A comprehensive and groundbreaking collection, Canada and the Great Irish Famine examines how Ireland’s famine migration was confronted, experienced, and remembered in a receiving country.
Between 1975 and 1997 some three million Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians fled atrocities in their home countries, with over 210,000 resettling... Læs mere
Settler Colonial Sovereignty examines what processes and understandings make Crown sovereignty seem natural and inevitable, particularly with respect to Indigenous Peoples who hold their own notions of political authority.
Huda Mukbil shares her experiences as a Black Arab-Canadian Muslim intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence... Læs mere
Wilful Neglect explores the devastating consequences of the Department of Indian Affairs’ responses to tuberculosis among First Nations in Canada from 1867 to 1945, demonstrating a direct link between historic health policies and modern disparities.
The Darkest Night Brings Longer Days is Sirous Houshmand’s eyewitness testimony of Tehran’s Evin Prison and the 1988 mass... Læs mere
In poems of loss and hope, Robin Durnford dares to pause for a moment, finding meaning in the metaphor of the life and work of Irish playwright Samuel Beckett.
Behead and Cure explores the ethics of humanitarianism during the Vietnam War through the experiences of medical teams from the United States,... Læs mere
"How is it possible to represent what is not seen?" This question pushes art history into collaboration with other disciplines - from philosophy to literature.
By examining intersections of the sacred and the secular in the autobiography of Fulton J. Sheen (1895–1979), his television series,... Læs mere
An exploration of Secwépemc history told through Indigenous knowledge and oral traditions.