Category Archives: Canadian Studies Program UC Berkeley

Happy Halloween! 👻 Plus: Bringing Indigenous arts to Berkeley

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


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Canadian Culture

  • Happy Halloween! Why the modern holiday is distinctly “Canadian”

News from Berkeley

  • BAMPFA curator Victoria Sung discusses working with Cree artist Duane Linklater on new exhibit mymotherside
  • Reminder: Get your official remembrance poppy from Canadian Studies

External Events

  • Canada Seminar: “Constructing the Future of Health Care in Canada”
  • Cosponsored performance: Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.
  • Last call for tickets: Canadian Heritage Hockey Night: Sharks vs. Canucks
  • Canadian films at the 48th Annual American Indian Film Festival (AIFF)
  • Remembrance Day Service

CANADIAN CULTURE

Why Modern Halloween is a “Canadian” Holiday

Tomorrow is Halloween, the haunted holiday beloved by children (and adults!) across the US and Canada. While Halloween’s origins lie in an ancient Celtic harvest festival, the modern celebration is a distinctly North American creation. Scottish and Irish immigrants brought their customs west with them in the 19th century, where they evolved into the holiday we know and love today. But while Halloween is often considered an “American” holiday, in fact many of its staple traditions were first reported in Canada!

  • Children wearing Halloween costumes was first reported in Vancouver in 1898.
  • The first record of trick-or-treating (then called “guising”) was in Ontario in 1911.
  • The first recorded use of the term “trick or treat” was in Alberta in 1927.

So whether you’ll be out trick-or-treating, attending a party, or staying at home with a scary movie, a very happy Halloween from Canadian Studies!

Image by Freepik.com.

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

BAMPFA Curator Victoria Sung Discusses Working With Cree Artist Duane Linklater on New Exhibit mymotherside

On Friday, Berkeley News published an interview with Victoria Sung, a senior curator at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA), about the museum’s new exhibition by Canadian Cree artist Duane Linklater. The exhibit, titled mymotherside, provides a survey of Linklater’s multidisciplinary career, and Sung was responsible for bringing the show to Berkeley. According to the exhibit description, it seeks to “explore the contradictions of contemporary Indigenous life within settler systems of knowledge, representation and value”.

Mymotherside is the first exhibit Sung has organized since joining the museum earlier this year. In the interview, Sung discusses the process of working with Linklater. Describing him as one of the most “thoughtful” artists she has ever worked with, she expresses how Linklater’s art “interrogates” the institutions that show his pieces. This has particular meaning at UC Berkeley, which has a troubled history with collecting Indigenous arts and sacred objects. Linklater’s work directly addresses the complicity of museums and academic institutions in contributing to the dispossession and erasure of historical and contemporary Native people.

When Linklater visited Berkeley early in October, he made it a priority to make meaningful connections with Native students on campus. For Sung, who strongly believes in making museums welcoming to marginalized groups, it was also important to ensure that the gallery space provided a meaningful space for Indigenous visitors, and to show their cultures as alive and vibrant.

The gallery is therefore hosting several live events in conversation with the exhibition. This week, Canadian Studies is cosponsoring a series of open rehearsals by Alutiiq dance artist Tanya Lukin Linklater, who is Linklater’s wife. Then, in January, the museum will host a roundtable focused on Indigenous knowledge and reviving ancestral practices, featuring Canadian Studies faculty affiliate Beth Piatote. Finally, in February, Linklater will return to Berkeley with his son Tobias to close out the exhibit with a live musical performance.

Mymotherside runs at BAMPFA through February 25, 2024. Admission to the museum is free to UC Berkeley faculty, staff, and students.

Photo of Duane Linklater at BAMPFA by KLC Photos, via Berkeley News.

Reminder: Get Your Official Remembrance Poppy From Canadian Studies

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.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Canada Seminar: “Constructing the Future of Health Care in Canada”

Tues., Oct. 31 | 9:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

The Weatherhead Canada Program at Harvard University welcomes Dr. Jane Philpott, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences and Director of the School of Medicine at Queen’s University in Ontario. Dr. Philpott is a medical doctor, a professor of family medicine, and former member of Parliament. From 2015 to 2019 she served as Canada’s Minister of Health, Minister of Indigenous Services, President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Digital Government. She played a lead role in policies that shaped the country: bringing Syrian refugees to Canada; legislating Medical Assistance in Dying; negotiating a health accord with resources for mental health and home care; improving infrastructure for First Nations; and reforming child welfare to reduce the over-apprehension of Indigenous children. She is currently the chair of the Ontario Health Data Council, vice-chair of the Ontario Life Sciences Council and was recently appointed as a commissioner to the Global Commission on Drug Policy.

Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.

Nov. 1-4 | BAMPFA | Learn more

Canadian Studies is pleased to cosponsor artist and choreographer Tanya Lukin Linklater’s performance Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth. at BAMPFA. This cyclical series of dance rehearsals will respond to the exhibition Duane Linklater: mymotherside, and feature Canadian dancers Ivanie Aubin-Malo and Ceinwen Gobert. The public is invited to view the in-situ, unfolding processes of embodiment, gesture, and sensation. Lukin Linklater is compelled by audiences viewing open rehearsals, or the process of making dances. Through experimentation, structured improvisation, prompts from objects in exhibition, place, and writings, she facilitates a choreographic process. Lukin Linklater is staying with this slow unfolding, refusing to culminate these processes in finished performances. In this way, she centres the intellectual, affective, and physical labor – and relational aspects – of making dances. The open rehearsals are free to the Berkeley community with their Cal1 card, and included in the public’s entrance to BAMPFA.

Last Call for Tickets: Canadian Heritage Hockey Night: Sharks vs. Canucks

Nov. 2 | 4:30 pm | San Jose, CA | Buy tickets

The San José Sharks, Digital Moose Lounge, and Canadian Consulate in San Francisco are pleased to bring you a special Canadian Heritage Game Night! Join fellow hockey fans in a dedicated Canadian zone at this family-friendly event. Your VIP tickets will get you pregame lounge access, Canadian smoked meats and poutine, and a few special surprises. Ticket sales close tomorrow, Tuesday, October 31.

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.

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.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Friday: How Canada & California can build better cities 🏙️

A weekly newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • 2023 Poppy Campaign starts Friday: Get your official pin from Canadian Studies

Upcoming Events

  • Workshop: “North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future”

External Events

  • Canada Seminar: “Constructing the Future of Health Care in Canada”
  • Cosponsored performance: Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.
  • Last call for tickets: Canadian Heritage Hockey Night: Sharks vs. Canucks
  • Canadian films at the 48th Annual American Indian Film Festival (AIFF)

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

2023 Poppy Campaign Starts Friday: Get Your Official Pin From Canadian Studies

Every year, from the last Friday of October to November 11, millions of Canadians wear a bright red poppy in honour of Canada’s veterans. It’s a tradition observed throughout the Commonwealth, from Britain to New Zealand, but one with deep Canadian roots. The poppy became an international symbol of WWI thanks to Canadian physician John McCrae, whose 1915 war poem “In Flanders’ Fields” became emblematic of the conflict. In 1921, Canada was the first country to adopt the poppy as its official symbol of remembrance, followed soon after by the rest of the Commonwealth. Over a century later, it remains an enduring symbol of the sacrifices made by Canadian soldiers, and a pledge to veterans in recognition of their service to the country.

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

Workshop: North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future

Fri., Oct. 27 | 1:30-5:00 pm | Women’s Faculty Club Reception to follow | RSVP

The rise of remote work has upended traditional thinking about the role of the urban core and what society might need and want from urban spaces. Some cities have weathered these changes better than others by attracting new residents and investment from firms and other institutions. At the same time, cities across North America are grappling with widening inequality, soaring living costs, and uneven recovery. What might be causing these differences? How can cities take these opportunities to remake the urban core in a more just and equitable way so all residents can thrive – and what can cities learn from each other?

This workshop will bring together scholars and policy leaders from across the United States and Canada for a discussion about the future of the urban core in select North American cities. Using a comparative lens, two panels will examine how the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic recovery have shifted narratives around development in urban centers. We will speculate on future development possibilities, and propose possible solutions to current and potential challenges to urban revival.

Participants will include Dr. Karen Chapple (UC Berkeley/University of Toronto); Jennifer Barrett (Canadian Urban Institute); Molly Harris (London Borough and Lambeth and former Canadian Studies Hildebrand Fellow); Dr. Tom Kemeny (University of Toronto; Sujata Srivastava (SPUR San Francisco); Egon Terplan (UC Berkeley); Andy Yan (Simon Fraser University); Dr. Gordon Douglas (San José State University); and Eric Eidlin (City of San José).

Space is limited, so please RSVP if you plan to attend in person. All attendees are welcome to attend a public reception following the workshop at 5:00 pm.

This workshop is cosponsored by the Department of City & Regional Planning, the Terner Center for Housing Innovation, the Goldman School of Public Policy, and the Institute of Governmental Studies.

Image: Robson Square, Vancouver, BC. Author: Los Paseos on Wikimedia Commons.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Canada Seminar: “Constructing the Future of Health Care in Canada”

Tues., Oct. 31 | 9:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

The Weatherhead Canada Program at Harvard University welcomes Dr. Jane Philpott, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences and Director of the School of Medicine at Queen’s University in Ontario. Dr. Philpott is a medical doctor, a professor of family medicine, and former member of Parliament. From 2015 to 2019 she served as Canada’s Minister of Health, Minister of Indigenous Services, President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Digital Government. She played a lead role in policies that shaped the country: bringing Syrian refugees to Canada; legislating Medical Assistance in Dying; negotiating a health accord with resources for mental health and home care; improving infrastructure for First Nations; and reforming child welfare to reduce the over-apprehension of Indigenous children. She is currently the chair of the Ontario Health Data Council, vice-chair of the Ontario Life Sciences Council and was recently appointed as a commissioner to the Global Commission on Drug Policy.

Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.

Nov. 1-4 | BAMPFA | Learn more

Canadian Studies is pleased to cosponsor artist and choreographer Tanya Lukin Linklater’s performance Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth. at BAMPFA. This cyclical series of dance rehearsals will respond to the exhibition Duane Linklater: mymotherside, and feature Canadian dancers Ivanie Aubin-Malo and Ceinwen Gobert. The public is invited to view the in-situ, unfolding processes of embodiment, gesture, and sensation. Lukin Linklater is compelled by audiences viewing open rehearsals, or the process of making dances. Through experimentation, structured improvisation, prompts from objects in exhibition, place, and writings, she facilitates a choreographic process. Lukin Linklater is staying with this slow unfolding, refusing to culminate these processes in finished performances. In this way, she centres the intellectual, affective, and physical labor – and relational aspects – of making dances. The open rehearsals are free to the Berkeley community with their Cal1 card, and included in the public’s entrance to BAMPFA.

Last Call for Tickets: Canadian Heritage Hockey Night: Sharks vs. Canucks

Nov. 2 | 4:30 pm | San Jose, CA | Buy tickets

The San José Sharks, Digital Moose Lounge, and Canadian Consulate in San Francisco are pleased to bring you a special Canadian Heritage Game Night! Join fellow hockey fans in a dedicated Canadian zone at this family-friendly event. Your VIP tickets will get you pregame lounge access, Canadian smoked meats and poutine, and a few special surprises. Ticket sales close next Tuesday, October 31.

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.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Today: Creating a Pan-African North America; Cree artist exhibits in Berkeley

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.

Note that the first event describe below is later today.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • Berkeley Art Museum opens survey exhibition on Canadian Cree artist Duane Linklater

Upcoming Events

  • Book talk: Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America
  • Workshop: “North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future”

External Events

  • Canada Seminar: “What Brought Us Here, Won’t Take Us There: The Rewiring of Canadian Healthcare”
  • Canadian films at the UN Association Film Festival
  • Cosponsored performance: Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

Berkeley Art Museum Opens Survey Exhibition on Canadian Cree Artist Duane Linklater

A new exhibit at the Berkeley Art Museum (BAMPFA) showcases the work of Ontario-based Omaskêko Cree artist Duane Linklater. Titled mymotherside, the show collects 30 diverse works spanning the artist’s multidisciplinary career.

Linklater’s art explores the complexity (and contradictions) of living as an Indigenous person in a settler society. He also grapples with the fraught relationship between Indigenous communities and museums, which have too often displayed Indigenous artworks stripped of their cultural context. Memory is a constant theme in Linklater’s work, concerning not just what we remember, but what we forget.

Linklater was born in Moose Factory, Ontario, and currently lives in North Bay. He completed his undergraduate education in Native studies and fine arts at the University of Alberta, and received his MFA from Bart College in New York. He has exhibited works in numerous galleries and museums across Canada and the United States.

The new exhibit, originally presented at the Frey Art Museum in Seattle, is the first major survey of Linklater’s work, and includes sculpture, painting, textiles, and video. The exhibit contextualizes the work within the last decade of Linklater’s career, as the artist “interrogates” the concept of the museum, and exposes the historical exclusion of Indigenous voices from gallery spaces. The pieces include works that recall ancestral traditions, alongside references to the artist’s own childhood and contemporary Indigenous life. Above all, Linklater refuses a “reductive” understanding of Indigeneity. He asserts his right to define himself, as an act of “sovereignty and self-determination” in the face of the historical and ongoing erasure and dispossession of First Nations people.

Duane Linklater: mymotherside will run in Berkeley through February 25, 2024. Guided tours of the exhibition, led by UC Berkeley graduate students, are available on select Wednesdays and Sundays.

From November 1-4, Canadian Studies will also cosponsor Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth., a series of performances in dialogue with the exhibition led by the artist’s wife, artist and choreographer Tanya Lukin Linklater. Please see below under “External Events” for more information.

Exhibition image courtesy of BAMPFA.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Book Talk: Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America

Tues., Oct. 17 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

20th-century Black history cannot be understood without accounting for the influence of Pan-African thought. In the early 1900s, Marcus Garvey’s followers saw North America, particularly Canada, as a base from which to liberate the Black masses from colonialism. Then, after World War II, Vietnam War resisters, Black Panthers, and Caribbean students joined the throngs of cross-border migrants to denounce militarism, imperialism, and capitalism. As revolutionaries from Oakland to Toronto dreamed of an “African world”, the prospect of coalitions among the Black Power, Red Power, and Quebecois Power movements inspired U.S. and Canadian intelligence services to infiltrate and sabotage Black organizations across North America.

In his new book Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America (University of North Carolina Press, 2023), Dr. Wendell Adjetey explores how twentieth-century global Black liberation movements began within the U.S.-Canadian borderlands as cross-border, continental struggles. This work reveals the revolutionary legacies of the Underground Railroad and America’s Great Migration, and the hemispheric and transatlantic dimensions of this history.

Dr. Wendell Nii Laryea Adjetey is assistant professor of post-Reconstruction U.S. and African Diaspora history at McGill University, where he holds the William Dawson Chair. A first-generation high school graduate, he earned an PhD, MPhil, and MA from Yale University in history and African American studies. He completed his BA in history and political science at the University of Toronto (University of St. Michael’s College), where he also earned an MA in political science and ethnic, immigration, and pluralism studies.

This event is cosponsored by the Center for African Studies, the Center for Race and Gender, and the Department of African American Studies & African Diaspora Studies.

Workshop: North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future

Fri., Oct. 27 | 1:30-5:00 pm | Women’s Faculty Club Reception to follow | RSVP

The rise of remote work has upended traditional thinking about the role of the urban core and what society might need and want from urban spaces. Some cities have weathered these changes better than others by attracting new residents and investment from firms and other institutions. At the same time, cities across North America are grappling with widening inequality, soaring living costs, and uneven recovery. What might be causing these differences? How can cities take these opportunities to remake the urban core in a more just and equitable way so all residents can thrive – and what can cities learn from each other?

This workshop will bring together scholars and policy leaders from across the United States and Canada for a discussion about the future of the urban core in select North American cities. Using a comparative lens, two panels will examine how the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic recovery have shifted narratives around development in urban centers. We will speculate on future development possibilities, and propose possible solutions to current and potential challenges to urban revival.

Participants will include Dr. Karen Chapple (UC Berkeley/University of Toronto); Jennifer Barrett (Canadian Urban Institute); Molly Harris (London Borough and Lambeth and former Canadian Studies Hildebrand Fellow); Dr. Tom Kemeny (University of Toronto; Sujata Srivastava (SPUR San Francisco); Egon Terplan (UC Berkeley); Andy Yan (Simon Fraser University); Dr. Gordon Douglas (San José State University); and Eric Eidlin (City of San José).

Space is limited, so please RSVP if you plan to attend in person. All attendees are welcome to attend a public reception following the workshop at 5:00 pm.

This workshop is cosponsored by the Department of City & Regional Planning, the Terner Center for Housing Innovation, the Goldman School of Public Policy, and the Institute of Governmental Studies.

Image: Robson Square, Vancouver, BC. Author: Los Paseos on Wikimedia Commons.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Canada Seminar: “What Brought Us Here, Won’t Take Us There: The Rewiring of Canadian Healthcare”

Tues., Oct. 17 | 9:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

The Weatherhead Canada Program at Harvard University welcomes Dr. Alika Lafontaine (University of Alberta), for a discussion on the future of Canada’s healthcare system. Named Maclean’s top Healthcare Innovator of 2023, Dr. Lafontaine has been at the epicentre of healthcare system change for almost two decades. He is the first Indigenous physician and the youngest doctor to lead the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) in its 156-year history, and the first Indigenous physician to be listed on The Medical Post’s 50 Most Powerful Doctors. As an experienced health leader, Lafontaine speaks eloquently and passionately on the politics of healthcare, implementing and scaling equity, effective advocacy, and redesigning health systems.

Canadian Films at the UN Association Film Festival

Oct. 19-29 | San Francisco Bay Area | Buy tickets

Three Canadian documentaries will be shown at this year’s UN Association Film Festival in San Francisco. Entries include Bahati (Oct. 20), the deeply personal story of a Rwandan refugee’s journey of survival; To Kill a Tiger (Oct. 21), which explores the steep cost an Indian family pays for seeking justice for sexual violence; and Backlash: Misogyny in the Digital Age (Oct. 26), which documents an online culture of hatred for women.

Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth.

Nov. 1-4 | BAMPFA | Learn more

Canadian Studies is pleased to cosponsor artist and choreographer Tanya Lukin Linklater’s performance Ewako ôma askiy. This then is the earth. at BAMPFA. This cyclical series of dance rehearsals will respond to the exhibition Duane Linklater: mymotherside, and feature Canadian dancers Ivanie Aubin-Malo and Ceinwen Gobert. The public is invited to view the in-situ, unfolding processes of embodiment, gesture, and sensation. Lukin Linklater is compelled by audiences viewing open rehearsals, or the process of making dances. Through experimentation, structured improvisation, prompts from objects in exhibition, place, and writings, she facilitates a choreographic process. Lukin Linklater is staying with this slow unfolding, refusing to culminate these processes in finished performances. In this way, she centres the intellectual, affective, and physical labor – and relational aspects – of making dances. The open rehearsals are free to the Berkeley community with their Cal1 card, and included in the public’s entrance to BAMPFA.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE

Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Happy Canadian Thanksgiving from Canadian Studies! 🍁

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


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

News from Berkeley

  • A Thanksgiving message from our director
  • In photos: Our 6th annual Canadian Thanksgiving dinner

Upcoming Events

  • Book talk: Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America
  • Workshop: “North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future”

Academic Opportunities

  • Call for papers: New Geographies in the International Journal of Canadian Studies

External Events

  • Canada Seminar: “Who Has Better Access to (Primary) Healthcare, Canadians or Americans?”
  • Canada Seminar: “What Brought Us Here, Won’t Take Us There: The Rewiring of Canadian Healthcare”
  • Canadian films at the UN Association Film Festival

NEWS FROM BERKELEY

🍁 Happy Canadian Thanksgiving! 🍁

Dear friends,

On behalf of the Canadian Studies Program, I wish a very happy Thanksgiving to all our Canadian friends celebrating today.

In a hectic and unpredictable world, it is important to take the time to gather with those who make our lives meaningful and give thanks for those good things we too often take for granted. At the Canadian Studies Program, we are always grateful to our community here in the Bay Area and abroad, who offer us so much support and friendship. It was wonderful to see so many longtime friends at our annual dinner yesterday, and to see so many new faces from Berkeley and beyond.

In the United States, today is also Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a federal holiday which celebrates the first inhabitants of the Americas. Indigenous Peoples’ Day was first celebrated in Berkeley in 1992 on the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ arrival in the Americas, October 12, 1492. This October date had long been celebrated as Columbus Day world-wide. Local celebrations in the United States go as far back as 1792, although Columbus Day only became a federal holiday in 1971. International concern about the aftermath of Columbus for the Indigenous peoples of the Americas led a 1977 UN-sponsored conference to propose the idea of an Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The idea got no traction until an elaborate proposed 500th anniversary celebration of Columbus in the Bay Area so horrified the Berkeley City Council that they acted.

As a program, Canadian Studies is committed to supporting research and events that support Indigenous groups. We encourage our affiliates, wherever you live, to take some time today to learn more about your local Native American/First Nations cultures.

From us to you and your families, a very happy Thanksgiving!

Sincerely,

Richard A. Rhodes

Interim Program Director

In Photos: Our 6th Annual Canadian Thanksgiving Dinner

Yesterday, Canadian Studies and the Digital Moose Lounge hosted our 6th annual community Thanksgiving dinner. Nearly 100 Canadians and their friends from across the Bay came to Berkeley to celebrate all things Canada. Special guests included Consul General Rana Sarkar as well as representatives from Canadian trade groups, Air Canada, and the San Jose Sharks. All guests were treated to a delicious turkey meal – plus a dessert of Nanaimo bars and butter tarts! Attendees were also excited to participate in a raffle for Canadian prizes, including a Canada swag bag, a basket of foods from Quebec, tickets to a San Jose Sharks game, and the grand prize: a pair of Air Canada tickets. We look forward to seeing you all again next year!

Right: Canadian Studies director Richard A. Rhodes greets student volunteers Allison Evans and Taesoo Song.

Bottom Left: Attendees listen to welcome remarks from the Canadian Consulate.

Bottom Right: Professor Rhodes and Consul-General Rana Sarkar pose with Canadian Studies board chair David Stewart, board members Pavan Dhillon and Rhonda Rubinstein, and former program director Irene Bloemraad.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Book Talk: Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America

Tues., Oct. 17 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

20th-century Black history cannot be understood without accounting for the influence of Pan-African thought. In the early 1900s, Marcus Garvey’s followers saw North America, particularly Canada, as a base from which to liberate the Black masses from colonialism. Then, after World War II, Vietnam War resisters, Black Panthers, and Caribbean students joined the throngs of cross-border migrants to denounce militarism, imperialism, and capitalism. As revolutionaries from Oakland to Toronto dreamed of an “African world”, the prospect of coalitions among the Black Power, Red Power, and Quebecois Power movements inspired U.S. and Canadian intelligence services to infiltrate and sabotage Black organizations across North America.

In his new book Cross-Border Cosmopolitans: The Making of a Pan-African North America (University of North Carolina Press, 2023), Dr. Wendell Adjetey explores how twentieth-century global Black liberation movements began within the U.S.-Canadian borderlands as cross-border, continental struggles. This work reveals the revolutionary legacies of the Underground Railroad and America’s Great Migration, and the hemispheric and transatlantic dimensions of this history.

Dr. Wendell Nii Laryea Adjetey is assistant professor of post-Reconstruction U.S. and African Diaspora history at McGill University, where he holds the William Dawson Chair. A first-generation high school graduate, he earned an PhD, MPhil, and MA from Yale University in history and African American studies. He completed his BA in history and political science at the University of Toronto (University of St. Michael’s College), where he also earned an MA in political science and ethnic, immigration, and pluralism studies.

This event is cosponsored by the Center for African Studies, the Center for Race and Gender, and the Department of African American Studies & African Diaspora Studies.

Graduate Student Discussion with Dr. Wendell Adjetey

UC Berkeley graduate students with a research interest in Dr. Adjetey’s work are welcome to attend a small group discussion with the speaker on Monday, October 16. For more information, please email canada@berkeley.edu.

Workshop: North American Cities in Changing Times: Rethinking the Urban Core for the City of the Future

Fri., Oct. 27 | 1:30-5:00 pm | Women’s Faculty Club Reception to follow | RSVP

The rise of remote work has upended traditional thinking about the role of the urban core and what society might need and want from urban spaces. Some cities have weathered these changes better than others by attracting new residents and investment from firms and other institutions. At the same time, cities across North America are grappling with widening inequality, soaring living costs, and uneven recovery. What might be causing these differences? How can cities take these opportunities to remake the urban core in a more just and equitable way so all residents can thrive – and what can cities learn from each other?

This workshop will bring together scholars and policy leaders from across the United States and Canada for a discussion about the future of the urban core in select North American cities. Using a comparative lens, two panels will examine how the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic recovery have shifted narratives around development in urban centers. We will speculate on future development possibilities, and propose possible solutions to current and potential challenges to urban revival.

Participants will include Dr. Karen Chapple (UC Berkeley/University of Toronto); Jennifer Barrett (Canadian Urban Institute); Molly Harris (London Borough and Lambeth and former Canadian Studies Hildebrand Fellow); Dr. Tom Kemeny (University of Toronto; Sujata Srivastava (SPUR San Francisco); Egon Terplan (UC Berkeley); Andy Yan (Simon Fraser University); Dr. Gordon Douglas (San José State University); and Eric Eidlin (City of San José).

Space is limited, so please RSVP if you plan to attend in person. All attendees are welcome to attend a public reception following the workshop at 5:00 pm.

This workshop is cosponsored by the Department of City & Regional Planning, the Terner Center for Housing Innovation, the Goldman School of Public Policy, and the Institute of Governmental Studies.

Image: Robson Square, Vancouver, BC. Author: Los Paseos on Wikimedia Commons.

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

Call for Papers: New Geographies in the International Journal of Canadian Studies

Deadline: November 1, 2023

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is a long-running interdisciplinary journal published by the University of Toronto Press, dedicated to examining Canada from the fields of the arts, literature, geography, history, native studies, and social and political sciences. The journal is seeking submissions of original articles from all disciplines that look to reconsider and revisit the geography of 21st-century Canada.

This means alternative forms of territoriality or spatialization in Canada, and to the new concepts to apprehend them (ecocriticism, environmental humanities, settler colonial studies, border studies, etc.), which have emerged over the past two decades and that render traditional environments and their definitions too parochial or limited.

All submissions will undergo peer review. Learn more and submit papers here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Canada Seminar: “Who Has Better Access to (Primary) Healthcare, Canadians or Americans?”

Tues., Oct. 10 | 9:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

It’s widely believed in both Canada and the United States that Canadians have been access to healthcare than Americans – but do the facts support this claim? The Weatherhead Canada Program at Harvard University will host a talk with two physicians who will walk through the myths and realities of each country’s healthcare system. Featured speakers are Dr. Marion Dove, an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University and practicing family physician, and Dr. Aaron Hoffman, Chief Clinical Innovation Engineer and a practicing family physician at Atrius Health in Boston and co-director of the Harvard Home for Family Medicine. Learn more here.

Photo credit: Sage Ross on Wikimedia Commons.

Canada Seminar: “What Brought Us Here, Won’t Take Us There: The Rewiring of Canadian Healthcare”

Tues., Oct. 17 | 9:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

The Weatherhead Canada Program at Harvard University welcomes Dr. Alika Lafontaine (University of Alberta), for a discussion on the future of Canada’s healthcare system. Named Maclean’s top Healthcare Innovator of 2023, Dr. Lafontaine has been at the epicentre of healthcare system change for almost two decades. He is the first Indigenous physician and the youngest doctor to lead the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) in its 156-year history, and the first Indigenous physician to be listed on The Medical Post’s 50 Most Powerful Doctors. As an experienced health leader, Lafontaine speaks eloquently and passionately on the politics of healthcare, implementing and scaling equity, effective advocacy, and redesigning health systems.

Canadian Films at the UN Association Film Festival

Oct. 19-29 | San Francisco Bay Area | Buy tickets

Three Canadian documentaries will be shown at this year’s UN Association Film Festival in San Francisco. Entries include Bahati (Oct. 20), the deeply personal story of a Rwandan refugee’s journey of survival; To Kill a Tiger (Oct. 21), which explores the steep cost an Indian family pays for seeking justice for sexual violence; and Backlash: Misogyny in the Digital Age (Oct. 26), which documents an online culture of hatred for women.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

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Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

6th Annual Canadian Thanksgiving

Earlier today the branch unofficially began its annual 2023 Poppy Campaign, as it participated in the 6th Annual Canadian Thanksgiving that was co-hosted Digital Moose Lounge and the Canadian Studies Program at the University of California at Berkeley.  Below are some pictures from the event.