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Civilian internment in canada : histories and legacies

https://archives.whyte.org/en/permalink/catalogue25512
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2020
Publisher
Winnipeg, Manitoba : University of Manitoba Press
Call Number
08.1 H58c
Responsibility
Edited by Rhonda L. Hinther and Jim Mochoruk
Publisher
Winnipeg, Manitoba : University of Manitoba Press
Published Date
2020
Physical Description
414 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
World War, 1914-1918
World War, 1939-1945
Internment Camps
Ukrainians
Japanese
Memory
Public History
Abstract
Civilian Internment in Canada examines abuse of the civil rights and liberties of tens of thousands of Canadians and Canadian residents via internment from 1914 to the present day. This ongoing story spans both war and peacetime and has affected people from a wide variety of political backgrounds and ethno-cultural communities, bequeathing a complex legacy for survivors and their descendants. Despite the well-known impounding of tens of thousands of Japanese, Ukrainians, assorted eastern Europeans, Germans, and Italians as "enemy aliens" during the two World Wars, civilian internment in this country has not been widely discussed, particularly in comparative ways. Indeed, there has been a propensity to sweep these events under the proverbial rug, keeping them out of the national discourse. Civilian Internment in Canada brings together senior scholars in the field of internment and civil liberties studies with emerging scholars, graduate students, community members, teachers, public historians, artists, former internees, descendants of internees, and redress activists to examine the processes and consequences of civilian internment during real and perceived wartime contexts, ranging from the Great War to the Cold War to the "War on Terror." It demonstrates the ways in which "shared authority" between scholars and subjects can both reshape our understanding of crucial episodes in Canada's history and bring a sense of vibrancy and immediacy to the all-too current question of civil liberties and minority rights in today's security state. -- from back cover
Contents
The rule of law and human rights in the twenty-first century / Dennis Edney ; Human rights and the politics of freedom: civilian internment in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights / Jodi Giesbrecht ; Reinserting radicalism: Canada's first national internment operations, the Ukrainian left, and the politics of redress / Kassandra Luciuk ; Collateral damage: the defence of Canada regulations, civilian internement, ethnicity, and left-wing institutions / Jim Mochoruk ; An unprecedented dichotomy: impacts and consequences of Serbian internment in Canada during the Great War / Marinel Mandres ; The ex-minister and the fascist: a tale of two RCMP informants during the Second World War / Travis Tomchuk ; "Camp boys": privacy and the sexual self / Christine Whitehouse ; "Likely to be hampered and so she prepared for the worst": far left women and political incarceration during the Second World War / Rhonda L. Hinther ; Informal internment: Japanese Canadian farmers in southern Alberta, 1941-1945 / Aya Fujiwara ; Destroying the myth of quietism: strikes, riots, protest, and resistance in Japanese internment / Mikhail Bjorge ; Japanese Canadian internment: a personal account / Grace Eiko Thomson ; Anecdote and document: the internment experience of Rolf Schultze and Dorothy Caine / Clemence Schultze ; Ukrainian internment during the Second World War: the case of the Ukrainian Labour Farmer Temple Association and Peter Prokopchak / Myron Momryk ; The New Brunswick Internment Camp Museum: preserving the history of Internment Camp B-70 / Ed Caissie and Todd Caissie ; Exhibiting contentious topics: finding a place for the internment violin in the Canadian History Hall / Emily Cuggy and Kathleen Ogilvie ; Civilian internment and the impact of war: legacy and public history / Sharon Reilly ; The paradox of survival: Jewish refugees interned in Canada, 1940-1943 / Paula J. Draper ; Narrating internment, narrating Canada: wartime experiences of German merchant seamen / Judith Kestler ; A numbers game?: stories of suffering in Italian Canadian internment in the Second World War / Franca Iacovetta ; The internment of Japanese Canadians: a human rights violation / Art Miki
ISBN
9780887558450
Accession Number
P2022.02
Call Number
08.1 H58c
Collection
Archives Library
Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Published Date
2021
Author
Torres, J. and Namisato, David
Publisher
Toronto, ON : Kids Can Press Ltd.
Call Number
08.1 T63s
Author
Torres, J. and Namisato, David
Publisher
Toronto, ON : Kids Can Press Ltd.
Published Date
2021
Physical Description
111 pages : chiefly illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Medium
Library - Book (including soft-cover and pamphlets)
Subjects
Internment Camps
Japanese
World War II
World War, 1939-1945
Graphic novel
Abstract
Sandy Saito looks back to his childhood in 1940s Vancouver, when he was eight years old. He's a happy kid: he goes to school, reads comic books and is obsessed with baseball -- especially the Asahi baseball team, the pride of the Japanese-Canadian community. Then the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor -- and everything changes. The kids Sandy used to play with every day now call him names and chase him from the playground. He and his family are no longer permitted to go outside at night or visit certain areas of the city. Japanese-Canadians are stripped of their rights, their jobs and their homes, and soon the government begins to round up Japanese families, sending them to internment camps. It isn't long before Sandy's family is among them. The reader accompanies Sandy on his journey to the camp and the seasons that follow in this historically accurate portrayal of a grave chapter in both Canadian and American history. David Namisato's detailed art depicts the 1940s setting with cultural and historical precision, following Sandy and his family as they are forced to leave their home and relocate to a prison camp comprised of crowded, makeshift barracks in a remote site without electricity or running water. The theme of baseball, Sandy's favorite sport, runs through the story as a message of hope and renewal. -- Provided by publisher
ISBN
9781525303340
Accession Number
P2022.14
Call Number
08.1 T63s
Collection
Archives Library
Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
Date
1860 – 1900
Material
metal
Catalogue Number
104.20.0227
Description
A heavy cast iron teapot of traditional shape with thick hexagonal lip around circular opening at top and small gracefully curved spout from centre at one side. Tall looped handle of metal tapers at ends into lugs on shoulder of pot above spout and on opposite side. Surface beginning 3 cm above rou…
  1 image  
Title
Teapot
Date
1860 – 1900
Material
metal
Dimensions
20.0 x 13.0 x 16.7 cm
Description
A heavy cast iron teapot of traditional shape with thick hexagonal lip around circular opening at top and small gracefully curved spout from centre at one side. Tall looped handle of metal tapers at ends into lugs on shoulder of pot above spout and on opposite side. Surface beginning 3 cm above rough metal of bottom has been polished and etched with a flock of butterflies inlaid with gold, and a similarly worked gold chrysanthemum on each face of the hexagonal lip. Simple flat round bronze lid with plain hollow metal knob screwed into centre on a bed of simple leaves. Inside texture of roughly cast iron; handle contains inlaid butterfly motif. Marks: four Japanese characters under handle opposite spout, engraved Japanese signature underside of lid.
Subject
households
ceremonial
Japanese
Edward S. Morse
Credit
Gift of Catharine Robb Whyte, O. C., Banff, 1979
Catalogue Number
104.20.0227
Images
Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
Date
1860 – 1900
Material
wood
Catalogue Number
104.20.0628
Description
Small rectangular tray with rounded corners. Ridged tray rim is sloped design on surface is incised leaf and teapot with signature incised and stained red, in lower right corner. Furrowed tool marks gouged in bottom of tray around central flat rectangle containing incised calligraphy.
  1 image  
Title
Serving Tray
Date
1860 – 1900
Material
wood
Dimensions
1.4 x 17.3 x 23.8 cm
Description
Small rectangular tray with rounded corners. Ridged tray rim is sloped design on surface is incised leaf and teapot with signature incised and stained red, in lower right corner. Furrowed tool marks gouged in bottom of tray around central flat rectangle containing incised calligraphy.
Subject
households
decorative
Japanese
Edward S. Morse
Credit
Gift of Catharine Robb Whyte, O. C., Banff, 1979
Catalogue Number
104.20.0628
Images
Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
Date
1860 – 1890
Material
wood
Catalogue Number
108.05.0059
Description
Small square wooden box with inlaid top. Box contains another box within concealed by separate removable side panels on all four sides. Inlay pattern is a series of horizontal strips of dark, light and black woods. The horizontals are interrupted by two rectangles. Upper triangle, 6.4 x 2.5 cm.…
  1 image  
Title
Box Puzzle
Date
1860 – 1890
Material
wood
Dimensions
4.7 x 7.5 x 7.5 cm
Description
Small square wooden box with inlaid top. Box contains another box within concealed by separate removable side panels on all four sides. Inlay pattern is a series of horizontal strips of dark, light and black woods. The horizontals are interrupted by two rectangles. Upper triangle, 6.4 x 2.5 cm. is inlaid with thin strips of black set diagonally in both directions. The lower triangle, 3.5 x 3.0 cm, is inlaid with twelve light and black wood triangles. A narrow vertical rectangle, 3.2 x .9 cm. of light wood interrupted by thin horizontal strips of black is set to the left of the lower triangle. The four corner support posts are attached to base by small wooden pegs which are visible on bottom.
Subject
households
playthings
decorative
Japanese
Edward S. Morse
Edith Morse Robb
Credit
Gift of Catharine Robb Whyte, O. C., Banff, 1979
Catalogue Number
108.05.0059
Images
Less detail
This material is presented as originally created; it may contain outdated cultural descriptions and potentially offensive content. Read more.
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