Blogs / Interviews – Entretiens

  • Suzanna Wagner Q&A, Issue 32. no.2
    Suzanna Wagner is an independent scholar, focusing on Canadian health history between 1890 and 1930. She is currently the Historic Sites Program Coordinator with the Government of Alberta. She is the author of “Households Large and Small: Healthcare Civilians and the Prominence of Women’s Work in the Edmonton Bulletin’s Reporting of the 1918 Influenza Pandemic ”. You can read her article in JCHA/RSHC 32 no. 2 (2022).
  • Rachel Hope Cleves, Issue 32. no. 2 Roundtable
    Rachel Hope Cleves is a Professor at the University of Victoria. Her work focuses on American history, particularly through a gender and sexuality lens. Her latest work Unspeakable: A Life beyond Sexual Morality won the 2021 Wallace K. Ferguson Prize and is the subject of a roundatable in JCHA/RSHC 32 no
  • Nicole Demarchi Q&A, Issue 32. no.2
    Nicole Demarchi is a PhD candidate in medieval history. She is enrolled in a joint program at the University of Padua, Ca’Foscari Venice, University of Verona, and University of Lorraine. She is the author of “Between Expiatory Religious Processions and Individual Escapes: Responses to Bubonic Plague Epidemics in the Historiae of Gregory of Tours and Paul the Deacon”. You can read her article in JCHA/RSHC 32 no. 2 (2022).
  • jason chalmers Q&A, Issue 32 no.2
    jason chalmers is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at Concordia University. His work deals with decolonization and memory from a Jewish perspective. He is the author of “Decolonizing the Holocaust: Curatorial Possibilities at the Montreal Holocaust Museum.”. You can read his article in JCHA/RSHC 32 no.2 (2022).
  • Justin Richard Dubé Q&A, Numéro 31. n.2.
    Justin Richard Dubé est candidat à la maîtrise en histoire à l’Université du Québec à Rimouski. Ses travaux s’intéressent principalement à l’histoire politique et intellectuelle canadienne et québécoise des XIXe-XXe siècles. Vous pouvez lire son article,”L’octroi du droit de vote universel autochtone aux élections fédérales” dans JCHA/RSHC 31. no.2.
  • Aidan Forth, Issue 31. no.2 Rountable
    Aidan Forth is an Associate Professor of History at MacEwan University. His first book, Barbed-Wire Imperialism: Britain’s Empire of Camps, 1876-1902, won the Wallace K. Ferguson Prize from the Canadian Historical Association and the Stansky Book Prize from the North American Conference on British Studies. You can read his response to the JCHA roundtable in JCHA 31 no 2.
  • David M.K. Sheinin, Q&A, Issue 31. no.1
    David M.K. Sheinin is professor of History and director of the History Graduate Program at Trent University. His most recent books are Race and Transnationalism in the Americas (co-edited with Benjamin Bryce, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021) and Armed Jews in the Americas (co-edited with Raanan Rein, Brill, 2021). You can read his article “The Slow Conquest of the Argentine Frontier: From the Subversive Gaucho through the Erasure of First Peoples to the Cold War Military Triumph over Antarctica” in JCHA 31 no.1.
  • Cheryl Thompson, Q&A, Issue 31. no.1
    Dr. Cherly Thompson is an Assistant Professor in Creative Industries at The Creative School. She is the author of Uncle: Race, Nostalgia, and the Politics of Loyalty (2021) and Beauty in a Box: Detangling the Roots of Canada’s Black Beauty Culture (2019). You can read her article Black “Minstrelsy on Canadian Stages: Nostalgia for Plantation Slavery in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries” in JCHA 31 no. 1.
  • Olivier Guimond, Q&A Numéro 31. no.1
    Olivier Guimond est candidat au doctorat en histoire à l’Université d’Ottawa. Ses recherches portent sur l’histoire intellectuelle et culturelle de la question seigneuriale au Québec pendant le XIXe siècle. Vous pouvez lire son article,”Louis-Joseph Papineau’s Seigneurialism, Republicanism, and Jeffersonian Inclinations” dans JCHA/RSHC 31 no.1.
  • Sydney Harker Q&A, Issue 32. no.1
    ydney Harker is a doctoral candidate under the supervision of Dr. Jane Errington and Dr. Laila Haidarali at Queen’s University. Her current research examines how categories of beauty were employed and understood in Ontario from the mid to late nineteenth century. You can read her article ” ‘A Galaxy of Youth and Beauty’ : Beauty Entertainment in Late Victorian Ontario” in JCHA/RSHC issue 32 no.1.
  • Frederick Glover Q&A: Issue 32 no.1
    Frederick Glover is a professor in the Department of History at St. Mary’s University Calgary. His work deals with missionary work in the Korean peninsula. You can read his article “‘Very clever and yet too highly flavoured’: Why Robert Grierson’s History of the Canadian Presbyterian Mission in Korea and Manchuria was Unfit to Print” in JCHA/RSHC 32 no.1

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