book is the connection among gender, place, and the processes that shaped the diversity of women\u27s experiences in the settlement of the Canadian West. There is a broad range of articles, narratives, speeches, and biographies in the collection, including articles about Aboriginal women, black women, and pio...
This critical survey of Western Canadian history seeks to set the record straight. Sarah Carter take...
Review of: Western Women: Their Land, Their Lives. Schlissel, Lillian; Ruiz, Vicki L.; and Monk, Jan...
In Looking Back, Leigh Matthews, a literary scholar, argues that memoirs written by white, English-s...
Unsettled Pasts: Reconceiving the West Through Women\u27s History arose out of the same-named confer...
This new collection of essays is a welcome contribution to the literature on women in the Canadian W...
The twenty-one essays in this collection represent some of the finest work being done in the ongoing...
The articles grouped in Contact Zones examine the racial, class, and gender power relations that dev...
Ever since western women\u27s history emerged as a distinct field of study in the 1980s, collaborati...
This collection of articles published since the early 1990s makes a welcome contribution to the rang...
The exploration and settlement of the American West have long been subjects of interest to American ...
Capturing Women, an extended essay examining the role of Indian captivity narratives in racializing ...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Although the term pioneer in the book title recalls Turner\u27s West where white emigrants were th...
Review Essay: Brenda Child, Holding Our World Together: Ojibwe Women and the Survival of Community (...
From 1969 to 1990 the Western Canadian Studies conferences brought together researchers interested i...
This critical survey of Western Canadian history seeks to set the record straight. Sarah Carter take...
Review of: Western Women: Their Land, Their Lives. Schlissel, Lillian; Ruiz, Vicki L.; and Monk, Jan...
In Looking Back, Leigh Matthews, a literary scholar, argues that memoirs written by white, English-s...
Unsettled Pasts: Reconceiving the West Through Women\u27s History arose out of the same-named confer...
This new collection of essays is a welcome contribution to the literature on women in the Canadian W...
The twenty-one essays in this collection represent some of the finest work being done in the ongoing...
The articles grouped in Contact Zones examine the racial, class, and gender power relations that dev...
Ever since western women\u27s history emerged as a distinct field of study in the 1980s, collaborati...
This collection of articles published since the early 1990s makes a welcome contribution to the rang...
The exploration and settlement of the American West have long been subjects of interest to American ...
Capturing Women, an extended essay examining the role of Indian captivity narratives in racializing ...
This book fulfills one of two purposes emerging from the first National Symposium on Aboriginal Wome...
Although the term pioneer in the book title recalls Turner\u27s West where white emigrants were th...
Review Essay: Brenda Child, Holding Our World Together: Ojibwe Women and the Survival of Community (...
From 1969 to 1990 the Western Canadian Studies conferences brought together researchers interested i...
This critical survey of Western Canadian history seeks to set the record straight. Sarah Carter take...
Review of: Western Women: Their Land, Their Lives. Schlissel, Lillian; Ruiz, Vicki L.; and Monk, Jan...
In Looking Back, Leigh Matthews, a literary scholar, argues that memoirs written by white, English-s...