In Newfoundland expatriate communities, identity means creating and gaining cultural power through a variety of images and practices in everyday life; it is about the formation of distinction within a homogenous whole and the use of this distinction in the creation of a sense of place—of belonging. Through this study of Newfoundland communities in the United States and Canada, I expand on theories of critical regionalism while focusing on an immigrant community that spans a variety of geographic spaces. Critical regionalist theory is used to analyze the role of civic commons in the development and maintenance of sustainable communities. On demonstrating the relation between local and non-local power structures, with a concentration on power...
This thesis is an examination often novels at the centre of the recent surge of artistic and literar...
It is probably true that no culture has been found which does not have some equivalent of what we in...
This thesis focuses on the ways in which the folk tradition was perceived and presented by selected ...
Many studies of diasporas focus on (large) locales where sizable diasporic populations provide room ...
For over a century there has been a large ongoing migration from Newfoundland to other parts of Cana...
This paper considers the role of music in producing a cultural identity specific to Newfoundland (wh...
The outport, a term that describes all of Newfoundland's coastal communities, is an important touchs...
This thesis examines selected representations of Newfoundland cultural identity in twentieth century...
The purpose of this study is to learn about the cultural adaptation experiences of immigrants to rur...
Although a force in Newfoundland politics and culture, nationalist sentiment was not strong enough i...
Prior to the 1949 referendum on confederation, Newfoundland political factions on all sides of the ...
Newfoundland and Labrador reluctantly joined the Canadian Confederation in 1949. It is not well know...
We now live in a world where urbanization has become the norm. Approximately half the world now live...
This paper presents the Newfoundland boil-up as an integral means of transmitting folk knowledge ove...
grantor: University of TorontoIn this thesis I review existing academic research on the b...
This thesis is an examination often novels at the centre of the recent surge of artistic and literar...
It is probably true that no culture has been found which does not have some equivalent of what we in...
This thesis focuses on the ways in which the folk tradition was perceived and presented by selected ...
Many studies of diasporas focus on (large) locales where sizable diasporic populations provide room ...
For over a century there has been a large ongoing migration from Newfoundland to other parts of Cana...
This paper considers the role of music in producing a cultural identity specific to Newfoundland (wh...
The outport, a term that describes all of Newfoundland's coastal communities, is an important touchs...
This thesis examines selected representations of Newfoundland cultural identity in twentieth century...
The purpose of this study is to learn about the cultural adaptation experiences of immigrants to rur...
Although a force in Newfoundland politics and culture, nationalist sentiment was not strong enough i...
Prior to the 1949 referendum on confederation, Newfoundland political factions on all sides of the ...
Newfoundland and Labrador reluctantly joined the Canadian Confederation in 1949. It is not well know...
We now live in a world where urbanization has become the norm. Approximately half the world now live...
This paper presents the Newfoundland boil-up as an integral means of transmitting folk knowledge ove...
grantor: University of TorontoIn this thesis I review existing academic research on the b...
This thesis is an examination often novels at the centre of the recent surge of artistic and literar...
It is probably true that no culture has been found which does not have some equivalent of what we in...
This thesis focuses on the ways in which the folk tradition was perceived and presented by selected ...