Category Archives: Canadian Studies Program UC Berkeley

Student research showcase, Quebec studies & Big Give results! ðŸ¥³

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


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Big Give update: Thank you for your support!
  • Event tomorrow: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • Call for Papers: American Council for Québec Studies 22nd Biennial Conference
  • Upcoming event: “Future Imaginaries of Abundant Intelligences: Indigenous Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence and its Discontents”
  • External conference: “Public attitudes towards immigration in Canada: A false or true positive?”
🎉 Big Give Update: Another Amazing Year, Thanks to You! 🎉
Canadian Studies is excited to announce yet another record-breaking Big Give for the program. With processing not yet finished, we’ve raised almost $29,000. That’s almost 15% of ALL money raised for the entire Research Division!
We can’t say this enough – your support is the bedrock for everything we do. We’re a small program, but we have an outsized impact thanks to the strength of our community engagement. We’re incredibly grateful for all you do, whether through your philanthropy, volunteering your time, or just attending our events. You make our work not only possible, but meaningful. So thanks again, and we hope to see you soon!
EVENT TOMORROW
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
Call for Papers: American Council for Québec Studies 22nd Biennial Conference
Submission deadline: April 1, 2022
The American Council for Québec Studies (ACQS) invites proposals for papers and panels for their upcoming conference, to be held October 20-23, 2022 in Baltimore, Maryland. The conference hopes to give space to multiple openings and exchanges. Proposals related to any aspect of Québec studies will be considered, including Québec’s diasporas and the Francophone presence in the Americas. The conference is open to a wide range of approaches across the social and physical sciences and humanities. Submissions of both individual papers and complete panels are encouraged.
All submissions (abstracts of +/-250 words) are should be made via the ACQS website.
Conference presentations can be made in French or English. The deadline for the submission of abstracts is April 1, 2022. Please visit www.acqs.org for more details.
UPCOMING EVENT
Future Imaginaries of Abundant Intelligences: Indigenous Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence and its Discontents
Thursday, April 7 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses | RSVP here
The artificial intelligence (A.I.) industry-academic complex does not have an ethics problem. It has an epistemology problem. The persistent failures with computationally-enabled and -amplified bias are symptoms of a blind allegiance to knowledge frameworks that define the “knower” as a post-Enlightenment individual motivated by selfish utilitarianism while subordinating or erasing ways of understanding the world that imagine people differently. How do we expand the operational definitions of intelligence to account for different epistemologies? In particular, how might we take inspiration from Indigenous knowledge frameworks that situate knowing within a web of relationships amongst humans and non-humans? And how might we consider integrating advanced computational practices, such as A.I., into traditional knowledge frameworks to the benefit of Indigenous communities?
Jason Edward Lewis is the University Research Chair in Computational Media and the Indigenous Future Imaginary as well professor of computation arts at Concordia University in Montreal. His research explores computation as a creative material, and seeks to understand how our technologies are constituted through explicit and implicit cultural knowledge practices. He is lead author of the award-winning “Making Kin with the Machines” essay and editor of the Indigenous Protocol and Artificial Intelligence Position Paper. Lewis directs the Initiative for Indigenous Futures Partnership, and co-directs the Indigenous Futures Research Centre and the Aboriginal Territories in Cyberspace research network.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Public attitudes towards immigration in Canada: A false or true positive?
Tuesday, March 22 | 7:00 am PT | Online | RSVP here
Contrary to the experiences in most European countries and the U.S., public attitudes towards immigration in Canada have grown increasingly positive over the last two decades. However, several studies have found that while most of the population has a positive opinion on immigration, there is a significant difference in public attitudes depending on an individual’s education, age or political ideology. Studies also have shown that different factors, including economic and cultural concerns, play an essential role in influencing public opinion towards immigration, and that this has been shown to shift over time.
To understand the reasons behind changing public opinion, researchers have explored whether they are driven by changing demographics, ideological shifts or simply individuals changing their minds. Some scholars have taken a further step to examine what public support is like towards specific categories of immigration, racial groups or regions, showing that, at the finer grain, public support might not be as positive as Canada’s general attitudes suggest.
This workshop aims to address the following questions:
  • What are the main factors that explain the positive change in public attitudes towards immigration in Canada?
  • Are there differences in attitudes towards refugees versus (economic) immigrants?
  • Should we look closer at the attitudes of people in smaller communities?
  • What can we learn from qualitative and quantitative perspectives?
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Today’s the big day: show your support for Canadian Studies! ðŸ‡¨ðŸ‡¦

Note this appeal from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Dear Michael,
Today, Canadian Studies is taking part in Big Give, Berkeley’s annual day of giving. This fundraising extravaganza is a special opportunity to demonstrate your support for our work, and have your gift make a big impact!
This year, we’re celebrating 40 years of promoting public knowledge about Canada. Since our founding in 1982, we’ve become one of the largest programs of our kind in the United States, with a continuously expanding network of friends of Canada in California and beyond. We couldn’t have achieved that without the generosity of our friends: as a 90% donor-funded program, your support is crucial to our success.
We hope you’ll join us by making a donation towards our mission today. Read some of the ways we’re putting donations to use below, from travel and research grants to public events. Your gift makes a difference!
With gratitude
Irene Bloemraad
Director, Canadian Studies Program
Thomas Garden Barnes Chair in Canadian Studies
Read this before you give: you could help us win a big prize!
Throughout the day, the university will be running special timed contests with thousands of dollars in prizes for winning units. Your gift of any size could enter us to win if your name is randomly selected during the contest period – just see which group you fall into below and make your gift during the contest window. It’s that easy!
  • Berkeley alumni: Donate between 10 a.m. and noon PT ($750)
  • Non-alumni: Donate between 9-11 a.m. PT ($750)
Canadian Studies supports students!
Whether through our graduate Hildebrand Fellowships or undergraduate awards, Canadian Studies is proud to support Berkeley students engaged in world-class research with our donor-funded grants. Read what our current fellows have to say about the program, and don’t miss our Graduate Research Showcase on March 15!
“The Canadian Studies Program has been a huge asset to my time at Cal. The faculty and staff at Canadian Studies have been incredibly supportive… My dissertation research examining the social and cultural implications of new agricultural frontier development in the Northwest Territories was funded by the Canadian Studies Center, and I absolutely couldn’t not have done my 2021-22 field season without their support.
– Mindy Price, 2020-22 Hildebrand Fellow
“The Canadian Studies Program is a wonderful resource for students of all disciplines. My research attending to renewable energy infrastructures developed by First Nations in British Columbia was made possible by the Hildebrand Fellowship, alongside the institutional support and intellectual networks forged amongst faculty and Fellows alike. It facilitates a shared sense of community throughout a diverse range of students and scholars, providing a vibrant place of academic and intellectual engagement.”
– Aaron Gregory, 2021 Hildebrand Fellow
… and we set alumni up for success!
Canadian Studies is committed to helping young scholars of Canada develop the career skills and connections they need to succeed professionally. Recent Hildebrand Fellows have gone on to academic appointments at schools including Yale, UC San Francisco, University of British Columbia, and University of Windsor.
Canadian Studies supports public education!
The core of our mission is in public education on the most important issues facing Canada today. Our free public colloquium series brings these issues to the front through engaging, intellectually rigorous lectures.
This semester, we’ve already hosted an event on developing respectful repatriation policies for Indigenous artefacts in museum. And coming up, we have events on rethinking artificial intelligence through an Indigenous lens and what a Canadian teacher’s fight to keep her job in California tells us about the boundaries of American identity.
Finally, this May, Canadian Studies will be hosting a major policy research conference featuring 15 scholars from across the United States and Canada. The conference will examine the effects of bureaucracy on immigration policy in a global context, with the goal of developing specific policy recommendations. We hope you’ll join us then!
Canadian Studies supports community!
Canadian Studies serves as a hub for the Canadian community at Berkeley and beyond! From events like election watch parties to our annual Canadian Family Thanksgiving, we make it easy for students, faculty, and friends to connect with other Canadians and friends of Canada from across the Bay Area. We hope to create a welcoming environment for all, whether international students, expats, or just enthusiasts!
I learned about Canadian Studies when I was a visiting prospective student! I was worried about leaving Montreal and losing my connection to the Québec history that I had really grown to treasure at McGill. Knowing that Canadian Studies was here made me feel confident that I could keep my connection to Canadian scholarship… It was actually a major draw in deciding to come to Berkeley!
– Julia Lewandoski, 2015-16 Hildebrand Fellow
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Invest in the future of Canadian Studies this Thursday

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


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Special message from Director Bloemraad: What your support means to us
  • Next week: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • Applications close Friday for summer research funding
  • Upcoming event: “Future Imaginaries of Abundant Intelligences: Indigenous Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence and its Discontents”
  • External event: “Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era”
Dear friends,
This Thursday is Big Give, Berkeley’ annual fundraising marathon. This year’s drive coincides with a historic milestone for Canadian Studies, marking our 40th anniversary on campus. As I sat down to write this note, I reflected on the significance of this history. In 1982, a group of determined friends of Canada led by Professor Thomas G. Barnes scraped together funding for a center that no one was sure would succeed. Though we’ve been tested many times in the decades since, our program has always emerged stronger. What, I wondered, is the source of that strength? What has helped such an unlikely program thrive through the ups-and-downs of four decades?
The answer, I think, always comes back to our friends and alumni. Your philanthropy is the foundation of our program, from graduate research fellowships and public colloquia to community gatherings like our annual Canadian Thanksgiving. And your steadfast commitment to our vision has given us a crucial independence at a time when campus funding is constantly at risk. Last year, your support allowed us to achieve 100% donor-funding for the first time ever.
This Thursday, make an investment in the next 40 years of Canadian Studies at Berkeley. Donate if you believe that both Americans and Canadians benefit from a strong mutual understanding and close ties. We thank you in advance for your support, and hope to see you in the fall for a special anniversary celebration!
Irene Bloemraad
Program Director
Thomas G. Barnes Chair in Canadian Studies
Read this before you give: you can help us win big prizes!
Throughout Big Give, units can win special prizes by completing timed Challenges. Your gift of any size can help us win bonus money if your name is randomly selected during the contest period. Just see which group you fall into, and make your gift during the stated time. It’s that easy!
  • Berkeley Alumni: Donate between 6 and 7 pm PT ($750)
  • Non-alumni: Donate between 9 and 11 am PT ($750)
NEXT WEEK – See how Canadian Studies supports students!
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
Applications for summer research funding close this Friday
Deadline: Friday, March 11, 2022
The Canadian Studies Program is currently accepting applications for the Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2022 and AY 2022-23. The application is open to any UC Berkeley graduate student whose work focuses primarily or comparatively on Canada. This fellowship is meant to cover direct research costs.
The deadline for summer applications is this Friday, March 11; applications for AY 22-23 must be submitted by May 6. Please visit our website for more information and full eligibility criteria, and help us share this information with your friends and networks!
Your donations help make free events like the following possible:
UPCOMING EVENT
Future Imaginaries of Abundant Intelligences: Indigenous Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence and its Discontents
Thursday, April 7 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses | RSVP here
The artificial intelligence (A.I.) industry-academic complex does not have an ethics problem. It has an epistemology problem. The persistent failures with computationally-enabled and -amplified bias are symptoms of a blind allegiance to knowledge frameworks that define the “knower” as a post-Enlightenment individual motivated by selfish utilitarianism while subordinating or erasing ways of understanding the world that imagine people differently. How do we expand the operational definitions of intelligence to account for different epistemologies? In particular, how might we take inspiration from Indigenous knowledge frameworks that situate knowing within a web of relationships amongst humans and non-humans? And how might we consider integrating advanced computational practices, such as A.I., into traditional knowledge frameworks to the benefit of Indigenous communities?
Jason Edward Lewis is the University Research Chair in Computational Media and the Indigenous Future Imaginary as well professor of computation arts at Concordia University in Montreal. His research explores computation as a creative material, and seeks to understand how our technologies are constituted through explicit and implicit cultural knowledge practices. He is lead author of the award-winning “Making Kin with the Machines” essay and editor of the Indigenous Protocol and Artificial Intelligence Position Paper. Lewis directs the Initiative for Indigenous Futures Partnership, and co-directs the Indigenous Futures Research Centre and the Aboriginal Territories in Cyberspace research network.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era
Wednesday, March 9 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP here
Join the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute for a discussion on the emerging revolution in quantum technologies and how the governments of Canada and the United States are approaching the opportunities and challenges it presents.
Emerging quantum technologies will have significant economic and national security ramifications, setting off a global race for leadership in this field. Quantum computers hold the promise of infinitely greater processing power and the ability to crack today’s digital security protocols. They will transform industries from finance to pharmaceuticals to logistics. Quantum sensors and quantum imaging will change fields from mining to warfare. Moreover, a quantum internet, with ultra-high speeds and security is under development. This session will explore what the U.S. and Canada are doing in the quantum field and how they are thinking about closer collaboration in the years ahead.
This event will feature an expert panel drawn from top levels of government, science, and industry, and will be hosted by Canada Institute director and Berkeley Canadian Studies board member Chris Sands. This event is being hosted in partnership with the Embassy of Canada.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Tracking the LGB vote in Canada; The future of quantum tech; Big Give

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


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Upcoming event: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • New study tracks voting trends among Canada’s LGB population
  • Applications close next week for summer research funding
  • Show your support for Canadian Studies – Big Give is next Thursday, March 10!
  • External event: “Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era”
NEXT EVENT
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
New Study Tracks Trends Among Canada’s LGB Voters
A new study co-authored by a UC Berkeley political scientist sheds light on political trends in Canada’s lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) population. Titled “The Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Vote in a More Tolerant Canada“, the forthcoming article in the Canadian Journal of Political Science examines the effects of political mainstreaming on what has traditionally been a solid left-of-centre voting block. Its authors are Eric Guntermann, a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley, and Edana Beauvais, an assistant professor of political science at Simon Fraser University.
It’s no surprise that lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals overwhelmingly vote left-of-centre, and are on average less conservative than straight people. LGB policy priorities have traditionally been associated with progressive politics, and left-of-centre individuals were more likely to identify as LBG. These communities were traditionally very cohesive by virtue of forming around a strong shared experience of discrimination and persecution.
In recent decades, however, same-sex relationships have achieved widespread acceptance throughout Canada, with opponents being relegated to the political fringe. LGB political groups have also achieved many of their policy goals, most prominently same-sex marriage. Have these societal changes led to movement in individual political preferences? Guntermann and Beauvais hypothesize that the mainstreaming of LGB rights would lead to lower cohesion as a politically distinctive group.
The study partly confirms this expectation. While activism for same-sex marriage is historically tied to left-wing politics, the outcome of the push for gay marriage has moved some LGB individuals to the right. Guntermann and Beauvais’ estimates show that while marriage makes most people more conservative, it has a larger effect on gay men, bringing them roughly to the average ideological score of straight men.
However, when viewing the LGB community overall the study notes an important counterweight: bisexual women. This group is by far the most left-wing group as measured by self-identification, immigration preferences, and vote choice. While men are generally more conservative than women overall, bisexual women are not only more left-wing than gay men, but also significantly further left than lesbian women. This is important because data from the 2019 Canada Election Study show that the number of self-identified bisexual women increased fivefold from Gen X (born 1965-1980) to Gen Z (born 1997-2012). With over 20% of Gen Z women identifying as bisexual, this represents an extremely heavy counterweight to any movement among other groups in the LGB population.
The study’s conclusions? Despite some rightward movement among married gay men, the outsized increase in young bisexual-identified women suggests that the leftward tilt of the LGB community overall will persist for the foreseeable future.
Big Give is Next Thursday, March 10!
The big day is almost here! Join us next week for Big Give, Berkeley’s annual day of giving. Show your support for Canadian Studies by making a donation of any size in support of our program. Your generosity supports our public programs and student scholars. And a timely gift could help us earn $100s of dollars in matches at no extra cost to you – learn how here.
Applications closing for summer research funding
Deadline: Friday, March 11, 2022
The Canadian Studies Program is currently accepting applications for the Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2022 and AY 2022-23. The application is open to any UC Berkeley graduate student whose work focuses primarily or comparatively on Canada. This fellowship is meant to cover direct research costs.
The deadline for summer applications is next Friday, March 11; applications for AY 22-23 must be submitted by May 6. Please visit our website for more information and full eligibility criteria, and help us share this information with your friends and networks!
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era
Wednesday, March 9 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP here
Join the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute for a discussion on the emerging revolution in quantum technologies and how the governments of Canada and the United States are approaching the opportunities and challenges it presents.
Emerging quantum technologies will have significant economic and national security ramifications, setting off a global race for leadership in this field. Quantum computers hold the promise of infinitely greater processing power and the ability to crack today’s digital security protocols. They will transform industries from finance to pharmaceuticals to logistics. Quantum sensors and quantum imaging will change fields from mining to warfare. Moreover, a quantum internet, with ultra-high speeds and security is under development. This session will explore what the U.S. and Canada are doing in the quantum field and how they are thinking about closer collaboration in the years ahead.
This event will feature an expert panel drawn from top levels of government, science, and industry, and will be hosted by Canada Institute director and Berkeley Canadian Studies board member Chris Sands. This event is being hosted in partnership with the Embassy of Canada.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

An photographer captures rural Canada; Louis Riel; jobs for scholars

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


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Upcoming event: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • New exhibition reveals lost artistic vision of rural Canada in the 1930s
  • Manitoba celebrates Métis leader on Louis Riel Day
  • Two Canadian universities seek Canadianist faculty
NEXT EVENT
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
New Exhibition Reveals Lost Artistic Vision of Rural Canada in the 1930s
An exhibition of stunning black and white photographs at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, Canada uncovers a fresh vision of western Canada in the Great Depression, seen through the lens of a young Jewish Canadian artist. The Lost Expressionist: Nick Yudell, A Photographer Discovered, reveals the images of Nick Yudell (1916-1943), a previously unknown amateur photographer who lived in the town of Morden and in Winnipeg, Manitoba. This “lost world” was brought to light thanks to the persistence of one woman – Celia Rabinovitch, Ph.D., M.F.A. – with a little help and encouragement from the Canadian Studies Program.
For Celia Rabinovitch, artist, author and scholar, and longtime Canadian Studies affiliate, this exhibition is also personal. A painter and art historian, she was in art school when her father showed her the wooden box that Nick crafted for his life’s work before leaving for World War II in 1940. “When I first saw the negatives, I knew they were important, but I didn’t know how to work with them. The technology wasn’t there yet,” she says. When she began scanning and restoring the negatives in 2007, they fell into themes offering a visual story of Nick Yudell’s life and the communities he touched. It took nearly fifteen years for this labor of love to come to fruition.
Nick Yudell was born in Winnipeg in 1916, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants to Canada. Following his mother’s death, his father, who was supporting two other school-age children, brought him to live with his maternal aunt and his uncle David Rabinovitch in Morden. The youngest of nine children, Nick was particularly close to his cousin Milton Rabinovitch – Celia’s father. He received his first camera at the age of twelve. An avid photographer, he captured individuals in daily life in Morden and Winnipeg, where he lived with his father during high school in Winnipeg’s North End, returning to work in Morden in 1933. In 1940, he enlisted in the military to fight fascism in Europe – training for the RAF as part of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Nick Yudell became an RAF pilot stationed in North Africa and perished when his Vickers Wellington II on a mission to strike Nazi supply lines was shot down over Tunisia in 1943. He became a Canadian War hero; Yudell Lake in northern Manitoba is named for him.
Canadian Studies supported this project from the beginning, when Rabinovitch presented her work to the program in Berkeley. It sparked the imagination of former Canadian Studies director Nelson Graburn, who understood it as a complete visual archive of a relatively unknown time and place in Canada. “If it were not for Nelson’s encouragement, this exhibition (with accompanying book) probably wouldn’t have happened,” Rabinovitch says. She received a John A. Sproul Research Fellowship in 2012 to support her work. Now, ten years later, the photographs form an impressive exhibition that reveals Yudell’s original vision.
Yudell identified each image with the individual name, date, place, and lighting conditions, writing on brown envelopes that he inserted in his archive. He left his magazines and other photographic materials with Milton in Morden. Celia Rabinovitch visited there and conducted oral histories with those who remembered him to build a picture of the artist through these collected sources. “We can tie his use of chiaroscuro (dramatic, heavy contrast) to the film noir movies that he must have seen in the cinema. Several people that I interviewed remembered him, or recalled individuals depicted in his photographs. These observations rounded out his life.”
“This offers a prism of one man’s life, showing how rich and complex one person is,” says Rabinovitch. “Although he was a Canadian war hero, the show expresses the value of life through Nick’s portraits and images of daily life. Film was expensive; every shot counted. Nick expressed the personalities of the individuals around him. His themes cover dramatic lighting, photographic experimentation, and predict the course of his life.”
Rabinovitch hopes the exhibition also challenges notions about people from small towns and the west. She points to the diversity of Morden, which had a population largely consisting of immigrants. “They weren’t isolated from the world as some would assume. People there were curious and intellectually sophisticated. Growth and development – originating in agriculture- and the support of community were central to the daily life of the town. They were attentive to the patterns of life, and to support others – especially during the Dirty Thirties.”
The Lost Expressionist: Nick Yudell, a Photographer Discovered is on view at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg through August 1, 2022, and travels to the Pembina Hills Art Center, Morden, 2023. The exhibition is seeking seeking donations to cover material costs and prepare for a North American tour. For more information, see the exhibition website or contact thelostexpressionist@gmail.com.
The photographs included in this article were taken from the exhibition and provided courtesy of Celia Rabinovitch.
Manitoba Celebrates Métis Leader With Louis Riel Day
Today, people across North America are enjoying a day off – Presidents’ Day in the United States, and what’s usually called “Family Day” in Canada. But in Manitoba, the third Monday in February officially celebrates the Métis leader and provincial founder Louis Riel. A complex figure with a contested legacy, he has been called “the most written-about figure in Canadian history”. Riel led two uprisings against Canada’s federal government in defense of the rights of Francophones and Indigenous people in the early years of Confederation.
Riel was born in the Red River Colony in modern Manitoba, in a settlement composed largely of French-speaking Métis people. In the 1860s the colony was purchased by the Canadian government, and many English-speaking, Protestant settlers began moving to the territory. Riel was concerned that these settlers would soon come to dominate the area, especially when it seemed the government planned to redistribute lands in the colony already held by the Métis. Riel thus launched an uprising in 1867 that seized control of the territory, and organized an unrecognized provisional government. Subsequent negotiations led to the creation of the Province of Manitoba in the territory, and negotiated its entry into Canada under terms favorable for the Métis.
Riel was shortly thereafter elected to parliament as one of Manitoba’s first MP’s. However, he was unable to secure amnesty for his leadership in the rebellion, particularly the illegal execution of a pro-Canadian agent, and he fled to the United States without ever taking his seat. He lived in exile for the next ten years, eventually settling in Montana. During this time he experienced a prolonged mental deterioration, and allegedly came to believe himself to be a divinely-ordained leader and prophet.
Riel was eventually convinced to return to Canada to lead the 1885 North-West Rebellion in Saskatchewan. He was, however, captured by government troops, and controversially sentenced to death for treason. The sentence was hotly contested at the time, especially given Riel’s apparent mental state. While the government portrayed Riel as a dangerous, unstable rebel, many Métis and Francophone citizens viewed Riel as a martyr for their cause. His execution contributed to a widening divide between French and English-speakers in Canada; the defeat of Riel’s resistance movement led to domination of the prairies by English-speaking settlers, as he had feared. Many believed this was the driving force behind his execution.
While traditional histories depicted Riel as an anti-Canadian rebel, his legacy has been re-evaluated numerous times. Calls for a posthumous pardon have been raised on many occasions, as well as for recognition as one of the Fathers of Confederation. He is widely recognized as a folk hero in many parts of Canada, and admired as an avatar of popular resistance against an oppressive government. Ironically, while Riel viewed Canadian rule with skepticism, he has today become a “Canadian” national hero, thanks to his dedication to the contemporary Canadian values of social justice, diversity, and minority rights.
Two Canadian Universities Seeking Canadianist Faculty
Two Canadian universities are currently searching for scholars specializing in Canadian Studies to fill open faculty positions:
The Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies invites applications for the 2022-2023 Robarts Visiting Professorship at York University (Toronto, Ontario). The Professorship is open to full-time (tenured or tenure-track) faculty members who work on issues concerning Canada and who are based outside the country, are planning to go on sabbatical or other leave during 2022-2023 and have demonstrated scholarly expertise on Canada and a commitment to Canadian studies.
The McGill Institute for the Study of Canada at McGill University is seeking applications for a two-year Faculty-Lecturer Position with the possibility of reappointment for an additional two years. The position is designed to emphasize public affairs as a key feature of the Institute’s undergraduate programs. The successful candidate will be housed at the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, which promotes interdisciplinary inquiry, and will have the opportunity to engage with scholars from multiple disciplines. The successful candidate will teach six lecture/seminar courses in Canadian Studies a year, including the introductory course, CANS 200: Understanding Canada, and the capstone seminar, CANS 420: Shaping Public Affairs in Canada.
Image: McGill University Arts Building. Paul Lowry, Wikimedia Commons
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