Author Archives: Michael K. Barbour

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About Michael K. Barbour

Michael K. Barbour is the Director of Faculty Development and a Professor of Instructional Design for the College of Education and Health Sciences at Touro University California. He has been involved with K-12 online learning in a variety of countries for well over a decade as a researcher, teacher, course designer and administrator. Michael's research focuses on the effective design, delivery and support of K-12 online learning, particularly for students located in rural jurisdictions.

Berkeley student wins national undergrad award in Canadian studies 🏆

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • Berkeley student Haikun Liu wins national undergrad prize in Canadian studies
  • Last week to get your official Remembrance Poppy!

Upcoming Events

  • From “Tarktuk” (Darkness) to “Qaumajuk” (Light): Transformations in Canadian Inuit Arts

Academic Opportunities

  • William Lyon Mackenzie King Postdoctoral Fellowship

External Events

  • Canadian films at the 48th Annual American Indian Film Festival (AIFF)
  • John Kuszczak Memorial Lecture 2023: “The International Monetary and Financial System: Current and Future Challenges”
  • Remembrance Day Service
  • Seeing Them: The Films of Lindsay McIntyre
Please note there will be no newsletter next week due to the ACSUS Conference.

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

Berkeley Student Haikun Liu Wins National Undergraduate Prize in Canadian Studies

The Canadian Studies Program is proud to announce that our undergraduate fellow Haikun Liu has been selected to receive a national research award by the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS). The Martin Lubin Undergraduate Award in the Social Sciences, which Haikun will receive, recognizes outstanding research by an undergraduate student. His paper, Altruism of Aid: Analysis of Canadian Official Development Assistance (ODA), seeks to evaluate whether Canadian foreign development aid to Africa is motivated by altruism or self-interest.

Haikun is a senior at UC Berkeley, studying economics, data science, and politics. He is interested in economic development, economic history, and the role of foreign aid in developing countries. His paper previously won the 2023 Rita Ross Prize from Berkeley’s Canadian Studies Program, which has supported his continuing research on this topic. Haikun received a Canadian Studies Undergraduate Research Fellowship during Summer 2023, which enabled him to visit federal archives in Ottawa to analyze the use of altruistic language in official Canadian foreign aid documents.

Haikun will receive the Lubin Award next week at the 26th Biennial ACSUS Conference in Washington, DC. He will also present his paper as part of a panel focused on trade and economics policy. On November 28, he will return to Berkeley to officially receive his Ross Prize at the start of our regular colloquium. We hope you will join us in congratulating Haikun for his achievement!

Last Week to Get Your Official Remembrance Poppy!

 

In partnership with Royal Canadian Legion US Branch #25, the Canadian Studies Program is proud to serve as an official distributor of remembrance poppies. Interested persons may pick up their poppies at our office in 213 Philosophy Hall on the UC Berkeley campus, weekdays between 9am-4pm. While the poppy is free, the Legion gratefully accepts donations towards their Poppy Fund, which directly supports Canadian veterans and their families. Learn more about the Poppy Campaign here.

UPCOMING EVENTS

From “Tarktuk” (Darkness) to “Qaumajuk” (Light): Transformations in Canadian Inuit Arts

Tues., Nov. 28 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

During the more than sixty years that Nelson Graburn has been visiting the Canadian North, studying and experimenting with Canadian Inuit arts, and living and communicating with Inuit artists, life in the region has undergone major changes. The North has not only become increasingly “urbanized”, with schools, electricity in permanent housing, and communications by plane, phone, and internet; Inuit artists have also become aware of their global context and the international art world. Today, many have undertaken professional arts education and moved to live in the South.

The original generation of artists – Kananginak, Qirnuajuak (Kenojuak), Charlie and Aisa Shivuarapik, Jessie Oonark – were proud to share their world with outsiders. With the arrival of new forms of communication, those living in the North became more aware of the significance of their arts, their place as icons of Canadianness, as well as their relative poverty and formerly very localized world view. A new generation arose who incorporated views of and from the outside world. They increasingly visited the South, whether to sell their works, attend openings and exhibitions, attend schools and colleges, or just to spend time. They also became aware of their cultural and linguistic relatives in Greenland and Alaska and, like them, have won political rights and degrees of self-government. Many even settled away from their homeland to practice and sell their arts in the South.

Today, almost one-third of Canadian Inuit live in the South, and younger artists practice many art forms, like Qallunaat (white) and other Indigenous contemporary artists. Theirs is no longer “tourist art” but it remains an ethnic art, expressing their contemporary identities, struggles, and views of their ancestral culture. Their arts remain proud – and exploited – icons of Canadian identity, but also express strong Circumpolar and postcolonial feelings.

About the Speaker

Dr. Nelson Graburn first lived in the North in 1959 and again in 1960, as a student at McGill and an employee of the Federal Government of Canada. He was struck by the creativity of Inuit artists and the importance of their sanasimayangiit (things we made) in their personal, cultural, and economic lives. After completing his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, he returned to live in the North eight times, along with many smaller trips. He first published about Inuit art, as “Airport Art” in Canada (1967) and examined comparable movements among the world’s other Indigenous peoples, in Ethnic and Tourist Arts (1976). He has continued to research, teach, and publish about contemporary art, heritage, identity, and tourism – and he communicates almost daily with the Inuit, their children, and grandchildren in the North via the Internet.

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology.

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

William Lyon Mackenzie King Postdoctoral Fellowship

Deadline: December 1, 2023

The Canada Program at Harvard University’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs invites applications for the William Lyon Mackenzie King Postdoctoral Fellowship. The two available fellowships are open to postdoctoral scholars in all disciplines who are engaged in Canadian studies broadly defined. Scholars working on comparative US-Canada research may receive preference.

The fellowships provide an annual stipend of $68,000, which is supplemented by funding for research and for individual health insurance coverage, plus a dependent care stipend. This is a two-year position beginning August 1, 2024. Candidates must have received their PhD no earlier than July 31, 2019.

Learn more and apply here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Canadian Films at the 48th Annual American Indian Film Festival (AIFF)

Nov. 3-11 | San Francisco Bay Area | Buy tickets

The Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco is pleased to support the 47th annual American Indian Film Festival (AIFF). For 48 years, the Festival has been a pillar in San Francisco for independent film, showcasing cutting edge cinema by and about Native peoples. Almost every day features works by Indigenous Canadian filmmakers, starting with an opening night screening of Bones of Crows: the story of a Cree matriarch that unfolds over 100 years and chronicles her survival through Canada’s residential schools and a WWII posting as a Cree code talker for the Royal Canadian Air Force. View the full schedule here.

John Kuszczak Memorial Lecture 2023: “The International Monetary and Financial System: Current and Future Challenges”

Tues., Nov. 7 | 8:00 am PT | Online | Learn more

The Bank of Canada has invited economist and UC Berkeley faculty member Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas to deliver their annual John Kuszczak Memorial Lecture. The lecture is part of the Bank’s annual economic conference for policy makers and researchers. Dr. Gourinchas is a professor of economics, and the S.K. and Angela Chan Professor of Management at the Haas School of Business. His research focuses on international macro-economics and finance. At Berkeley, Dr. Gourinchas also directs the Clausen Center for International Business and Policy. He was appointed chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2022.

Remembrance Day Service

Sat., Nov. 11 | 10:00 am | Petaluma, CA

Join US Branch 25 of the Royal Canadian Legion, representing the San Francisco Bay Area, for their annual Remembrance Day Service from Liberty Cemetery in Petaluma. Guests are welcome at the cemetery. The service will also be streamed live via Zoom; if you are unable to join in person, please register here to join the online feed. Please direct questions to US Branch #25 President Michael Barbour.

Film screening: Seeing Them: The Films of Lindsay McIntyre

Wed., Nov. 15 | 7:00 pm | BAMPFA | Buy tickets

Canadian filmmaker and artist Lindsay McIntyre is of Inuit and settler descent, and much of her work reflects on her complicated family history. A lover of 16mm film, she embraces handmade techniques, often hand processing her films and at times creating her own 16mm film stock with handmade emulsions. Employing interviews and silence in her emotional, impressionistic explorations, her films include a variety of portraits: of people and family, and of the land and a former residential school. Among her concerns are silence as resistance, intergenerational trauma, and “the grandmother effect,” which notes elders’ unique impact on social dependence and survival. McIntyre is an associate professor of Film + Screen Arts at Emily Carr University of Art + Design on unceded Coast Salish territories.

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Remembrance and reflection

Another item from Canada’s History magazine with a focus on remembrance that may be of interest to members.


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Canada's History
Explore the resources below as you and your students remember and reflect on the complexity of war this November and beyond.
Historical Thinking

‘Bomb Girls’: Defense Industries Limited and the Home Front

This lesson has students use documents, images, and interviews to gather data about the historical experiences of the ‘Bomb Girls’ and their workplace environment at Defence Industries Limited. Learn more

War and Peace in the Classroom

CANADA IN FOCUSIn this guide, educators share how they teach war and peace in the classroom, including advice, online resources, books, and lesson plans. Learn more

| Kayak: Canada’s History Magazine for Kids

Flying and Spying: The Life of Kam Len Douglas Sam

HISTORY BITSThrough exploring the life of Kam Len Douglas Sam, students will discover why Sam was the most decorated and highest-ranked Chinese Canadian in history. Learn more

At Home and Away

Explore the Kayak issues “Remembering the Great War,” “Great Canadian Women,” and “Canada and the Second World War” for stories about some of the many ways Canadians have been touched by war.

Museum Connections

Canada in the Korean War

STORIES BEHIND THE HISTORYIn this podcast episode, Canadian War Museum post-1945 historian Andrew Burtch and Canadian Armed Forces Chief of the Defence Staff General Wayne Eyre discuss Canada’s role in Korea, during the war and beyond. Listen now

Lee-Enfield Rifle

50 MUSEUM MARVELSAfter losing his cherished rifle, nicknamed “Rosalie,” during a gas attack in June 1918, Henri-Paul Lecorre discovered it thirty-eight years later in an exhibition of military artifacts in Lachute, Quebec. Learn more

War Games, CANADIAN WAR MUSEUM | In an age when tech can game out gazillions of options in a split second, it’s arresting to take in very real, often very analog, military simulations. Learn more

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🍁 We Remember

Note the focus on remembrance as this month’s theme in the Canada’s History magazine.

Also, due to the fact that we are in the remembrance period, we’re likely to see more activity in the blog portion of our website over the next couple of weeks.


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Canada's History

Over the Top

How a photographer faked Canada’s most iconic battlefield images. Read more

War Games

A Canadian War Museum exhibition highlights the history of strategy gaming, from deadly serious to light-hearted. Read more

Canada in the Korean War

Podcast: The border between North and South Korea bristles with weapons and with mistrust. A stress point in current global tensions, the border on the 38th Parallel is a seventy-year-old legacy of the Korean War. Listen now

Lee-Enfield Rifle

A soldier carved his memories into his Second World War weapon. Read more

Airplane Nose Art

Decorations on a Second World War bomber recall Quebec’s contribution to the conflict. Read more

Canada in Focus: War and Peace

Is Canada really a nation of peacekeepers? Watch now

History Bits: Flying and Spying

Chinese-Canadian Kam Len “Doug” Sam served in the air force in the Second World War. Shot down in France, he gathered critical information as a spy for the Allies. Watch now

End of the Second World War

2020 was the seventy-fifth anniversary of the end of the Second World War. For Remembrance Day we curated a collection of our online articles, audio, images and video about that era. Read more

The War to End All War

November 2018 marked the one hundredth anniversary of the end of the First World War. A century later, the conflict continues to affect us — even if we don’t fully realize it. This is our collection from the past ten years of articles, audio, images and video about the Great War. Read more

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Canada’s History Archive featuring The Beaver

Please note: Some items featured in our newsletters and social media will include links to the Canada’s History Archive. The Beaver magazine was founded, and for decades was published, during eras shaped by colonialism. Concepts such as racial, cultural, or gender equality were rarely, if ever, considered by the magazine or its contributors. In earlier issues, readers will find comments and terms now considered derogatory. Canada’s History Society cautions readers to explore the archive using historical thinking concepts — not only analyzing the content but asking questions of who shaped the content and why.
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© 2023 Canada’s History Society, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.
Our mailing address is:

Canada’s History Society

Main Floor Bryce Hall, 515 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9

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