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SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and NATURE’S PAST ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND URBAN PARKS Editor’s Note: This post is part of a series that focuses on thematic collections of episodes of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast.Find all the posts in this series here.. Animals, as it turns out, have little respect for the political boundaries established by humans. TEDIUM, TINS AND TURBINES: SLEEPWALKING IN DOGGERLAND Tedium, tins and turbines: Sleepwalking in Doggerland. This post by Elliot Honeybun-Arnolda and Reuben Martens is the ninth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how ourthinking about
UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. PERSONNALITÉ JURIDIQUE DE LA RIVIÈRE MAGPIE / …TRANSLATE THIS PAGE Personnalité juridique de la Rivière Magpie / Muteshekau Shipu: une premiere au Canada. En février 2021, une action conjointe menée par la Municipalité régionale de comté (MRC) de Minganie et le Conseil des Innus d’Ekuanitshit 1 a marqué un tournant en ce qui concerne la perception des rivières au Québec et au Canada : à travers REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. EMOTIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY AT NIAGARA FALLS Niagara Falls is known for creating an affective response: awestruck explorers; fainting women in Victorian gowns; artists trying to capture the sublime; besotted newlyweds; etc. Niagara Falls presents an opportunity to blend environmental and emotional history. Emotional, or affective, history is part of the broader turn towardssensory
NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENTPETE ANDERSONBLAIR STEINM. BLAKE BUTLERKATE BAUERROBYNNE MELLORMATTHEW EVENDEN Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and NATURE’S PAST ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND URBAN PARKS Editor’s Note: This post is part of a series that focuses on thematic collections of episodes of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast.Find all the posts in this series here.. Animals, as it turns out, have little respect for the political boundaries established by humans. TEDIUM, TINS AND TURBINES: SLEEPWALKING IN DOGGERLAND Tedium, tins and turbines: Sleepwalking in Doggerland. This post by Elliot Honeybun-Arnolda and Reuben Martens is the ninth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how ourthinking about
UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. PERSONNALITÉ JURIDIQUE DE LA RIVIÈRE MAGPIE / …TRANSLATE THIS PAGE Personnalité juridique de la Rivière Magpie / Muteshekau Shipu: une premiere au Canada. En février 2021, une action conjointe menée par la Municipalité régionale de comté (MRC) de Minganie et le Conseil des Innus d’Ekuanitshit 1 a marqué un tournant en ce qui concerne la perception des rivières au Québec et au Canada : à travers REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. EMOTIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY AT NIAGARA FALLS Niagara Falls is known for creating an affective response: awestruck explorers; fainting women in Victorian gowns; artists trying to capture the sublime; besotted newlyweds; etc. Niagara Falls presents an opportunity to blend environmental and emotional history. Emotional, or affective, history is part of the broader turn towardssensory
NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENT Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
#PANDEMICMETHODOLOGIES TWITTER CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 1 day ago · Conference Programme *indicates presenter for a group Thursday June 24, 2021. 10:00: Jacob Steere-Williams (@steerewilliams), “Pandemic Public(s): At the Intersections of Public Health and Public History”. 10:30: Esyllt Jones (), “Public Health History and Pandemic Policy-Making”. 11:00: BREAK. 11:30: Crystal Gail Fraser (@crystalfraser), Thinking through IndigenousArchives & the
THINKING WITH HISTORY ABOUT THE FUTURE WITH IMMERSIVE This post by Jim Clifford (University of Saskatchewan) and Atif Ghani (Heritage 5G) is the thirteenth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how our thinking about the environment in 2021 might shape the future. MONITORING AND EVALUATING CLIMATE COMMUNICATION AND JOIN THE MECCE PROJECT REGIONAL HUB LAUNCH! Share and learn through a growing network supporting global #climateeducation #climatecommunication and #climateaction. The Monitoring and Evaluating Climate Communication and Education (MECCE) Project is launching its Regional Hub network this June. TheWILLIAM THOMPSON
Content published by William Thompson. Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. / About THE CHICAGO RIVER: A TRANSNATIONAL MATRIX OF PLACE The Chicago River is one of those little rivers that has a big history. This is largely because a megalopolis grew up around it. Indeed, the humble fluvial characteristics of this river belie what we call a “technological matrix of place.” In this post, we’ll discuss some of the themes we HBC FAMILY ROOTS AND REMEMBERING This post is part of a limited series called HBC at 350, which focuses on the environmental history of the Hudson’s Bay Company in light of the 350th anniversary of its founding in 1670.. The HBC is the oldest commercial enterprise in what we now know as Canada. For much of its history, it was also a family enterprise, the survival of which depended on the labour, ingenuity, mobility and kinKAREN BARTON
Karen Sam Barton is a Professor of Geography, GIS, and Sustainability at the University of Northern Colorado, USA. Her recent book, Africa's Joola Shipwreck: Causes and Consequences of a Humanitarian Disaster, explores the second worst maritime disaster in peacetime history as well as the community resistance and resilience that followed in the wake of this avoidable tragedy. THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MOVEMENT NEEDS BLACK A Canadian EJ and BLM partnership would provide the EJ movement with tools for large-scale activism in favour of transparency and accountability in all institutions and a critique of White spaces. In turn, BLM would benefit from an understanding of how the social relations of oppression affect Black folks, include environmentalmarginalization.
PRISONERS IN THE PARK: GERMAN POWS IN RIDING MOUNTAIN Bear cub captured by German PoWs in Riding Mountain National Park, MB, 1944. RMNP Collection. In the heart of Manitoba’s Riding Mountain National Park lies a small clearing on the shore of Whitewater Lake. To many visitors, the clearing appeared to be no different from any other and was simply a backcountry campsite.SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
PAST AND FUTURE WORLDS: QUEER AND NON-BINARY DYSTOPIAN Flickr Common. Queer authors Bev Prescott and Rivers Solomon remake the future in unique ways through the use of time and history in their dystopian novels. Set in 2092, Prescott’s 2 Degrees painstakingly illustrates climate change by evocating a bygone past, a time before climate change irreparably damaged the global world. REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders.RICHARD YEOMANS
Richard Yeomans is a PhD Candidate at the University of New Brunswick in the department of history. His research explores the development of science and society in nineteenth-century New Brunswick and how scientific and local knowledge shaped policy around resource management. He is also the creator and website manager for atlanticdigitalscholarship.ca, the official website of UNB's THE 2020 ATLANTIC CANADA STUDIES CONFERENCE: CALL FOR The Atlantic Canada Studies Conference is a biennial gathering of scholars whose research focuses on the study of the Atlantic Region of Canada, broadly defined. The University of Maine will be hosting the 2020 meeting of the conference, from May 14-16, at the HutchinsonCenter in Belfast.
NOVA SCOTIA ACADIAN RECORDER Nova Scotia Acadian Recorder, 10 August 1816. Abridged Transcript: At a time like the present when our streets are crowded with numbers of our countrymen, who for want of employment have been forced from their native country, and with others, who after having gloriously fought its battles in the late wars have been disbanded and left without any other means of support than their labour. WATER AND THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF COLONIALISM Water and the Infrastructure of Colonialism. The lack of drinkable water on reserves has become emblematic of the failure of Canadian modernity to deliver even the most basic services for Indigenous peoples, and particularly First Nations on reserves. One of the 2015 election promises made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberalgovernment
SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
PAST AND FUTURE WORLDS: QUEER AND NON-BINARY DYSTOPIAN Flickr Common. Queer authors Bev Prescott and Rivers Solomon remake the future in unique ways through the use of time and history in their dystopian novels. Set in 2092, Prescott’s 2 Degrees painstakingly illustrates climate change by evocating a bygone past, a time before climate change irreparably damaged the global world. REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders.RICHARD YEOMANS
Richard Yeomans is a PhD Candidate at the University of New Brunswick in the department of history. His research explores the development of science and society in nineteenth-century New Brunswick and how scientific and local knowledge shaped policy around resource management. He is also the creator and website manager for atlanticdigitalscholarship.ca, the official website of UNB's THE 2020 ATLANTIC CANADA STUDIES CONFERENCE: CALL FOR The Atlantic Canada Studies Conference is a biennial gathering of scholars whose research focuses on the study of the Atlantic Region of Canada, broadly defined. The University of Maine will be hosting the 2020 meeting of the conference, from May 14-16, at the HutchinsonCenter in Belfast.
NOVA SCOTIA ACADIAN RECORDER Nova Scotia Acadian Recorder, 10 August 1816. Abridged Transcript: At a time like the present when our streets are crowded with numbers of our countrymen, who for want of employment have been forced from their native country, and with others, who after having gloriously fought its battles in the late wars have been disbanded and left without any other means of support than their labour. WATER AND THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF COLONIALISM Water and the Infrastructure of Colonialism. The lack of drinkable water on reserves has become emblematic of the failure of Canadian modernity to deliver even the most basic services for Indigenous peoples, and particularly First Nations on reserves. One of the 2015 election promises made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberalgovernment
MONITORING AND EVALUATING CLIMATE COMMUNICATION AND JOIN THE MECCE PROJECT REGIONAL HUB LAUNCH! Share and learn through a growing network supporting global #climateeducation #climatecommunication and #climateaction. The Monitoring and Evaluating Climate Communication and Education (MECCE) Project is launching its Regional Hub network this June. The THINKING WITH HISTORY ABOUT THE FUTURE WITH IMMERSIVE This post by Jim Clifford (University of Saskatchewan) and Atif Ghani (Heritage 5G) is the thirteenth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how our thinking about the environment in 2021 might shape the future. #PANDEMICMETHODOLOGIES TWITTER CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 23 hours ago · Conference Programme *indicates presenter for a group Thursday June 24, 2021. 10:00: Jacob Steere-Williams (@steerewilliams), “Pandemic Public(s): At the Intersections of Public Health and Public History”. 10:30: Esyllt Jones (), “Public Health History and Pandemic Policy-Making”. 11:00: BREAK. 11:30: Crystal Gail Fraser (@crystalfraser), Thinking through IndigenousArchives & the
NATURE’S PAST ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND URBAN PARKS Editor’s Note: This post is part of a series that focuses on thematic collections of episodes of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast.Find all the posts in this series here.. Animals, as it turns out, have little respect for the political boundaries established by humans. CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
UNDERWATER MUNITIONS AND THE POLLUTION OF MILITARY Within the context of troops training for combat and faulty cleanup and disposal activities, a serene environment was transformed into a deadly place by a specific form of military pollution: underwater munitions. “Underwater munitions” is a catchall term that defines all types of ammunition, explosives, chemical weapons, and their THE AESTHETIC OF THE NORTHLAND: HOW THE GROUP OF SEVEN This post is part of a series called “The Group of Seven and the History of the Canadian Landscape.”On the 100 th anniversary of the art collective’s founding, this series reads the Group of Seven through an environmental history lens.. Black Bay, August 2020. Photo: Douglas Hunter. After spending several days on my boat in Black Bay in northeastern Georgian Bay in August 2020, I posted THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE MOVEMENT NEEDS BLACK A Canadian EJ and BLM partnership would provide the EJ movement with tools for large-scale activism in favour of transparency and accountability in all institutions and a critique of White spaces. In turn, BLM would benefit from an understanding of how the social relations of oppression affect Black folks, include environmentalmarginalization.
“A SALUBRIOUS, SALINE EXHALATION”: FOG AND HEALTH IN In contrast, the fog in Nova Scotia, although bewildering, was “still considered by the inhabitants as a salubrious, saline exhalation.”. Photo Sara Spike. Not only was the Nova Scotian fog not dangerous to those who breathed it in, it was actively healthy. The ladies were relatively unconcerned about their hatsbecause, as they
VACCINES AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY OF MEDICINE Vaccines and the Environmental History of Medicine - March 18, 2015. Doctoral Study Opportunity – Northern Exposures at the University of Alberta - January 15, 2015. Carnivorous Walrus as Country Food - May 6, 2013. New Tools for Climate History from the Early Canada Environmental Data Project - November 30, 2012. NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENTABOUTSUBSCRIBEPUBLICATIONSTHE OTTER ~ LA LOUTREPROJECTSEVENTS Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and NATURE’S PAST ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND URBAN PARKS Editor’s Note: This post is part of a series that focuses on thematic collections of episodes of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast.Find all the posts in this series here.. Animals, as it turns out, have little respect for the political boundaries established by humans. CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
TEDIUM, TINS AND TURBINES: SLEEPWALKING IN DOGGERLAND Tedium, tins and turbines: Sleepwalking in Doggerland. This post by Elliot Honeybun-Arnolda and Reuben Martens is the ninth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how ourthinking about
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
PERSONNALITÉ JURIDIQUE DE LA RIVIÈRE MAGPIE / …TRANSLATE THIS PAGE Personnalité juridique de la Rivière Magpie / Muteshekau Shipu: une premiere au Canada. En février 2021, une action conjointe menée par la Municipalité régionale de comté (MRC) de Minganie et le Conseil des Innus d’Ekuanitshit 1 a marqué un tournant en ce qui concerne la perception des rivières au Québec et au Canada : à travers REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENTABOUTSUBSCRIBEPUBLICATIONSTHE OTTER ~ LA LOUTREPROJECTSEVENTS Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders have WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and NATURE’S PAST ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND URBAN PARKS Editor’s Note: This post is part of a series that focuses on thematic collections of episodes of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast.Find all the posts in this series here.. Animals, as it turns out, have little respect for the political boundaries established by humans. CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
TEDIUM, TINS AND TURBINES: SLEEPWALKING IN DOGGERLAND Tedium, tins and turbines: Sleepwalking in Doggerland. This post by Elliot Honeybun-Arnolda and Reuben Martens is the ninth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how ourthinking about
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
PERSONNALITÉ JURIDIQUE DE LA RIVIÈRE MAGPIE / …TRANSLATE THIS PAGE Personnalité juridique de la Rivière Magpie / Muteshekau Shipu: une premiere au Canada. En février 2021, une action conjointe menée par la Municipalité régionale de comté (MRC) de Minganie et le Conseil des Innus d’Ekuanitshit 1 a marqué un tournant en ce qui concerne la perception des rivières au Québec et au Canada : à travers REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENT Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and MONITORING AND EVALUATING CLIMATE COMMUNICATION AND 1 day ago · JOIN THE MECCE PROJECT REGIONAL HUB LAUNCH! Share and learn through a growing network supporting global #climateeducation #climatecommunication and #climateaction. The Monitoring and Evaluating Climate Communication and Education (MECCE) Project is launching its Regional Hub network this June. The THE GLENGARRY CAIRN NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE AND THE MAKING Editor’s Note: This post by Katie Louise McCullough is the second installment in the Parks and Profit series, which explores the complex relationship between profit and parks historically and in present-day. Looking at the history of the Glengarry Cairn, McCullough highlights an example of how the Canadian government used the park-making process to profit off of Indigenous dispossession.FELIX – NICHE
21 hours ago · Editor’s Note: This piece of magical realism by William Thompson is the third installment in the Parks and Profit series, which explores the complex relationship between profit and parks historically and in present-day. The story of Felix speaks to the critical tension between preservation and providing “a good show” for tourists in national parks that negatively affects bears,like Bear
THE CHICAGO RIVER: A TRANSNATIONAL MATRIX OF PLACE The Chicago River is one of those little rivers that has a big history. This is largely because a megalopolis grew up around it. Indeed, the humble fluvial characteristics of this river belie what we call a “technological matrix of place.” In this post, we’ll discuss some of the themes we BORDERLINE CONCLUSIONS: STUDYING BORDERLANDS IN THE Why study borderlands in the Canadian North? The Northern Borders and Boundaries series has sought to answer this question and demonstrate the value of a borderlands lens for the North. The North has received scant attention – as Heather Green and Jonathan Luedee showed in their introductory essay to this series – in a field of flourishing of scholarship related to the 49 th parallel and HERITAGE TREES & GAY CRUISING IN THE 1980S The podcast of the Edmonton City as Museum Project tells the stories of the people, places, things, and moments that make Edmonton. Each episode examines aspects of Edmonton’s past with contributions from local historians, professors, enthusiastsWILLIAM THOMPSON
21 hours ago · Content published by William Thompson. Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. / About UNDERWATER MUNITIONS AND THE POLLUTION OF MILITARY Within the context of troops training for combat and faulty cleanup and disposal activities, a serene environment was transformed into a deadly place by a specific form of military pollution: underwater munitions. “Underwater munitions” is a catchall term that defines all types of ammunition, explosives, chemical weapons, and theirSEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders haveBACK TO THE ISLAND
And Prince Edward Island in the 1970s was a good place to do it. The Island had a long tradition not only of small farming, but also of rural exodus. The population had shrunk every decade of the previous century (the 1970s would reverse that trend, thanks in part to the back-to-the-landers). There CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
RICHARD YEOMANS
Richard Yeomans is a PhD Candidate at the University of New Brunswick in the department of history. His research explores the development of science and society in nineteenth-century New Brunswick and how scientific and local knowledge shaped policy around resource management. He is also the creator and website manager for atlanticdigitalscholarship.ca, the official website of UNB's REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. VACCINES AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY OF MEDICINE Vaccines and the Environmental History of Medicine - March 18, 2015. Doctoral Study Opportunity – Northern Exposures at the University of Alberta - January 15, 2015. Carnivorous Walrus as Country Food - May 6, 2013. New Tools for Climate History from the Early Canada Environmental Data Project - November 30, 2012. NOVA SCOTIA ACADIAN RECORDER Nova Scotia Acadian Recorder, 10 August 1816. Abridged Transcript: At a time like the present when our streets are crowded with numbers of our countrymen, who for want of employment have been forced from their native country, and with others, who after having gloriously fought its battles in the late wars have been disbanded and left without any other means of support than their labour. WATER AND THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF COLONIALISM Water and the Infrastructure of Colonialism. The lack of drinkable water on reserves has become emblematic of the failure of Canadian modernity to deliver even the most basic services for Indigenous peoples, and particularly First Nations on reserves. One of the 2015 election promises made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberalgovernment
SEASPIRACY REVIEW
Seaspiracy in the Faroe Islands. One of the final scenes of Seaspiracy—in which Tabrizi and his partner Lucy visit the Faroe Islands—gives viewers a chance to better understand artisanal whaling, specifically, and sustainability, more generally, through a glimpse into the lives of one of the most maligned maritime groups in the world.Every year for a thousand years the Faroe Islanders haveBACK TO THE ISLAND
And Prince Edward Island in the 1970s was a good place to do it. The Island had a long tradition not only of small farming, but also of rural exodus. The population had shrunk every decade of the previous century (the 1970s would reverse that trend, thanks in part to the back-to-the-landers). There CANADIAN NAUTICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY 2021 CFP AND AWARDS The 2021 CNRS-SCRN Conference will be held Thursday 10 and Friday 11 June 2021, and the Annual General Meeting on Saturday 12 June 2021. The Canadian Nautical Research Society/Société Canadienne Pour la Recherche Nautique will hold its annual conference 10-11 June 2021. The conference theme will be Canada’s Pacific Gateway, past presentand
HARD TIMES IN CANADA: WHAT BUTTERGATE REVEALS First, buttergate reveals massive shifts in the role of tropical oils in butter politics. Second, its emergence demonstrates the continued significance of the senses in how consumers come to know and understand foods in contemporary times. Before buttergate melts away, it is worth placing in historical perspective. UNNATURAL DEATH: THE VANCOUVER WATERFRONT IN 1913 On the morning of May 28, 1913, members of the Vancouver Police Department were searching the waterfront for a murderer. A sergeant had found the body of Constable James Archibald in a brush-covered vacant lot one block inland from the Vancouver waterfront at nine o’clock that morning. Archibald had missed a scheduled check-in andhis fellow
RICHARD YEOMANS
Richard Yeomans is a PhD Candidate at the University of New Brunswick in the department of history. His research explores the development of science and society in nineteenth-century New Brunswick and how scientific and local knowledge shaped policy around resource management. He is also the creator and website manager for atlanticdigitalscholarship.ca, the official website of UNB's REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders. VACCINES AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY OF MEDICINE Vaccines and the Environmental History of Medicine - March 18, 2015. Doctoral Study Opportunity – Northern Exposures at the University of Alberta - January 15, 2015. Carnivorous Walrus as Country Food - May 6, 2013. New Tools for Climate History from the Early Canada Environmental Data Project - November 30, 2012. NOVA SCOTIA ACADIAN RECORDER Nova Scotia Acadian Recorder, 10 August 1816. Abridged Transcript: At a time like the present when our streets are crowded with numbers of our countrymen, who for want of employment have been forced from their native country, and with others, who after having gloriously fought its battles in the late wars have been disbanded and left without any other means of support than their labour. WATER AND THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF COLONIALISM Water and the Infrastructure of Colonialism. The lack of drinkable water on reserves has become emblematic of the failure of Canadian modernity to deliver even the most basic services for Indigenous peoples, and particularly First Nations on reserves. One of the 2015 election promises made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberalgovernment
NICHE – NETWORK IN CANADIAN HISTORY & ENVIRONMENT Network in Canadian History and Environment | Nouvelle initiative Canadienne en histoire de l'environnement is licensed under a CreativeCommons Attribution
WRITING HEALTH AND HISTORY DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC When we started writing about the McIntyre Research Foundation and its silicosis ‘cure’ in 2016, we could not have predicted that our article would be published in the midst of a global (lung health) pandemic. Nor did we anticipate the degree to which rhetoric, paternalism, misinformation, and THINKING WITH HISTORY ABOUT THE FUTURE WITH IMMERSIVE 4 hours ago · This post by Jim Clifford (University of Saskatchewan) and Atif Ghani (Heritage 5G) is the thirteenth post in a series on Environmental Histories of the Future, in which scholars from the environmental humanities explore how people in the past imagined and crafted their own environmental futures, and how our thinking about the environment in 2021 might shape the future. THE GLENGARRY CAIRN NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE AND THE MAKING 1 day ago · Editor’s Note: This post by Katie Louise McCullough is the second installment in the Parks and Profit series, which explores the complex relationship between profit and parks historically and in present-day. Looking at the history of the Glengarry Cairn, McCullough highlights an example of how the Canadian government used the park-making process to profit off of Indigenous dispossession. REVIEW OF ROUTLEDGE, DO YOU SEE ICE? Karen Routledge, Do You See Ice? Inuit and Americans at Home and Away. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018. 272 pgs. ISBN 9780226580135. Reviewed by Heather Green. Do You See Ice? presents a beautifully written history of cultural encounter in the Arctic from1850 to
BORDERLINE CONCLUSIONS: STUDYING BORDERLANDS IN THE Why study borderlands in the Canadian North? The Northern Borders and Boundaries series has sought to answer this question and demonstrate the value of a borderlands lens for the North. The North has received scant attention – as Heather Green and Jonathan Luedee showed in their introductory essay to this series – in a field of flourishing of scholarship related to the 49 th parallel and HERITAGE TREES & GAY CRUISING IN THE 1980S 1 day ago · The podcast of the Edmonton City as Museum Project tells the stories of the people, places, things, and moments that make Edmonton. Each episode examines aspects of Edmonton’s past with contributions from local historians, professors, enthusiasts GREEN PLACES AND THIRD SPACES DURING AND AFTER COVID-19 Green places and third spaces during and after COVID-19. This post by Samantha Cutrara is the tenth in a series asking how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected, or might affect, research, writing, and scholarly work in the environmental humanities. I live close to a large ravine system. I moved to this location specifically to haveaccess to
REVIEW OF “THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE WATER” I recently attended a screening of the new Ellen Page and Ian Daniel documentary There’s Something in the Water at the Halifax Black Film Festival (#HBFF2020). The documentary focuses on environmental racism in rural Nova Scotia and acts as a critique of industry and the inaction of provincial politicians and leaders.KATIE MCCULLOUGH
1 day ago · Historian of economic and social development in the Highlands and Islands of Canada and Scottish colonization of early Canada. Katie's forthcoming co-authored book Mohawks and Scots in Early Canada will be published with Edinburgh University Press.* About
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A NEAR AND ARID FUTURE: BARBARA SAPERGIA’S NOVEL, DRY June 2, 2021June 1, 20218
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