From Dorset sculpture to traveling circuses to the Barenaked Ladies, award-winning historian Jonathan Vance reveals a storyteller\u27s ear for narrative. In a country of unparalleled diversity, culture has many different shades of importance and meaning. A stranded Innu woman found by eighteenth-century explorers in the wind-swept Arctic took the time to decorate her clothing with rich designs. The explorers were taken aback; but Vance informs us that the Inuit word meaning to make poetry is the same as the word for breathe ; and both derive from the word for the soul. Unsurprisingly, Aboriginal culture began to change with the arrival of more Europeans (who brought their own ideas about culture) in one of the many complicated and in...
In Nunavut at present there exist only a small number of visitor’s centres and only one museum, whic...
The methods of the 'new' history have helped to define the study of theatre history; at the same tim...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of dis...
This article argues that the relation between folklore and literature in Canadian culture has signif...
This beautifully written narrative history paints a magnificent picture of the second largest nation...
International audienceThis paper, both a testimony and reflection about the author’s experience as c...
experienced artists, right across the Arctic and ultimately forced the abandonment of many of these ...
In 1992, when this dissertation was completed, Canadian museums (among many others) were in a state ...
grantor: University of TorontoLittle attention has been paid to the Contemporary Native Li...
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Professor Campbel...
Prior to contact with European culture, Eskimos in the circumpolar world had a highly developed oral...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
The author of this article examines the ways in which the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangi...
Most scholars consider the 1951 issue of a report by the Royal Commission on National Development in...
This paper, both a testimony and reflection about the author’s experience as contributor of the “co...
In Nunavut at present there exist only a small number of visitor’s centres and only one museum, whic...
The methods of the 'new' history have helped to define the study of theatre history; at the same tim...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of dis...
This article argues that the relation between folklore and literature in Canadian culture has signif...
This beautifully written narrative history paints a magnificent picture of the second largest nation...
International audienceThis paper, both a testimony and reflection about the author’s experience as c...
experienced artists, right across the Arctic and ultimately forced the abandonment of many of these ...
In 1992, when this dissertation was completed, Canadian museums (among many others) were in a state ...
grantor: University of TorontoLittle attention has been paid to the Contemporary Native Li...
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Professor Campbel...
Prior to contact with European culture, Eskimos in the circumpolar world had a highly developed oral...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
The author of this article examines the ways in which the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangi...
Most scholars consider the 1951 issue of a report by the Royal Commission on National Development in...
This paper, both a testimony and reflection about the author’s experience as contributor of the “co...
In Nunavut at present there exist only a small number of visitor’s centres and only one museum, whic...
The methods of the 'new' history have helped to define the study of theatre history; at the same tim...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of dis...