Within and Without the Nation
Canadian History as Transnational History
Herausgeber: Dubinsky, Karen; Yu, Henry; Perry, Adele
Within and Without the Nation
Canadian History as Transnational History
Herausgeber: Dubinsky, Karen; Yu, Henry; Perry, Adele
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Moving beyond well-known comparisons with Britain and the United States, the fifteen essays in this collection connect Canada with Latin America, the Caribbean, and the wider Pacific world, as well as with other parts of the British Empire.
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Moving beyond well-known comparisons with Britain and the United States, the fifteen essays in this collection connect Canada with Latin America, the Caribbean, and the wider Pacific world, as well as with other parts of the British Empire.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. November 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781442646773
- ISBN-10: 1442646772
- Artikelnr.: 41961141
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. November 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781442646773
- ISBN-10: 1442646772
- Artikelnr.: 41961141
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Edited by Karen Dubinsky, Adele Perry, and Henry Yu
Introduction: Canadian History, Transnational History (Karen Dubinsky,
Adele Perry, and Henry Yu)
Part One: Indigenous Peoples and Dispossessions
1. The Dog that Didn’t Bark: The Durham Report, Indigenous Dispossession,
and Self-Government for Britain’s Settler Colonies (Ann Curthoys)
2. The Bannisters and Their Colonial World: Family Networks and Colonialism
in the Early Nineteenth Century (Elizabeth Elbourne)
3. Comparing to Connect: Indigenous Voices in Canada and South Africa
(Tolly Bradford)
4. State-Sponsored Photography and Assimilation Policy in Canada and New
Zealand (Angela Wanhalla)
5. Canada and Australia: On Anglo-Saxon “Oceana,” Transcolonial History,
and an Interconnected Pacific World (Penelope Edmonds)
Part Two: Migrations
6. “In England a Man Can Do as He Likes with His Property”: Migration,
Family Fortunes, and the Law in Nineteenth-Century Quebec and the Cape
Colony (Bettina Bradbury)
7. Slave-Owner, Missionary, and Colonization Agent: The Transnational Life
of John Taylor, 1813–1884 (Ryan Eyford)
8. Conceptualizing a Pacific Canada Within and Without Nations (Henry Yu)
9. “How I Wish I Might Be Near”: Distance, Emotion, and the Epistolary
Family in Late Nineteenth-Century Condolence Letters (Laura Ishiguro)
10. “She Cannot Be Confined to Her Own Region”: Nursing and Nurses in the
Caribbean, Canada, and the UK (Karen Flynn)
Part Three: Nationalisms, Internationalisms, and Antinationalisms
11. Law and Migration across the Pacific: Narrating the Komagata Maru
Outside and Beyond the Nation (Renisa Mawani)
12. Canadian Girls, Imperial Girls, Global Girls: Race, Nation, and
Transnationalism in the Interwar Girl Guide Movement (Kristine Alexander)
13. Health and Nation through a Transnational Lens: Radical Doctors and the
History of Medicare in Saskatchewan (Esyllt W. Jones)
14. Progressive Catholicism at Home and Abroad: The “Double Solidarité” of
Quebec Missionaries in Honduras, 1955–1975 (Fred Burrill and Catherine
LeGrand)
15. Thinking Beyond What Nation? Empire and the Writing of Post-1945
Canadian History (Sean Mills)
Adele Perry, and Henry Yu)
Part One: Indigenous Peoples and Dispossessions
1. The Dog that Didn’t Bark: The Durham Report, Indigenous Dispossession,
and Self-Government for Britain’s Settler Colonies (Ann Curthoys)
2. The Bannisters and Their Colonial World: Family Networks and Colonialism
in the Early Nineteenth Century (Elizabeth Elbourne)
3. Comparing to Connect: Indigenous Voices in Canada and South Africa
(Tolly Bradford)
4. State-Sponsored Photography and Assimilation Policy in Canada and New
Zealand (Angela Wanhalla)
5. Canada and Australia: On Anglo-Saxon “Oceana,” Transcolonial History,
and an Interconnected Pacific World (Penelope Edmonds)
Part Two: Migrations
6. “In England a Man Can Do as He Likes with His Property”: Migration,
Family Fortunes, and the Law in Nineteenth-Century Quebec and the Cape
Colony (Bettina Bradbury)
7. Slave-Owner, Missionary, and Colonization Agent: The Transnational Life
of John Taylor, 1813–1884 (Ryan Eyford)
8. Conceptualizing a Pacific Canada Within and Without Nations (Henry Yu)
9. “How I Wish I Might Be Near”: Distance, Emotion, and the Epistolary
Family in Late Nineteenth-Century Condolence Letters (Laura Ishiguro)
10. “She Cannot Be Confined to Her Own Region”: Nursing and Nurses in the
Caribbean, Canada, and the UK (Karen Flynn)
Part Three: Nationalisms, Internationalisms, and Antinationalisms
11. Law and Migration across the Pacific: Narrating the Komagata Maru
Outside and Beyond the Nation (Renisa Mawani)
12. Canadian Girls, Imperial Girls, Global Girls: Race, Nation, and
Transnationalism in the Interwar Girl Guide Movement (Kristine Alexander)
13. Health and Nation through a Transnational Lens: Radical Doctors and the
History of Medicare in Saskatchewan (Esyllt W. Jones)
14. Progressive Catholicism at Home and Abroad: The “Double Solidarité” of
Quebec Missionaries in Honduras, 1955–1975 (Fred Burrill and Catherine
LeGrand)
15. Thinking Beyond What Nation? Empire and the Writing of Post-1945
Canadian History (Sean Mills)
Introduction: Canadian History, Transnational History (Karen Dubinsky,
Adele Perry, and Henry Yu)
Part One: Indigenous Peoples and Dispossessions
1. The Dog that Didn’t Bark: The Durham Report, Indigenous Dispossession,
and Self-Government for Britain’s Settler Colonies (Ann Curthoys)
2. The Bannisters and Their Colonial World: Family Networks and Colonialism
in the Early Nineteenth Century (Elizabeth Elbourne)
3. Comparing to Connect: Indigenous Voices in Canada and South Africa
(Tolly Bradford)
4. State-Sponsored Photography and Assimilation Policy in Canada and New
Zealand (Angela Wanhalla)
5. Canada and Australia: On Anglo-Saxon “Oceana,” Transcolonial History,
and an Interconnected Pacific World (Penelope Edmonds)
Part Two: Migrations
6. “In England a Man Can Do as He Likes with His Property”: Migration,
Family Fortunes, and the Law in Nineteenth-Century Quebec and the Cape
Colony (Bettina Bradbury)
7. Slave-Owner, Missionary, and Colonization Agent: The Transnational Life
of John Taylor, 1813–1884 (Ryan Eyford)
8. Conceptualizing a Pacific Canada Within and Without Nations (Henry Yu)
9. “How I Wish I Might Be Near”: Distance, Emotion, and the Epistolary
Family in Late Nineteenth-Century Condolence Letters (Laura Ishiguro)
10. “She Cannot Be Confined to Her Own Region”: Nursing and Nurses in the
Caribbean, Canada, and the UK (Karen Flynn)
Part Three: Nationalisms, Internationalisms, and Antinationalisms
11. Law and Migration across the Pacific: Narrating the Komagata Maru
Outside and Beyond the Nation (Renisa Mawani)
12. Canadian Girls, Imperial Girls, Global Girls: Race, Nation, and
Transnationalism in the Interwar Girl Guide Movement (Kristine Alexander)
13. Health and Nation through a Transnational Lens: Radical Doctors and the
History of Medicare in Saskatchewan (Esyllt W. Jones)
14. Progressive Catholicism at Home and Abroad: The “Double Solidarité” of
Quebec Missionaries in Honduras, 1955–1975 (Fred Burrill and Catherine
LeGrand)
15. Thinking Beyond What Nation? Empire and the Writing of Post-1945
Canadian History (Sean Mills)
Adele Perry, and Henry Yu)
Part One: Indigenous Peoples and Dispossessions
1. The Dog that Didn’t Bark: The Durham Report, Indigenous Dispossession,
and Self-Government for Britain’s Settler Colonies (Ann Curthoys)
2. The Bannisters and Their Colonial World: Family Networks and Colonialism
in the Early Nineteenth Century (Elizabeth Elbourne)
3. Comparing to Connect: Indigenous Voices in Canada and South Africa
(Tolly Bradford)
4. State-Sponsored Photography and Assimilation Policy in Canada and New
Zealand (Angela Wanhalla)
5. Canada and Australia: On Anglo-Saxon “Oceana,” Transcolonial History,
and an Interconnected Pacific World (Penelope Edmonds)
Part Two: Migrations
6. “In England a Man Can Do as He Likes with His Property”: Migration,
Family Fortunes, and the Law in Nineteenth-Century Quebec and the Cape
Colony (Bettina Bradbury)
7. Slave-Owner, Missionary, and Colonization Agent: The Transnational Life
of John Taylor, 1813–1884 (Ryan Eyford)
8. Conceptualizing a Pacific Canada Within and Without Nations (Henry Yu)
9. “How I Wish I Might Be Near”: Distance, Emotion, and the Epistolary
Family in Late Nineteenth-Century Condolence Letters (Laura Ishiguro)
10. “She Cannot Be Confined to Her Own Region”: Nursing and Nurses in the
Caribbean, Canada, and the UK (Karen Flynn)
Part Three: Nationalisms, Internationalisms, and Antinationalisms
11. Law and Migration across the Pacific: Narrating the Komagata Maru
Outside and Beyond the Nation (Renisa Mawani)
12. Canadian Girls, Imperial Girls, Global Girls: Race, Nation, and
Transnationalism in the Interwar Girl Guide Movement (Kristine Alexander)
13. Health and Nation through a Transnational Lens: Radical Doctors and the
History of Medicare in Saskatchewan (Esyllt W. Jones)
14. Progressive Catholicism at Home and Abroad: The “Double Solidarité” of
Quebec Missionaries in Honduras, 1955–1975 (Fred Burrill and Catherine
LeGrand)
15. Thinking Beyond What Nation? Empire and the Writing of Post-1945
Canadian History (Sean Mills)