Category Archives: Canadian Studies Program UC Berkeley

Cal takes Canada to Olympic gold! 🥇 Plus: “Star Wars” in Ojibwe

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


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • Three Cal alumnae propel Canada to historic Olympic finish

News from Canada

  • Ojibwe Star Wars dub gives “New Hope” to Indigenous language advocates

Academic Opportunities

  • 2024 ACSUS-Enders Graduate Fellowship in Canada-US Relations

External Events

  • Concerts in the Redwood Grove: William Prince
  • 2nd Annual Silicon Valley Terry Fox Run

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

Three Cal Alumnae Propel Canada to Historic Olympic Finish

The Paris Olympics closed yesterday, and both Canada and Berkeley have a lot to be proud of. Team Canada took home its second-largest ever medal haul at this year’s games, winning nine gold, seven silver, and eleven bronze. But they couldn’t have done it without the work of three talented Cal alumnae, including one athlete who won a coveted gold that helped Canada reach a 12th place global finish.

Camryn Rogers (BA/BS ’22, MA ’24) made history again this Olympics by earning gold in women’s hammer throw. Her victory was not only Canada’s first-ever medal in the event; it was only Canada’s third-ever gold in any women’s athletics event, and its first since 1928. Rogers, a native of British Columbia, is the top-ranked hammer thrower in the world, and was favored going into the event. Her perfomance also ensured Canada took gold in both hammer throw events, after fellow BC native Ethan Katzberg took first place in the men’s event. This is only the third time ever that one country took both medals.

Two other alumnae helped Canada take silver in the women’s eight rowing championships. Caileigh Filmer (Victoria) and Sydney Payne (Toronto), who both rowed for Cal, were part of one of only two Canadian boat teams to qualify for Paris. The medal continues a streak for Canada, which has won a medal in rowing at nine consecutive Olympics since 1992. Both Payne and Filmer are previous medalists, and both competed for Canada in Tokyo 2020. Payne made her debut appearance as part of the women’s eight team that won gold that year, while Filmer took home the bronze in paired rowing.

News from Canada

Ojibwe Star Wars Dub Gives “New Hope” to Indigenous Language Advocates

It’s not often that Manitoba gets the chance to host the premiere of a globally known franchise like Star Wars. But last Thursday, members of Anishinaabe communities gathered in Winnipeg for the world premiere of an Ojibwe language dub of the 1977 film Star Wars: A New Hope (or, Star Wars: Anangong Miigaading).

The project is a partnership between the Dakota Ojibway Tribal Council, the University of Manitoba, Disney/Lucasfilm, and the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, with support from the Canadian government. It is only the second-ever translation of the film into an Indigenous language, after a Navajo translation was completed in 2013. People involved in the project hope that it will show Ojibwe as a modern, living language, and encourage its use and preservation.

As reported by the Globe & Mail, the project owes much to the involvement of one family. Project lead Maeengan Linklater (Dakota Ojibway Tribal Council), who spearheaded the initiative, is a lifelong Star Wars fan: he saw the original film twenty times in theaters. He enlisted the help of his relatives to bring his goal to life. His mother, Pat Ningewance Nadeau, is an assistant professor at the University of Manitoba and served as lead translator for the script. And his son, AJ Muldrew, who plays Luke Skywalker, was destined for the role – his middle name is “Jedi”.

The team spent two years working on the translation, which required the creation of new Ojibwe words to represent terms that have become an everyday part of English, such as “lightsaber” or “the dark side”. The Force, the spiritual power in Star Wars, became “Mamaandaawiziwin”, roughly “the wonderful thing”. With highly variable syllable counts between English and Ojibwe, one translation challenge was making sure each character’s lines didn’t overrun the time of the English dialogue.

Once the script was complete, the project recruited Ojibwe-speaking actors from both Canada and the United States in January. The actors spent ten days in Winnipeg this spring recording their lines, with final processing being done by Lucasfilm in California.

Ojibwe speakers hope that the movie will encourage wider use of their ancestral language. While Ojibwe is Canada’s third most spoken Indigenous language, it is considered severely endangered. One of the greatest difficulties in language preservation is encouraging its use by younger generations. Linklater himself feels profound sadness that he does not speak Ojibwe, despite his mother’s efforts, and he ensured that his son began learning the language when he was ten.

By fusing Ojibwe traditions with popular culture, advocates hope to reach new audiences and encourage pride in Ojibwe culture. Dustin Morrow, who voiced Obi-Wan Kenobi, is a University of Minnesota linguistics PhD student and member of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe. Morrow learned Ojibwe as a second language, and believes that mass media will be critical to securing the language’s future.

Star Wars is a good vehicle for this philosophy. It has particular thematic resonance for some Indigenous people, who see its story of resistance echo their own struggle against imperialism and colonialism. That symbolism was intentional on the part of creator George Lucas, who has previously stated that the film’s rebel protagonists were inspired by the Viet Cong’s success against superior American forces.

The film will began a limited theatrical release in Winnipeg and select other markets on Saturday; afterwards, it will be available on Disney+.

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

2024 ACSUS-Enders Graduate Fellowship in Canada-US Relations

Deadline: August 20, 2024

The ACSUS Awards Committee has announced the reopening of applications for the 2024 ACSUS-Enders Graduate Fellowship in Canada-US Relations. The award includes a US $5,000 grant, and is open to US citizen or permanent resident members who are enrolled in a full-time masters or doctoral program at an institution in the United States. The grant will support thesis or dissertation research related in substantial part to the study of Canada, Canada-US relations, or comparative policies in North America.

The grant will cover the 2024-25 academic year. Application packages should be submitted electronically (by attachment) to info@acsus.org.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Concerts in the Redwood Grove: William Prince

Thurs., Aug. 22 | 5:30 pm | UC Botanical Garden | Buy tickets

Enjoy a magical evening as you experience the music of Canadian First Nations singer-songwriter William Prince under towering redwoods in the Berkeley Hills. Since his debut in 2015, Prince has become one of Canada’s leading folk and country musicians, winning two Juno Awards and three Canadian Folk Music Awards. Guided by a practical yet profound gratitude, his songs convey the power of wonder and humility. With the recent release of his latest album, Stand in Joy, Prince has created a discography that traces his remarkable journey from Peguis First Nation, Manitoba, to playing sold-out shows across continents. A masterclass in skillful simplicity, Prince’s songwriting balances the personal and the universal, offering what’s true for himself in whatever way it is helpful.

2nd Annual Silicon Valley Terry Fox Run

Sun., Sept. 15 | 9:30 am | Palo Alto, CA | Register

Help raise money for cancer research while honoring a Canadian national hero. The Terry Fox Run is an annual international event commemorating cancer activist Terry Fox’s cross-Canada Marathon of Hope. Participants will celebrate his determination and inspiring legacy with a 5K run/walk event at Baylands Nature Preserve in Palo Alto. Be sure to look out for our friends from the Digital Moose Lounge, who will be running as a team!

Funds from the event will be donated to the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK), a world-leading institution in groundbreaking cancer research and treatment. Donations are welcome from those who cannot participate in the run.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley 213 Philosophy Hall #2308 | Berkeley, CA 94720 US

The Cal fan’s guide to Canada’s Olympic team! 🇨🇦

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • Meet the seven Cal Bears competing for Team Canada in Paris

Academic Opportunities

  • 2024 Enders / ACSUS 50 Research Award
  • Call for Manuscripts: International Journal of Canadian Studies

External Events

  • Concerts in the Redwood Grove: William Prince

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

Meet the Seven Cal Bears Competing for Team Canada in Paris

Canadians and Cal fans should be excited for this year’s Summer Olympics, with seven current or former Berkeley students representing Team Canada in the 2024 Paris Games. The athletes are among a record-setting 58 current or former Golden Bears who qualified for this year’s competition. Team Canada is second only to the United States in its number of Cal Olympians; it also boasts two of the seven returning athletes who are previous Olympic medalists.

Without further ado, Canadian Studies is pleased to introduce the Cal contingent of Team Canada. We wish them well in their upcoming events! For more information, check out Cal Athletics’ complete list of Berkeley Olympians, which includes an event schedule for each athlete. Several members of Team Canada were highlighted in “A Cal Fan’s Guide to the 2024 Paris Olympics“, published by California magazine.

Jeremy Bagshaw (2010-2014), Men’s Swimming

Jeremy makes his Olympic debut as one of Canada’s four swim team captains. He is a three-time bronze medalist in the Pan American Games, a bronze medalist in the Youth Olympics, and helped lead the Cal men’s team to three NCAA titles.

Caileigh Filmer (2015-17), Women’s Rowing

Caleigh makes her third Olympics appearance after winning bronze at the Tokyo 2020 games. She has previously won gold at the 2018 World Rowing Championships, gold and silver at the U23 championships, and silver at the Junior championships.

Rowan Hamilton (2024), Men’s Track and Field

Rowan is ranked 13th globally in hammer throw and is the fourth-best men’s hammer thrower in Canadian history. He was the 2019 PanAm champion, two-time Canadian U20 champion, and has won numerous medals in Canadian national competitions.

Kindred Paul (2015-18), Women’s Water Polo

While this is Kindred’s second Olympics appearance, she has represented Team Canada since her international debut at the 2014 Youth World Championships. She is a two-time Pan American silver medalist and won silver at the 2015 FISU Universiade.

Sydney Payne (2016-19), Women’s Rowing

Sydney made her Olympic debut at Tokyo 2020 as part of the team that won Canada’s first gold medal in any women’s rowing event since 1996. She previously won bronze and silver in the World Rowing Championships, is a two-time gold medalist in the U23 group, and won bronze in the 2023 World Indoor Rowing Championships.

Camryn Rogers (2018-23), Women’s Track and Field

Camryn made history in her debut at Tokyo 2020, becoming the first Canadian woman to ever advance to the hammer throw finals despite being the youngest contestant. She has previously won gold medals at the Commonwealth Games, World Athletics Championships (U20), and Pan American Championships (Junior).

Emma Wright (2017-19), Women’s Water Polo

Another returning Olympian, Emma scored seven goals in her debut on Team Canada at Tokyo 2020. She is a two-time silver medalist in the Pan American Games, a silver medalist in the FINA World League, and a bronze and silver in the Pan American Championships (Junior).

An additional Cal alumna, three-time Olympian Sydney Collins, qualified for the Canadian women’s soccer team but was unable to compete due to an injury. Other Bay Area Olympians on Team Canada this year include Stanford alumni Serena Browne (water polo), Malindi Elmore (track and field), Justin Lui (volleyball), Dwight Powell (basketball), Taylor Ruck (swimming); San José State alumna Rae Lekness (water polo); and University of the Pacific alumna Clara Vulpisi (water polo).

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

2024 Enders / ACSUS 50 Research Award

Deadline: December 1, 2024

The Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS) is pleased to announce the 2024 competition for the Enders / ACSUS 50 Research Award. With the generous support of the Thomas O. Enders Endowment, the award honors the 50th anniversary of ACSUS and is granted biennially to a U.S.-based scholar whose current research or creative project promises to make a significant contribution to the field of Canadian Studies. Researchers from all disciplines in the field are encouraged to apply. The award totals $15,000, but funding only covers direct research costs. Click here to learn more.

Call for Manuscripts: International Journal of Canadian Studies

Deadline: January 8, 2025

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is seeking original submissions for its forthcoming May 2025 issue. The Journal is a long-running, interdisciplinary, bilingual publication supported by the International Council for Canadian Studies and published by the University of Toronto Press.

The upcoming issue welcomes articles discussing the “margins of Canada”. This topic may include Canada’s geographic margins, and how that reflects provincial political dynamics; but it also includes groups, communities, or individuals who might feel politically or socially marginalized in Canadian society, either at present or historically. Submissions are welcome from any discipline. To learn more, click here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Concerts in the Redwood Grove: William Prince

Thurs., Aug. 22 | 5:30 pm | UC Botanical Garden | Buy tickets

Enjoy a magical experience as you experience the music of Canadian First Nations singer-songwriter William Prince under towering redwoods in the Berkeley Hills. Since his debut in 2015, Prince has become one of Canada’s leading folk and country musicians, winning two Juno Awards and three Canadian Folk Music Awards. Guided by a practical yet profound gratitude, his songs convey the power of wonder and humility. With the recent release of his latest album, Stand in Joy, Prince has created a discography that traces his remarkable journey from Peguis First Nation, Manitoba, to playing sold-out shows across continents. A masterclass in skillful simplicity, Prince’s songwriting balances the personal and the universal, offering what’s true for himself in whatever way it is helpful.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley 213 Philosophy Hall #2308 | Berkeley, CA 94720 US

Happy Canada Day! Announcing our new director 🇨🇦

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

SPECIAL LEADERSHIP UPDATE

Happy Canada Day! As we celebrate Canada’s birthday, the Canadian Studies Program is excited to introduce three affiliates who officially step into their new roles today – including our new director! Each of them is a valuable addition to the program, so please join us in welcoming them into our Canadian Studies community.

Hidetaka Hirota Appointed New Program Director

The Canadian Studies Program is delighted to announce that Dr. Hidetaka Hirota, an associate professor in the Department of History, has been appointed as the program’s new co-director beginning July 1. Professor Hirota is a social and legal historian of North America with a focus on immigration, especially nativism and immigration control in the 19th century.

Professor Hirota was born in Japan, and received his BA in foreign studies from Sophia University in Tokyo. He received his MA and PhD in history from Boston College, where his dissertation won the university’s best humanities dissertation award. He has been affiliated with the Canadian Studies Program since his arrival at Berkeley in 2022. Before joining the Berkeley faculty, Professor Hirota taught at the City College of New York and Sophia University. He also previously served as a Mellon Research Fellow at Columbia University.

Professor Hirota’s award-winning first book, Expelling the Poor: Atlantic Seaboard States and the Nineteenth-Century Origins of American Immigration Policy, identifies a new origin of immigration restriction in the United States, based on a study of the deportation of impoverished Irish immigrants from the United States to Canada and Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. His current book project, titled The American Dilemma, explores how the US government restricted the immigration of foreign contract workers from Canada, Asia, Mexico, and Europe at the turn of the 20th century. He is also currently working on a project exploring the history of Japanese immigration to Canada and the US, and its political impacts in those countries.

Current interim co-director Richard A. Rhodes will continue to serve alongside Professor Hirota for the next year to ensure a smooth leadership transition.

Griselda Zhou Appointed New Advisory Board Chair; Iris Nemani Joins as New Board Member

We are also excited to introduce two new members of our program’s External Advisory Board: Griselda Zhou and Iris Nemani. The Board is a group of our most dedicated friends that provides an external perspective on program operations and assists with community outreach and fundraising. Griselda and Iris bring extensive professional experience, strong community networks, and personal enthusiasm to their new roles, and we look forward to working with them.

Local community leader Griselda Zhou has been selected to lead the board, replacing outgoing board chair David Stewart. Griselda is a first-generation Chinese North American, born in Mexico, raised in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Canada, and now residing in San Francisco. While living in Moose Jaw, she founded a student leadership group focused on multiculturalism education efforts among youth called, “We Are Canadian Teens” (W.A.C.T.) and served the Moose Jaw Motif Multicultural Festival for multiple years as a Chinese heritage performing artist and organizing committee member.

Griselda was a Director of the Digital Moose Lounge (DML), a professional group for Bay Area Canadians, for eight years between 2015-2023. She held the role of Co-Chair of the Board of Directors from 2019-2021. During her tenure at the DML, she led the transformation of the organization into a thriving community and partnership-based organization, receiving recognition from the City of San Francisco and City of San Jose for the organization’s advocacy of volunteerism and social impact in the local communities. Griselda was also a founding member of SFUers@Bay, a social and networking group serving Simon Fraser University alumni in the Bay Area.

Griselda currently serves as Global Head of Employee Communications at Woven by Toyota, a subsidiary of Toyota focused on automotive software technology and realizing a mobility society in which everyone can move freely, happily and safely. Prior to this role, she held corporate communications positions at PayPal for nearly a decade, specializing in leadership and organizational communications, public relations, and crisis communications. She has also previously held consulting roles in technology companies, including a Y-Combinator-backed startup that was acquired by Dropbox.

Griselda holds a master’s degree in integrated marketing communications from the University of Westminster (London, United Kingdom) and a bachelor’s of business administration from Simon Fraser University. Griselda is married with two children. Her passions and hobbies include advancing multiculturalism in society, promoting ocean and wildlife conservation efforts, world travel, and photography.

We are also pleased to welcome Iris Nemani, who recently moved to the Bay Area from Toronto to serve as the McMurtry Family Director at Stanford Live. Stanford Live presents a wide range of the finest performances from around the world, fostering a vibrant learning community and providing distinctive experiences through the performing arts. With its home at Bing Concert Hall and Frost Amphitheater, Stanford Live draws on the breadth and depth of Stanford University to connect performance to the significant issues, ideas, and discoveries of our time. Iris replaced former Stanford Live director and Canadian Studies board member Chris Lorway, who returned to Canada last year after being appointed president of the Banff Centre.

Iris has worked in arts and culture for more than 30 years, bringing her expertise and leadership to a variety of arts organizations. Her career has spanned both not-for-profit and commercial endeavors. She has served as Chief Programming Officer at Harbourfront Centre, Managing Director of the Toronto 2015 Pan American/Parapan American Games Cultural Program and General Manager of the Young Centre for the Performing Arts among others.

Iris studied science at the University of Toronto before earning her bachelor of applied arts in interior design from Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU, formerly Ryerson University). She has guest lectured at TMU in theater producing.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Two more new Hildebrand Fellows; past Fellow joins U of Alberta Law faculty

An item from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Program News

  • Eid Mubarak from Canadian Studies!
  • Two more new Hildebrand Fellows to travel to Canada this summer:
  • Andrew Zhao explores role of Chinatown family associations in immigrant integration
  • Allison Evans investigates growth of homeless encampments in semi-rural Ontario
  • Former Hildebrand Fellow Caylee Hong appointed professor at University of Alberta Law School

External Events

  • DML Canada Day Picnic
  • Friends of Canada at SF Pride

Eid Mubarak from Canadian Studies!

Canadian Studies wishes a joyful Eid to our Muslim friends around the world. Eid al-Adha is the second of the two main Islamic holidays, and coincides with the culmination of the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca. It honors the patriarch Abraham’s obedience to God when ordered to sacrifice his son, Ishmael. Nearly 2 million Canadian Muslims will join in the celebrations, which traditionally center on each family slaughtering a lamb or goat to share with the community.

Image from Starline on Freepik.

PROGRAM NEWS

Two More Hildebrand Fellows to Travel to Canada This Summer

The Canadian Studies Program is pleased to announce two additional recipients of our Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2024.

Andrew Zhao is a PhD student in the Department of Political Science studying identity politics and immigration.

Andrew’s Hildebrand Fellowship will support a project exploring the role of Chinatown family associations in either helping or hindering integration in early Canadian Chinatowns. These organizations aided Chinese immigrants in the face of exclusion and violence, with idiosyncratic membership criteria based on surname. Through conducting interviews and visiting field sites, Andrew hopes to learn more about the role of these associations in the lives of early Chinese immigrants to Canada.

Andrew holds a BA in political science and philosophy from the University of Toronto, where he received the Suzanne and Edwin Goodman Prize as the top graduating student in the political science specialization. Before coming to Berkeley, he worked in in public opinion research for several years.

Allison Evans is a PhD student in the Department of City & Regional Planning and a previous Hildebrand Fellowship recipient. Her current research focuses on the recent proliferation of tent encampments in semi-rural areas of Ontario. Most tent encampment research is conducted in major urban areas, with many studies emanating from cities on the US West Coast. Allison’s research aims to shed light on the emergent housing struggles in smaller towns and cities.

Allison’s fellowship will fund her travel to Ontario to conduct preliminary fieldwork for her dissertation. She will explore the mechanisms contributing to encampment formation in in-between places, and highlight new modes of governance emerging in response. Allison aims to contribute to recent debates in urban and rural theory, and to bridge the divide between urban and rural homelessness research.

Allison holds a BES and MES in planning from York University in Toronto, where she researched various housing-related topics, including two peer-reviewed articles about the political economy of student housing and state ambiguities around tent encampments in Toronto.

Former Hildebrand Fellow Caylee Hong Appointed Professor at University of Alberta Law School

Canadian Studies is proud to announce that former Hildebrand Fellow Caylee Hong has been appointed an assistant professor at the University of Alberta’s Faculty of Law, effective July 1, 2025.

Caylee is a PhD candidate in socio-cultural anthropology. Her dissertation explores the long-term impacts of urban oil operations. The Canadian Studies Program funded her to travel to Alberta and British Columbia in 2021, to conduct research on abandoned oil wells. Her research on the afterlives of “orphan” wells received the 2024 Graduate Student Paper Prize from Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Law and Society.

Caylee holds an LLM from the SOAS University of London, an LLB and BCL from McGill University, and a BA from University College Utrecht. She previously clerked for the Federal Court of Canada, and worked as an attorney in New York. Please join us in congratulation Caylee on her new position!

EXTERNAL EVENTS

DML Canada Day Picnic

Sat., June 29 | 11:00 am | San Mateo, CA | RSVP

Celebrate Canada’s 157th birthday at the DML’s annual Canada Day Picnic. Enjoy a family-friendly afternoon of games and activities for all ages and a delicious BBQ. Meet new #sfbaycanadians and reconnect with old friends as we embrace our heritage and celebrate with patriotic pride. Remember to wear your red & white Canada gear, Alum colors or support your favorite Canadian sports team. Bring a lawn chair and enjoy open space and Bay views.

Friends of Canada at SF Pride

Sun., June 30 | 11:00 am | San Francisco, CA | RSVP

 

The Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco cordially invites Canadians and friends of Canada in the San Francisco Bay Area to march with them in the 54th annual San Francisco Pride Parade. All are welcome to join with friends and family to celebrate diversity and to support the 2SLGBTQI+ members of our communities in California, at home in Canada, and abroad.

The assembly location and time will be announced approximately one week prior to the parade. Please register via Eventbrite to receive updates We hope to see you there!

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley 213 Philosophy Hall #2308 | Berkeley, CA 94720 US

Three new Hildebrand Fellows; Alice Munro; June events

A newsletter form a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Program News

  • Three new Hildebrand Fellows take on summer research projects:
  • AJ Kurdi studies ethnic minority LGBTQI community organizing in Quebec
  • Lydia Mathews investigates links between public health reform, race, and citizenship in 20th-century Canada
  • Matt Kovac places Canada’s Irish republican activists within a global anti-colonial movement

News from Canada

  • Former Cal swimmer to represent Canada at Paris Olympics
  • Nobel Laureate Alice Munro, “Master of the Short Story”, dies at 94

External Events

  • DML Canada Day Picnic
  • Friends of Canada at SF Pride

PROGRAM NEWS

Three New Hildebrand Fellows Take On Summer Research Projects

The Canadian Studies Program is pleased to announce three more recipients of our Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2024.

AJ Kurdi is a PhD student in the Department of Ethnic Studies, with a designated emphasis in Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. His dissertation research is a comparative study on different forms of ethnic minority queer organizing in Budapest, Montreal, and Paris, and how they shape the priorities and political orientations of mainstream LGBTQI movements, laws and public policies in Europe and North America. Historically, this movement has largely represented the interests of white, middle-class and up gay men, but most are now more explicitly taking an “intersectional” approach.

AJ’s Hildebrand Fellowship will support his travel to Montreal this month to attend the Fierté Montréal pride festival. There, he will conduct interviews to probe the relationship between certain queer Arab activist organizations and the broader LGBTQI movement in Quebec. While Canada presents as a progressive country, significant divisions nevertheless remain between large, national organizations and minority groups.

AJ holds degrees from the Central European University, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, and Corvinus University of Budapest. His previous work focuses broadly on queer social movement debates and transnational networks in West Asia, and the various forms of discrimination faced by queer Romani people in Central and Eastern Europe. He has published in the Journal of Israeli History, Critical Romani Studies, and International Journal of Discrimination and the Law.

Lydia Mathews is a PhD candidate in the Department of History. Her research focuses on the intersections of gender, public health, and immigration at the turn of the 20th century. She is particularly interested in the work of settlement houses and milk committees in urban spaces, and how immigrant women engaged with reform projects and could lay claim to social citizenship through their mothering and hygienic practices.

Lydia’s research on Canada will explore connections between clean milk initiatives and constructions of whiteness within the transnational history of the settlement movement. Her research will center on Montreal’s Iverley Settlement, the city’s Council of Social Agencies, and the Milk Commission of the Montreal Medico-Chirurgical Society. The Hildebrand Fellowship will support her travel to Montreal to conduct archival research at McGill University and the Université du Québec.

Lydia holds a bachelor’s degree in English and History from Vassar College and master’s degrees in Women’s and Gender Studies and History from Brandeis University.

Matthew Kovac is a PhD candidate in the Department of History. His research focuses on anticolonial struggles and transnational solidarity movements in the 20th century. His dissertation examines the role of solidarity committees in building alliances between Irish republicans and the Palestinian and South African national liberation movements during the 1960s-1980s.

Matt’s Hildebrand Fellowship will support archival research in Vancouver and Montreal, where he will investigate the activities of local Irish solidarity committees. Matthew’s fellowship will allow him to explore the understudied role that Canadian actors played in this global revolutionary network, including their relationships with First Nations activists and Québécois nationalists.

Matt holds a BS in Journalism and History from Northwestern University and an MSt in Modern British and European History from the University of Oxford. He previously worked as communications manager for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights in San Francisco.

NEWS FROM CANADA

Former Cal Swimmer to Represent Canada at Paris Olympics

Team Canada will have a Berkeley alumnus on its Olympic team at this year’s summer Olympics. Cal Athletics recently announced that former All-American swimmer Jeremy Bagshaw (Class of 2015) will represent Canada in Paris in just a few months, one of six Berkeley alumni who have so far qualified for the games.

Bagshaw was born in Singapore, but grew up in Victoria, BC. While attending Berkeley, he helped the Golden Bears win the 2014 NCAA championship. Bagshaw is currently attending medical school at the University of Limerick in Ireland.

Bagshaw earned his spot on Canada’s 4×200 relay team with a fourth-place finish at Canada’s Olympic trials. Bagshaw is a three-time bronze medal winner at the Pan-American Games and won bronze at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Nobel Laureate Alice Munro, “Master of the Short Story”, Dies at 94

The world of Canadian letters lost one of its leading lights last month with the passing of renowned author Alice Munro, who was the first Canadian to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. Lauded as the “master of the contemporary short story” by the Nobel Committee, Munro remained one of Canada’s most influential living authors for over fifty years.

Munro was born in Wingham, Ontario, to a farming family with deep roots in the region. Her intimate familiarity with the region shows in her work, almost all of which is set in rural Ontario. She began writing as a teenager, and had her first piece published in 1950 while she was studying English at university. However, she achieved only minor recognition until her first short story collection, Dance of the Happy Shades, was published in 1968. Munro’s family committments influenced her choice to work in short stories, as she found it difficult to find the time or energy for longer projects while raising her children. Nevertheless, the stories she produced received international acclaim, and were published in magazines such as The Atlantic, Harper’s Magazine, The New Yorker, and The Paris Review.

Munro achieved particular recognition for her deft handling of human complexity, particularly female characters across various stages of life. She crafted psychologically penetrating sketches of ordinary people, which have often been favorably compared to those of the great Russian author Anton Chekhov.

Munro was a three-time winner of the Governor General’s Award of Fiction, a two-time Giller Prize recipient, and recipient of the 2009 Man Booker Prize. She received the Nobel Prize in 2013. The Committee praised her ability for writing stories that included the “entire epic complexity of the novel in just a few short pages”. She retired from writing after her Nobel win and lived quietly at her Port Hope, ON home until her death.

Learn more surprising facts about Alice Munro’s life here, via the CBC.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

DML Canada Day Picnic

Sat., June 29 | 11:00 am | San Mateo, CA | RSVP

Celebrate Canada’s 157th birthday at the DML’s annual Canada Day Picnic. Enjoy a family-friendly afternoon of games and activities for all ages and a delicious BBQ. Meet new #sfbaycanadians and reconnect with old friends as we embrace our heritage and celebrate with patriotic pride. Remember to wear your red & white Canada gear, Alum colors or support your favorite Canadian sports team. Bring a lawn chair and enjoy open space and Bay views.

Friends of Canada at SF Pride

Sun., June 30 | 11:00 am | San Francisco, CA | RSVP

 

The Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco cordially invites Canadians and friends of Canada in the San Francisco Bay Area to march with them in the 54th annual San Francisco Pride Parade. All are welcome to join with friends and family to celebrate diversity and to support the 2SLGBTQI+ members of our communities in California, at home in Canada, and abroad.

The assembly location and time will be announced approximately one week prior to the parade. Please register via Eventbrite to receive updates We hope to see you there!

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley 213 Philosophy Hall #2308 | Berkeley, CA 94720 US