Below are upcoming events as well as announcements that may be of interest. (A bulletin will be sent out each week with upcoming events and announcements.) Departmental events are also posted on our website.

Events

 

March 15, 2019 – “Entangled Histories from Segregated Archives: Writing a De-ghettoized History of Marriage in a South African Colony”

Time: 1:00pm – 3:00pm

Venue: 433 Paterson Hall, Carleton University

Nafisa Essop Sheik received her PhD in African History from the University of Michigan in Ann Arborin 2012. She is Senior Lecturer in the History Department at the University of Johannesburg, and for 2018/19 she is the Cornell Visiting Professor in History at Swarthmore College. She works on gender, law and nineteenth century

March 16, 2019 – “Wine and Cheese”

On March 16th, at 6:30 PM EWB’s annual Wine and Cheese will be held at Ottawa’s very own Impact Hub. Our Wine and Cheese is an event that aims to bring students and people passionate about international development closer to individuals who have vast experience in the field, whether it is from the perspective of policy and advocacy or the “on the ground” direct impact perspective. The evening is organized into a short networking period, followed by three speaker presentations, followed once again by a networking period. The attending audience consists of student members/alumni of EWB, professors at Carleton University and potentially members of the EWB National Office.

Find more about this event on our Facebook event here. You may pruchase tickets here.

March 18, 2019 – “What Should Canadians Know — and What Can They Do — About Criminal and Justice Reforms During This Election Year?

The Dick, Ruth, and Judy Bell Lecture is an annual lecture that honours the contributions of individuals to the political and public life of Canada.

The 2019 Lecture “What Should Canadians Know and Do About Criminal Justice Reforms During This Election Year?” will be presented by Senator Kim Pate. Kim Pate was appointed to the Senate of Canada on November 10, 2016. First and foremost, the mother of Michael and Madison, she is also a nationally renowned advocate who has spent the last 35 years working in and around the legal and penal systems of Canada, with and on behalf of some of the most marginalized, victimized, criminalized and institutionalized — particularly imprisoned youth, men and women.

Event Details

Doors open at 6:30pm

Lecture from 7:00 – 8:30pm

Reception in Richcraft Hall Atrium from 8:30 – 9:30pm

Free to attend and open to the public. Advance registration is required.

This event is part of 2019 FPA Research Month

March 21-22, 2019 – “Breaking Barriers, Shaping Worlds: Women and the Search for Global Order, 1919-2019”

The Historical Section (PORH) is pleased to sponsor a two-day conference on the history of women and Canada’s international history on the theme, Breaking Barriers, Shaping Worlds: Women and the Search for Global Order, 1919-2019. Linking past and present, this symposium will explore how Canadian women have influenced Canada’s place in the world during the 20th century and beyond. Speakers will highlight the diverse ways in which Canadian women have shaped international relations, peacebuilding, security, humanitarian aid and development, as well as offering international historical perspectives on empowered women in diplomacy. The full conference program is available here.

Robertson Room, Lester B. Pearson Building, 125 Sussex Avenue, Ottawa

There is no fee, but as space is limited, we ask participants to register in advance. Government-issued photo identification will be required for entry to the Lester B. Pearson building. Also, please note that due to renovations, access to 125 Sussex Drive is temporarily confined to the King Edward Avenue entrance at the rear of the building.

Parking at the venue is extremely limited. Attendees are encouraged to use public transportation or park in the nearby Byward Market. For information on public transportation, please visit the OC Transpo website. For information on parking in the nearby Byward Market, visit Parkopedia. A map to the Market area is available here. For more information, please email Stacey Barker or Greg Donaghy.

March 22, 2019 – Michael Petrou: “’Anti-British…roaring communist…but has courage’: The wars of Canadian SOE agent Steve Markos

The History Department invites you to a talk by Adjunct Professor Michael Petrou as part of our Brown Bag Friday Occasion Series. Bring your lunch and join us in the History Department Lounge, 433 Paterson, at 12:30pm.

During the Second World War, the British Special Operations Executive recruited some 25 Yugoslav and Hungarian migrants to Canada to parachute into the Balkans to liaise with partisan groups on the ground, report to the British on their makeup and nature, and help coordinate armed resistance between the British and these local groups. Many of the recruits were members of the Communist Party of Canada who had lived difficult lives on the margins of Canadian society, harassed by the RCMP and threatened with deportation. The SOE’s worried about the loyalty and motives of some of these men but felt that their family and party connections made them invaluable assets to the Allied war effort. This presentation will explore some of these tensions — as they affected members of the SOE who recruited Canadian agents, and among the agents themselves. Special attention will be paid in particular to one recruit: Steve Markos, a “roaring communist” who infiltrated into occupied Europe and found himself a prisoner of the Red Army.

March 23-24, 2019 – “Anti-69: Against the Mythologies of the 1969 Criminal Code Reform”

Taking place in Richcraft Hall.

Anti-69: Against the Mythologies of the 1969 Criminal Code Reform is being organized to provide a forum for scholarly and activist work critical of the mythologies and limitations of Canada’s 1969 Criminal Code reform (on its 50th anniversary). In June 1969, amidst the rhetoric of the “Just Society,” the White Paper on the extinguishing of Indigenous sovereignty, and the early years of the initiation of state multiculturalism, the Canadian government passed an omnibus Criminal Code reform bill. While often celebrated for fully decriminalizing homosexuality or providing access to abortion and reproductive rights, this is not what the reforms did, nor is it what they were intended to do. the Anti-69 conference, and its concurrent film and video program, place this reform —and the struggles around it—in its broader social, historical, colonial, classed, racialized, gendered and sexualized contexts.

You can see the conference program here: https://anti-69.ca/program/

You can access the film and video program here:https://anti-69.ca/video/

The deadlines for registering is  Sunday, March 10th! 
The Anti-69 organizers would also like to invite you to a Film Screening of Forbidden Love at 8:00 pm, Saturday March 23rd at the SAW Video’s Knot Gallery. Space is limited so please register via the anti-69 website.

If you have any questions please contact Lara Karaian at lara.karaian@carleton.ca.

March 27, 2019 – “Florence Bird Lecture 2019: Ann Cvetkovich”

Free Event: Florence Bird Lecture 2019: Ann Cvetkovich – “Artist Curation as Queer and Decolonial Museum Practice: Kent Monkman’s Shame and Prejudice

Wednesday March 27 from 4:00pm-6:30pm

Dunton Tower Room 2017

* This event includes a lecture, question period, and a reception with light refreshments

**Please R.S.V.P. and direct any questions to Katharine Bausch katharinebausch@cunet.carleton.ca

The Pauline Jewett Institute of Women’s and Gender Studies at Carleton invites you to attend the 2019 Florence Bird Lecture, featuring our new director, Ann Cvetkovich. She was previously Ellen Clayton Garwood Centennial Professor of English, Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies, and Director of LGBTQ Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of Mixed Feelings: Feminism, Mass Culture, and Victorian Sensationalism (Rutgers, 1992); An Archive of Feelings: Trauma, Sexuality, and Lesbian Public Cultures (Duke, 2003); and Depression: A Public Feeling (Duke, 2012).

The Florence Bird Lecture: “Artist Curation as Queer and Decolonial Museum Practice: Kent Monkman’s Shame and Prejudice: This talk draws on a book in progress, which chronicles the recent proliferation of LGBTQ archives as a point of departure for a broader inquiry into the power of archives to transform public histories. The push for LGBTQ state recognition, civil rights, and cultural visibility has been accompanied by a desire for the archive–a claim that the recording and preservation of LGBTQ history is an epistemic right. Yet new LGBTQ archival projects must also respond to historical and theoretical critiques, including decolonizing ones, that represent archives as forms of epistemological domination and surveillance or as guided by an impossible desire for stable knowledge.

 

March 29, 2019 – Chinnaiah Jangam: “Recast(e)ing Violence against Dalits in India

he History Department invites you to a talk by Professor Chinnaiah Jangam, Assistant Professor in the History Department, as part of our Brown Bag Friday Occasion Series. Bring your lunch and join us in the History Department Lounge, 433 Paterson, at 12:30pm.

The violence against Dalits (Untouchables) in India continues to rise. According to the latest available Amnesty International Human Rights Report, more than 40,000 crimes were committed against Dalits in 2016 alone. Sanctioned and reinforced over centuries, the everyday humiliation and brutal violence against Dalits is not a new phenomenon but has been further exacerbated by the rise of the Hindu right-wing political forces in India. This talk attempts to build a historical framework to understand the nature of recent violence by the privileged caste Hindus against the social and political assertion of Dalits by focusing on the infamous massacre/lynching of Dalits in Karamchedu and Chundur in 1985 and 1991 respectively.

March 30, 2019 – “Hard truths and fake news”

Please join the Canadian Committee for World Press Freedom and the School of Journalism and Communication for Hard truths and fake news: A timely boot camp for users of democracy

and defenders of press freedom.

March 30, 2019 in the Atrium of Richcraft Hall.

For more information and to register: https://bit.ly/2IpgYYa

 

April 2, 2019 – “HIST 4302 Documentary Screenings

The annual screening of narrative historical documentaries from students in Hist 4302 – Making Documentary History – is scheduled for Tuesday evening, April 02 at 7.00 pm in St. Pats, Room 100.

The students of Hist 4302 have a very exciting evening in the works — there’ll be documentaries about a shocking jet fighter crash in Orleans, more than 60 years ago; another about the Halifax explosion of 1917, and the yellow journalism that feasted on it; one about an heroic Ottawa doctor who reported on the appalling conditions he discovered in residential schools in Western Canada, a century ago; and finally, a documentary about the struggles of an Inuit poet and artist during his 50 years of being in Ottawa.

Over the years this class has developed a reputation for its qualitatively distinguished productions, including last year’s “Prosser: A Portrait of a Small Town” which was broadcast on the CBC.

A jury of eminent scholars –– David Dean, Professor of History and Co-Director of the Carleton Centre for Public History; Janne Cleveland, Co-ordinator of the Drama Studies Program; and James Wright, Professor Music –– will select one documentary to be awarded an Underhill prize.

There’ll be plenty of that curiously creative Carleton cheese to enjoy at the post-screening reception and celebration, sponsored by the Department.

Come for the movie magic, stay for the cheese and experience the excitement that “experiential learning” can generate.

 

Announcements

 

REQUEST FOR SUGGESTIONS: SHANNON LECTURES IN HISTORY

Bruce Elliott would be pleased to receive proposals from faculty or senior doctoral students for the autumn 2019 Shannon Lectures in History, the department’s annual public lecture series.  Though the series deals with the social history of Canada, broadly defined, the terms of reference encourage linkages between approaches to Canadian history and the wider body of international scholarship on a theme, so we also encourage non-Canadianists to propose series.  At least two of the sessions should be about Canada. The series is funded through a major gift from the late Lois M. Long, a long-time friend of the Department of History.  The fund allows for speakers to be brought from throughout North America and overseas.  Some colleagues have chosen to organize the series in connection with a seminar course, so that the students can meet with and hear the people they are reading.  Dominique and Ann have arranged for a slot to be reserved on Fridays next fall so that it would be possible for anyone contemplating this to overlap a seminar with the time of the lecture.  Anyone offering to organize the series will receive plenty of help and guidance along the way.  If you have any thoughts as to a topic, please contact Bruce Elliott at bruce.elliott@carleton.ca.

Funding Opportunities: AMS Healthcare 2019-20

AMS Healthcare: History of Medicine Grants and Fellowships

On behalf of AMS Healthcare, the NSHRF is pleased to announce the launch of the following 2019-20 AMS Healthcare funding opportunities.

  • AMS Project Grant
    A max of 10,000 for one year
    2018 funded recipients 
  • Doctoral Completion Award
    A $25,000 stipend
    2018 funded recipients 
  • AMS Fellowship                
    A max of a $45,000 stipend & $2,500 research/travel allowance

2018 funded recipients

Application DeadlineMay 2, 2019 – 2:00 P.M. (AT)

Details about the awards and how to apply can be found at: www.nshrf.ca/AMS

“AMS is a key supporter of the history of medicine and healthcare in Canada, and believes that the understanding of our past is a way to create a better healthcare system for the future.”

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