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129 records – page 1 of 13.

Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
1970
Publisher
[N.W.T.] : Canadian Eskimo Arts Council
Call Number
NE542 B3 1970
Publisher
[N.W.T.] : Canadian Eskimo Arts Council
Published Date
1970
Physical Description
[48]p. : ill., ports.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Eskimos - Art
Eskimos - Canada - Prints
Eskimos - Canada - Sculpture
Sculpture, Canadian
Prints - Canada
Notes
Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Edmonton Art Gallery
Text in English, French and Inuktitut
Call Number
NE542 B3 1970
Location
Art Library is located in Curatorial Department - Please contact Curatorial Department for access
Collection
Art Library
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Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
1971
Publisher
N.W.T. : Government of N.W.T.
Call Number
NE542 B3 1971
Publisher
N.W.T. : Government of N.W.T.
Published Date
1971
Physical Description
[52]p. : ill. (some col.), ports.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Eskimos - Art
Eskimos - Canada - Prints
Eskimos - Canada - Sculpture
Sculpture, Canadian
Prints - Canada
Notes
Catalogue of prints from Baker Lake
Text in English, French and Inuktitut
Call Number
NE542 B3 1971
Location
Art Library is located in Curatorial Department - Please contact Curatorial Department for access
Collection
Art Library
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Joe Talirunili : a grace beyond the reach of art

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue20950
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
1977
Author
Myers, Marybelle
Publisher
Ville St. Laurent, Montreal : La Federation de cooperatives du Nouveau-Quebec
Call Number
NE543 T3 M93
Author
Myers, Marybelle
Responsibility
foreword by Marybelle Myers
Publisher
Ville St. Laurent, Montreal : La Federation de cooperatives du Nouveau-Quebec
Published Date
1977
Physical Description
84p. : ill. (some col.), ports.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Eskimos - Art
Eskimos - Canada - Sculpture
Sculpture, Canadian
Eskimos - Canada - Prints
Prints, Canadian
Eskimos - Canada - Drawing
Drawing
Notes
Collection of art work and stories by Joe Talirunili
Text in English and Inuktitut
Call Number
NE543 T3 M93
Location
Art Library is located in Curatorial Department - Please contact Curatorial Department for access
Collection
Art Library
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The American Western in Canadian literature

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue25703
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2022
Author
Deshaye, Joel
Publisher
Calgary, Alberta : University of Calgary Press
Call Number
08.1 D45t
Author
Deshaye, Joel
Publisher
Calgary, Alberta : University of Calgary Press
Published Date
2022
Physical Description
x, 414 pages ; 23 cm.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Nationalism
Literature
Canada
Canada - Western Region
History
American
Abstract
The first historically broad and in-depth study of the Canadian Western, its relationship to the American genre, and its shifting place within Canada's national and regional literary traditions. The Western, with its stoic cowboys and quickhanded gunslingers, is an instantly recognizable American genre that has achieved worldwide success. Cultures around the world have embraced but also adapted and critiqued the Western as part of their own national literatures, reinterpreting and expanding the genre in curious ways. Canadian Westerns are almost always in conversation with their American cousins, influenced by their tropes and traditions, responding to their politics, and repurposing their structures to create a national literary tradition. The American Western in Canadian Literature examines over a century of the development of the Canadian Western as it responds to the American Western, to evolving literary trends, and to regional, national, and international change. Beginning with Indigenous perspectives on the genre, it moves from early manifestations of the Western in Christian narratives of personal and national growth, and its controversial pulp-fictional popularity in the 1940s, to its postmodern and contemporary critiques, pushing the boundary of the Western to include Northerns, Northwesterns, and post-Westerns in literature, film, and wider cultural imagery. The American Western in Canadian Literature is more than a simple history. It uses genre theory to comment on historical perspectives on nation and region. It includes overviews of Indigenous and settler-colonial critiques of the Western, challenging persistent attitudes to Indigenous people and their traditional territories that are endemic to the genre. It illuminates the way that the Canadian Western enshrines, hagiographies, and ultimately desacralizes aspects of Canadian life, from car culture to extractive industries to assumptions about a Canadian moral high ground. This is a comprehensive, highly readable, and fascinating study of an underexamined genre.-- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Introduction. Signposts and scales -- Scaling and spacing the genre transnationalism, nationalism, and regionalism -- Tom King's John Wayne Indigenous perspectives on the Western -- Northwestern Cross Christianity and Transnationalism in early Canadian westerns -- From law to outlaw -- Second World War, westerns, and the '40s pulps -- CanLit's postmodern westerns ghosts and the cowgirl riding off into the sunrise -- Degeneration through violence contemporary historical westerns and post-human horsemen -- Conclusion mining the western in the Twenty-First Century.
ISBN
9781773852676
Accession Number
P2023.07
Call Number
08.1 D45t
Collection
Archives Library
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Canadian political cartoons

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue20589
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
1977
Author
Bovey, Patricia E.
Publisher
Winnipeg : Winnipeg Art Gallery
Call Number
NC1447 W5 W56
Author
Bovey, Patricia E.
Responsibility
Patricia E. Bovey
Publisher
Winnipeg : Winnipeg Art Gallery
Published Date
1977
Physical Description
55p. : ill.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Caricatures and cartoons - Canada - Exhibitions
Canada - Politics and government - Caricatures and cartoons - Exhibitions
Notes
Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, and travelling to other museums
Includes bibliographical references
Call Number
NC1447 W5 W56
Location
Art Library is located in Curatorial Department - Please contact Curatorial Department for access
Collection
Art Library
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Cigarette nation : business, health, and Canadian smokers, 1930-1975

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue26246
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2021
Author
Robinson, Daniel J.
Publisher
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press
Call Number
08.1 R56c
Author
Robinson, Daniel J.
Publisher
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press
Published Date
2021
Physical Description
xiii, 338 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Canada
History-Canada
Health
Health and Social Development
Health and wellness
Drugs
Marketing
Abstract
In the 1950s, the causal link between smoking and lung cancer surfaced in medical journals and mainstream media. Yet the best years for the Canadian cigarette industry were still to come, as per capita cigarette consumption rose steadily in the 1960s and 1970s. In Cigarette Nation, Daniel Robinson examines the vibrant and contentious history of smoking to discover why Canadians continued to light up despite the publicized health risks. Highlighting the prolific marketing and advertising practices that helped make smoking a staple of everyday life, Robinson explores socio-cultural aspects of cigarette use from the 1930s to the 1950s and recounts the views and actions of tobacco executives, government officials, and Canadian smokers as they responded to mounting evidence that cigarette use was harmful. The persistence of smoking owes to such factors as product development, marketing and retailing innovation, public relations, sponsored science, and government inaction. Domestic and international tobacco firms worked to furnish Canadian smokers with hope and doubt - hope in the form of reassuring marketing, as seen with light and mild cigarette brands, and doubt by means of disinformation campaigns attacking medical research and press accounts that aligned cigarettes with serious disease. Drawing on a wide range of primary sources, including thousands of industry records released during a landmark tobacco class-action trial in 2015, Cigarette Nation documents in rich detail the history of one of Canada's foremost public health issues. -- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Depression-era cigarette marketing and smoking culture -- The gift of wartime cigarettes -- The incomparable cigarette -- Taxes, public smoking, and lung cancer -- Hope and doubt -- Marketing bonanza -- The view from Ottawa.
ISBN
9780228005322
Accession Number
P2024.02
Call Number
08.1 R56c
Collection
Archives Library
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Cornelius Krieghoff

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue20694
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
1973
Author
de Jouvancourt, Hugues
Publisher
Toronto : Musson Books
Call Number
ND249 K7 J6
Author
de Jouvancourt, Hugues
Responsibility
Hugues de Jouvancourt
Publisher
Toronto : Musson Books
Published Date
1973
Physical Description
144p. : facsims (some col.), ports.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Artists - Canada - Biography - 19th century
Painters - Canada - Biography - 19th century
Krieghoff, Cornelius, 1815-1872
Call Number
ND249 K7 J6
Location
Art Library is located in Curatorial Department - Please contact Curatorial Department for access
Collection
Art Library
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Dark days at noon : the future of fire

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue26239
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2022
Author
Struzik, Edward
Publisher
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press
Call Number
04 St8d
Author
Struzik, Edward
Publisher
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press
Published Date
2022
Physical Description
ix, 291 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour), colour map ; 27 cm
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Canada
Environment
Climate change
Climate
Politics
History
History-Canada
Fire ecology
Abstract
The catastrophic runaway wildfires advancing through North America and other parts of the world are not unprecedented. Fires loomed large once human activity began to warm the climate in the 1820s, leading to an aggressive firefighting strategy that has left many of the continent's forests too old and vulnerable to the fires that many tree species need to regenerate. Dark Days at Noon provides a broad history of wildfire in North America, from pre-European contact to the present, in the hopes that we may learn from how we managed fire in the past, and apply those lessons in the future. As people continue to move into forested landscapes to work, play, live, and ignite fires--intentionally or unintentionally--fire has begun to take its toll, burning entire towns, knocking out utilities, closing roads, and forcing the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of people. Fire management in North America requires attention and cooperation from both sides of the border, and many of the most significant fires have taken place at the boundary line. Despite a clear lack of political urgency among political leaders, Edward Struzik argues that wildfire science needs to guide the future of fire management, and that those same leaders need to shape public perception accordingly. By explaining how society's misguided response to fire has led to our current situation, Dark Days at Noon warns of what may happen in the future if we do not learn to live with fire as the continent's Indigenous Peoples once did. -- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Introduction -- 1. Prelude to the dark days at noon -- 2. The fire triangle -- 3. More dark days coming -- 4. The big burn -- 5. Big burns in Canada -- 6. Paiute forestry -- 7. Fire suppression -- 8. The Civilian Conservation Corps -- 9. Canada's Conservation Corps -- 10. The fall of the Dominion Forest Service -- 11. The royal commission into wildfire -- 12. White man's fire -- 13. International co-operation -- 14. Blue moon and blue sun -- 15. Nuclear winter -- 16. Yellowstone: A turning point -- 17. Big and small grizzlies -- 18. Climate and the age of megafire -- 19. The holy shit fire -- 20. The Pyrocene -- 21. Nuclear winter: Part two -- 22. Owls and clear-cuts -- 23. Water on fire -- 24. The Arctic on fire -- 25. The big smoke -- 26. Fire news -- Conclusion.
ISBN
9780228012092
Accession Number
P2024.02
Call Number
04 St8d
Collection
Archives Library
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Decolonizing sport

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue26241
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2023
Publisher
Halifax ; Winnipeg : Fernwood Publishing
Call Number
07.2 F77d
Responsibility
Edited by Janice Forsyth, Christine O'Bonsawin, Russell Field, and Murray G. Phillips
Publisher
Halifax ; Winnipeg : Fernwood Publishing
Published Date
2023
Physical Description
xi, 276 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Canada
History-Canada
Education
Sport
Indigenous
Indigenous Culture
Indigenous People
Indigenous Traditions
Indigenous Customs
Abstract
The path to decolonization is difficult and complex, and can even be contradictory at times, as when an Indigenous community enlists the same corporate sponsor that will destroy its natural environment to provide sport programming for its youth. There is no easy way forward. The Black Lives Matter movement, and their massive followers on social media, propelled forward discussions about the inequities that Covid-19 highlighted with unprecedented momentum. Indigenous people in Canada voiced their concerns in solidarity, calling attention to disparities they faced in everything from impoverished Indigenous health care initiatives to the overrepresentation of Indigenous people in the Canadian justice system, demanding to be heard alongside systemic change. Structural adjustments were afoot, including changes in the professional sport leagues. In both the United States and Canada, people witnessed the toppling of racist sports team names and logos in the spring and summer, not the least of which included the American Washington NFL team (Redskins) and the Canadian Edmonton CFL team (Eskimos). Clearly Indigenous people and their allies saw sport as a part of this desire for social change. This multi-authored collection contributes to that desire by bringing the work of Indigenous and non-Indigenous allied scholars together to explore the history of sport, physical activity, and embodied physical culture in the Indigenous context. Including chapters that address Indigenous topics beyond the political boundaries of Canada, including the US, Australia, New Zealand/Aotearoa, and Kenya, this collection considers questions such as: How can the history of sport (a colonizing practice with European origins) exist in dialogue with Indigenous voices to open up possibilities for reconsidering the history of modern sport? How can Indigenous and anti-oppressive research methodologies/methods inform the study of sport history? What are the ethics and responsibilities associated with conducting an Indigenous sport or recreation history? How can sport history as a discipline be open to the study of traditional land-based recreation? How can the meanings of "sport" be made more inclusive to include a variety of recreational practices? How can sport historians learn from histories of colonization and how can they contribute to a more reciprocal approach to knowledge formation through Indigenous community engagement? How can the discipline of sport history meaningfully support movements of Indigenous resurgence, regeneration, and decolonization? -- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Ways of knowing: sport, colonialism, and decolonization / Janice Forsyth, Christine O'Bonsawin, Russell Field -- Beyond competition: an Indigenous perspective on organized sport / Brian Rice -- More than a mascot: how the mascot debate erases Indigenous people in sport / Natalie Welch -- Witnessing painful pasts: understanding images of sports at Canadian Indian residential schools / Taylor McKee and Janice Forsyth -- The absence of Indigenous moving bodies: whiteness and decolonizing sport history / Malcolm MacLean -- # 87: using Wikipedia for sport reconciliation / Victoria Paraschak -- Olympism at face value: the legal feasibility of Indigenous-led Olympic Games / Christine O'Bonsawin -- Canoe racing to fishing guides: sport and settler colonialism in Mi'kma'ki / John Reid -- Transcending colonialism?: rodeos and racing in Lethbridge / Robert Kossuth -- "Men pride themselves on feats of endurance": masculinities and movement cultures in Kenyan running history / Michelle M. Sikes -- Stealing, drinking, and not cooperating: sport and everyday resistance in Aboriginal settlements in Australia / Gary Osmond -- Let's make baseball!: practices of unsettling on the recreational ball diamonds of Tkaronto/Toronto / Craig Fortier and Colin Hastings -- Subjugating and liberating at once: Indigenous sport history as a double-edge sword / Brendan Hokowhitu.
ISBN
9781773636344
Accession Number
P2024.02
Call Number
07.2 F77d
Collection
Archives Library
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Educating the body : a history of physical education in Canada

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue26240
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2024
Author
Hall, M. Ann, Kidd, Bruce and Vertinsky, Patricia
Publisher
Toronto ; Buffalo ; London : University of Toronto Press
Call Number
08.1 H14e
Author
Hall, M. Ann, Kidd, Bruce and Vertinsky, Patricia
Publisher
Toronto ; Buffalo ; London : University of Toronto Press
Published Date
2024
Physical Description
xvi, 305 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Canada
Politics
History
History-Canada
Education
Sport
Abstract
The thesis of this work sets out a history of physical education in Canada with a focus on the major advocates, innovators, and institutions that helped shaped it. This work places the historical narrative within the social, economic, and political conditions that impacted institutions, advocates, and innovators as they influenced the formulation of state physical education schooling in Canada between the Ryerson era (1803-1882) and ending with the early decades of the 21st century. The title of the work, "Educating the Body" recognizes that "the body" has its own unique vocabulary and analysis, and as such, reflects the authors' belief that physical education curriculum should ideally enable the learner to direct their own discovery of body agency (and the joy of movement) in ways that are creative, self-expressive and true to their lived body experience. As the work demonstrates, however, waves of state-directed physical education curriculum each held their own agenda about how the "ideal" child and adolescent body should be trained within the context of hegemonic paradigms of dominance and control. The work is framed around three major developments that shape the analysis: a) the significant growth of critical, social scientific research about physical education and sport during the last 50 years (through the lens of social, material, feminist, post-structuralist and queer theory); b) the tensions underlying the evolution of kinesiology and the "displacement" (p. 13) of physical education as a school subject; and c) evidence from the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. -- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Ryerson and His Vision -- Towards a Pan-Canadian Curriculum -- The Margaret Eaton School: Forty Years of Women's Physical Education -- Fit for Living -- Setting a Heroic Agenda--Realizing the Possibilities -- Changing Times and New Initiatives -- Seeking Optimism in a Contested Field.
ISBN
9781487508562
Accession Number
P2024.02
Call Number
08.1 H14e
Collection
Archives Library
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129 records – page 1 of 13.

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