Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Spring/Summer 2009
CONTENTS SERIES SERIES
Rites of Way
The Politics and Poetics of Public Space
Mark Kingwell and Patrick Turmel, editors
There are many ways to approach the subject of public space: the threats posed to it by sur-
veillance and visual pollution; the joys it offers of stimulation and excitement, of anonymity
and transformation; its importance to urban variety or democratic politics. But public space
remains an evanescent and multidimensional concept that too often escapes scrutiny.
The essays in Rites of Way: The Politics and Poetics of Public Space open up mul-
tiple dimensions of the concept from architectural, political, philosophical, and technological
points of view. There is some historical analysis here, but the contributors are more focused
on the future of public space under conditions of growing urbanization and democratic con-
fusion. The added interest offered by non-academic work—visual art, fiction, poetry, and
drama—is in part an admission that this is a topic too important to be left only to theorists.
It also makes an implicit argument for the crucial role that art, not just public art, plays in a
thriving public realm.
Throughout this work contributors are guided by the conviction, not pious but steely,
that healthy public space is one of the best, living parts of a just society. The paths of desire
we follow in public trace and speak our convictions and needs, our interests and foibles.
They are the vectors and walkways of the social, the public dimension of life lying at the
CONTENTS
heart of all politics.
Introduction | Mark Kingwell and Patrick Turmel
Masters of Chancery: The Gift of Public Space |
Mark Kingwell is a professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto and a contributing Mark Kingwell
We Wuz Robbed (comic) | Joe Alterio
editor of Harper’s Magazine. He is the author of eleven books of political and cultural theory,
Public Space: Lost and Found | Ken Greenberg
including most recently, Concrete Reveries: Consciousness and the City (2008). He is the Architecture and Public Space | Alberto Pérez-Gómez
recipient of the Spitz Prize in political theory, National Magazine Awards for both essays The Enduring Presence of the Phenomenon of “the Public”:
and columns, and in 2000 was awarded an honorary DFA from the Nova Scotia College of Thoughts from the Arena of Architecture and
Urban Design | George Baird
Art & Design for contributions to theory and criticism. His next book, a collection of his
Excerpt from Private Jokes, Public Places | Oren Safdie
essays on art and philosophy called Opening Gambits, will appear in Fall 2009. Holistic Democracy and Physical Public Space |
John Parkinson
Public Spaces and Subversion | Frank Cunningham
Patrick Turmel is an assistant professor of philosophy at Université Laval. His main research
Never Trust a City Where the Streets Don’t Shut Down: When
interests are in moral and political philosophy. He has published articles in ethics and on People Take over the Streets and the City Goes Liminal |
issues pertaining to cities and justice. He is also co-editor of Penser les institutions (Presses Shawn Micaleff
The Return of Beauty | Nick Mount
de l’Université Laval).
Excerpt from How Insensitive | Russell Smith
Protect the Net: The Looming Destruction of the Global
Communications Environment | Ron Deibert
The City as Public Space | Patrick Turmel
Excerpt from Seven Walks from the Office for Soft
Architecture | Lisa Robertson
In recent years, breastfeeding has been prominently in the public eye in relation to debates
on issues ranging from parental leave policies, work–family balance, public decency, the
safety of our food supply, and public health concerns such as health care costs and the
obesity “epidemic.”
Breastfeeding has officially been considered “the one best way” for feeding infants
for the past 150 years of Canadian history. This book examines the history and evolution of
breastfeeding policies and practices in Canada from the end of the nineteenth century to
the turn of the twenty-first. The authors’ historical approach allows current debates to be
situated within a broader social, political, cultural, and economic context.
Breastfeeding shifted from a private matter to a public concern at the end of the
nineteenth century. Over the course of the next century, the “best” way to feed infants
was often scientifically or politically determined, and guidelines for mothers shifted from
one generation to the next. Drawing upon government reports, academic journals, archival
sources, and interviews with policy-makers and breastfeeding advocates, the authors trace
trends, patterns, ideologies, and policies of breastfeeding in Canada.
Tasnim Nathoo completed her graduate studies in health care and epidemiology and social
work at the University of British Columbia. She currently works in the areas of reproduc-
tive health, mental health and addictions, and social policy. Her research interests include
health theory, integrated medicine, and the relationship between individual experience and
broader social change.
Aleck Ostry is a professor at the University of Victoria. He is a Canada Research Chair and
holds a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Senior Scholar Award. He is an
epidemiologist and historian and conducts a broad research program on the social determi-
nants of health, with a focus on nutrition policy and food security.
Bearing Witness
Living with Ovarian Cancer
Kathryn Carter and Laurie Elit, editors
Storytelling is an important art form present in many cultures: it is a way of processing life
events, of searching for meaning, and of allowing the teller and the listener to wrestle with
the message. It is a form of teaching and learning.
Bearing Witness is a collection of stories from women who went through the initial
diagnosis and treatment of ovarian cancer only to find that the cancer recurred and that cure
was no longer an option. These women represent a spectrum of ages, ethnic backgrounds,
marital circumstances, and professional experiences. From their stories, we learn how each
shapes the meaning of her life. Facing a life crisis can make one bitter and angry, but it can
also provide the key to a thankful and generous spirit within.
For the women in Bearing Witness, the stories are tangible legacies for family and
friends and a chance to share their choice of living with the “glass half full.” They inspire
the reader to reflect on life’s struggles and to find within themselves a sense of optimism,
perhaps when they least expect to.
The concluding critical essay places these stories in the context of contemporary
discourses of illness and healing.
Kathryn Carter is acting dean at Laurier Brantford where she has taught English and
contemporary studies. Her research on women’s diaries led to an edited collection,
The Small Details of Life: Twenty Diaries by Women in Canada: 1830–1996 (2002), and
recent articles address the 1830 letter journal of Frances Simpson (in Australian-Canadian
Studies), the 1930s diary of Myrtle Gamble Knister (in the Journal of Canadian Studies), and
diaries written by schoolgirls in Canada at the end of the nineteenth century (in Canadian
Children’s Literature). Another article on the 1830s journal letters of Mary Gapper O’Brien
is forthcoming.
National Plots
Historical Fiction and Changing Ideas of Canada
Andrea Cabajsky and Brett Joseph Grubisic, editors
Fiction that reconsiders, challenges, reshapes, and/or upholds national narratives of history
has long been an integral aspect of Canadian literature. Works by writers of historical fiction
(from early practitioners such as John Richardson to contemporary figures such as Alice
Munro and George Elliott Clarke) propose new views and understandings of Canadian his-
tory and individual relationships to it. Critical evaluation of these works sheds light on the
complexity of these depictions.
The contributors in National Plots: Historical Fiction and Changing Ideas of Canada
critically examine texts with subject matter ranging from George Vancouver’s west coast
explorations to the eradication of the Beothuk in Newfoundland. Reflecting diverse meth-
odologies and theoretical approaches, the essays seek to explicate depictions of “the his-
torical” in individual texts and to explore larger questions relating to historical fiction as a
genre with complex and divergent political motivations and goals. Although the topics of
the essays vary widely, as a whole the collection raises (and answers) questions about the
significance of the roles historical fiction has played within Canadian culture for nearly two
centuries.
Contents
Andrea Cabajsky is an assistant professor at the Université de Moncton, where she teaches
Introduction: Historical Fiction and Changing Ideas of Canada |
and does research in comparative literature, especially English- and French-Canadian Studies. Andrea Cabajsky and Brett Josef Grubisic
She has published widely on the literary history of nationalism in romantic and Victorian Part I: Forging the New, Grappling with the Old
1. “[A] trading shop so crooked a man could jump through the
Canadian and British literatures and is currently developing the curriculum for an approved
cracks”: Counting the Cost of Fred Stenson’s The Trade in
new master’s program in comparative Canadian literature at the Université de Moncton. the Hudson’s Bay Company Archive | Kathleen Venema
2. Past Lives: Aimée Laberge’s Where the River Narrows and the
Brett Josef Grubisic is a lecturer at the University of British Columbia and specializes in Transgenerational Gene Pool | Cynthia Sugars
3. Narrating the Birth of Region and Nation: Guy Vanderhaeghe’s
contemporary Canadian and UK fiction. His publications include Contra/diction (ed.), Carnal
The Last Crossing | Elspeth Tulloch
Nation (co-edited with Carellin Brooks), the City of Vancouver Book Award finalist The Age 4. State of Shock: History and Crisis in Hugh MacLennan’s
of Cities, and Understanding Beryl Bainbridge. Barometer Rising | Robert David Stacey
5. John Richardson’s Unlikely Narrative of Nationhood: Sport as
Prophecy in Wacousta | Michael Paul Buma
Part II: Postmodern Innovations and Limitations
6. Windigo Killing: Joseph Boyden’s Three Day Road |
Herb Wyile
7. The Racialization of Canadian History: African Canadian
Fiction, 1990–2005 | Pilar Cuder-Domínguez
8. The Orange Devil: Thomas Scott and the Canadian Historical
Novel | Albert Braz
9. Turning the Tables | Aritha van Herk
10. “And they may get it wrong, after all”: Reading Alice Munro’s
“Meneseteung” | Tracy Ware
Part III: Literary Forms, Regional Particularities
11. “To Free Itself, and Find Itself”: Writing a History for the
Prairie West | Claire Campbell
12. “Old Lost Land”: Loss in Newfoundland Historical Fiction |
Paul Chafe
13. Imagining Vancouvers: Burning Waters, Ana Historic, and the
Literary (Un)Settling of the Pacific Coast | Owen D. Percy
14. Too Little Geography, Too Much History: Writing the Balance
July 2009 | Cloth $85.00 in “Meneseteung” | Dennis Duffy
340 pp. | 6 x 9 Contributors
978-1-55458-061-3 Bibliography
Technonatures
Environments, Technologies, Spaces, and
Places in the Twenty-first Century
Damian F. White and Chris Wilbert, editors
The term “technonatures” is in debt to a long line of environmental cultural theory from
Raymond Williams onwards, problematizing the idea that a politics of the environment can
be usefully grounded in terms of the rhetoric of defending the pure, the authentic, or an
idealized past solely in terms of the ecological or the natural. In using the term “techno-
natures” as an organizing myth and metaphor for thinking about the politics of nature in
contemporary times, this collection seeks to explore one increasingly pronounced dimen-
sion of the social natures discussion. Technonatures highlights a growing range of voices
considering the claim that we are not only inhabiting diverse social natures but that within
such natures our knowledge of our worlds is ever more technologically mediated, pro-
Contents
duced, enacted, and contested.
Introduction: Inhabiting Technonatural Space/Times | Damian
White, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI , and
Damian F. White is an assistant professor of sociology in the Department of History, Phi- Chris Wilbert, Anglia Ruskin University, Chelmsford, UK
Part I: Conceptualizing Technonatural Space Times
losophy, and Social Science at the Rhode Island School of Design. He has held academic
Ecological Modernization in Technonatural Space/Times:
posts previously at James Madison University and Goldsmith College University of London. Governing Global Environmental Flows |
He has published articles on the historical relations between human societies and nature, Peter Oosterveer, Wageningen University, Wageningen,
the green industrial revolution, the “production of nature” debate, the libertarian traditions The Netherlands
Circulations and Metabolisms: (Hybrid) Natures and (Cyborgs)
of the political left, and the public understanding of science. He is the author of Murray
Cities | Erik Swyngedouw, University of Manchester,
Bookchin: A Critical Appraisal (2008) and, with Chris Wilbert, The Colin Ward Reader (forth- Manchester, UK
coming, 2009). The Cell-Phone-in-the-Countryside: On Some of the Ironic
Spatialities of Technonature | Mike Michael, Goldsmith
College, University of London, UK
Chris Wilbert is a senior lecturer in tourism and geography at Anglia Ruskin University, Eng- Living Cities: Towards a Politics of Conviviality | Steve
land. He has published on animal geographies with Chris Philo (Animal Spaces, Beastly Hinchcliffe, Open University, UK, and Sarah Whatmore,
Oxford University Centre for the Environment, Oxford, UK
Places, 2000) and with Jennifer Wolch and Jody Emel. More recently he has written on
Part II: Experiencing Technonatural Cultures
the politics of avian flu, cultural and media aspects of tourism, and environmentalism. He is DES, Technology, and Environmental Justice | Julie Sze,
currently on the editorial board of Society & Animals and Radical Philosophy. University of California, Davis, CA
Critical Mass: How Built Bodies Can Help Forge Environmental
Futures | Fletcher Linder, James Madison University,
Harrisonburg, VA
Suburban Technonatures? Australian Cities, Their Environ-
mental Social Movements, and the Problem of New Na-
tures | Aidan Davison, University of Tasmania, Tasmania
Part III: Suburban Technonatural Present-Futures
Fluid Architectures: Ecologies of Hybrid Urbanism |
Simon Guy, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
“Inventing the Future”: The Property/Boundaries/Boundary
Properties in Technonature Studies | Timothy Luke, Virginia
March 2009 | Paper $38.95 Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA
296 pp. | 6 x 9 A Post-industrial Green Economy: The New Productive Forces
978-1-55458-150-4 and the Crisis of the Academic Left | Brian Milani, York
Environmental Humanities series University, Toronto, ON
Scandalous Bodies
Diasporic Literature in English Canada
Smaro Kamboureli
Smaro Kamboureli is a professor in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University
of Guelph and Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in Critical Studies in Canadian Literature. Her
publications include A Mazing Space: Writing Canadian Women Writing, co-edited with
Shirley Neuman (1986); On the Edge of Genre: The Contemporary Canadian Long Poem By the Same Author
(1991); Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of Canadian Literature (WLUP, 2007), co-edited Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of
Canadian Literature
with Roy Miki; and Making a Difference: Multicultural Literatures in English Canada (2006). Smaro Kamboureli and Roy Miki, editors
She is the founder and director of TransCanada Institute. 2007 | Paper $36.95
252 pp. | 6 x 9
978-0-88920-513-0
TransCanada series
Transnational Canadas
Anglo-Canadian Literature and Globalization
Kit Dobson
Transnational Canadas marks the first sustained inquiry into the relationship between glo-
balization and Canadian literature written in English. Tracking developments in the literature
and its study from the centennial period to the present, it shows how current work in trans-
national studies can provide new insights for researchers and students.
Arguing first that the dichotomy of Canadian nationalism and globalization is no lon-
ger valid in today’s economic climate, Transnational Canadas explores the legacy of leftist
nationalism in Canadian literature. It examines the interventions of multicultural writing in
the 1980s and 1990s, investigating the cultural politics of the period and how they increas-
ingly became part of Canada’s state structure. Under globalization, the book concludes, we
need to understand new forms of subjectivity and mobility as sites for cultural politics and
look beyond received notions of belonging and being.
An original contribution to the study of Canadian literature, Transnational Canadas
seeks to invigorate discussion by challenging students and researchers to understand the
national and the global simultaneously, to look at the politics of identity beyond the rubric of
multiculturalism, and to rethink the slippery notion of the political for the contemporary era.
Contents
Kit Dobson is currently a Killam Post-doctoral Fellow in the Department of English at Dalhousie
Introduction: Globalization and Canadian Literature
University. He has studied at the Universities of Victoria, York (UK), and Toronto, and has Chapter One: Reconstructing Canadian Literary Nationalism
published in periodicals such as Studies in Canadian Literature, Open Letter, Callaloo, and Spectres of Derrida and Theory’s Legacy
Ambiguous Resistance in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing
English Studies in Canada. Transnational Canadas is his first book-length work.
Nationalism and the Void in Dennis Lee’s Civil Elegies
Leonard Cohen’s Beautiful Losers and the Crisis of
Canadian Modernity
Chapter Two: Indigeneity and the Rise of Canadian
Multiculturalism
Critique of Spivakian Reason and Canadian
Postcolonialisms
Multiculturalism and Reconciliation in Joy Kogawa’s
Obasan
Multicultural Postmodernities in Michael Ondaatje’s
In the Skin of a Lion
Dismissing Canada in Jeannette Armstrong’s Slash
Chapter Three: Canada in the World
Transnational Multitudes
The Everyday Multiculturalisms of the Giller Prize and
Vincent Lam’s Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures
Global Subjectivities in Roy Miki’s Surrender
Writing Past Belonging in Dionne Brand’s
What We All Long For
Conclusion: Transnational Canadas
The False Laws of Narrative is a selection of Fred Wah’s poems covering the poet’s entire
poetic trajectory to date. A founding editor of Tish magazine, Wah was influenced by leading
progressive and innovative poets of the 1960s and was at the forefront of the exploration
of racial hybridity, multiculturalism, and transnational family roots in poetry. The selection
emphasizes his innovative poetic range.
Wah is renowned as one of Canada’s finest and most complex lyric poets and has
been lauded for the musicality of his verse. Louis Cabri’s introduction offers a paradigm for
thinking about how sound is actually structured in Wah’s improvisatory poetry and offers
fresh insights into Wah’s context and writing. In an afterword by the poet himself, Wah
presents a dialogue between editor and poet on the key themes of the selected poems and
reveals his abiding concerns as poet and thinker.
Fred Wah has been involved with a number of literary magazines over the years, such as
Open Letter and West Coast Line. Recent books are the biofiction Diamond Grill (1996),
Faking It: Poetics and Hybridity (2000), a collection of essays, and Sentenced to Light
(2008), a collection of poetic image/text projects. He splits his time between the Kootenays
in southeastern B.C. and Vancouver. For more volumes in the Laurier Poetry series,
see pages 9, 20, and 24.
Louis Cabri is author of The Mood Embosser, which was awarded the 2002 book of the
year by Small Press Traffic (San Francisco), and —that can’t (forthcoming). He edited, from
Philadelphia, the poets’ newsletter PhillyTalks and co-edited, from Ottawa/Calgary, hole
magazine and books. He teaches literary theory, Canadian and US modern and contempo-
rary poetry, and creative writing at the University of Windsor.
Fierce Departures
The Poetry of Dionne Brand
Selected with an introduction by Leslie C. Sanders
The selections in Fierce Departures, drawn from Dionne Brand’s work between 1990 and
2006, delineate with searing eloquence how history marks and dislocates peoples of the
African diaspora, how nations, concretely and conceptually, fail to create safe haven, and
how human desire persists nevertheless. Through a widening canvas, Brand unfolds the
(im)possibilities of belonging for those whom history has dispossessed. Yet she also shows
how Canada and in particular Toronto, remade by those who alight on it, is a place of con-
tingency. Known for her linguistic intensity and lyric brilliance, Brand consoles through the
beauty of her work and disturbs with its uncompromising demand for ethical witness.
In her introduction, editor Leslie C. Sanders traces the evolution of Brand’s poetic
concerns and changing vision. In particular, she observes Brand’s complex use of land-
scape and language to delineate the ethical and emotional issues around the desire for
place. She argues that Brand reformulates Northrop Frye’s question “Where is here?,”
disturbing and expanding the national imaginary.
As afterword, Brand has selected from her evocative collection of essays A Map to
the Door of No Return, the section “Ruttier for the Marooned in the Diaspora.” Read as an
ars poetica, the passage summons the presences of those whose lives are circumscribed
by the same histories the poet narrates as her own. For more volumes in the Laurier Poetry series,
see pages 8, 20, and 24.
Dionne Brand is internationally known for her poetry, fiction, and essays. She has received
many awards, notably the Governor General’s Award for Poetry, the Trillium Award (Land
to Light On, 1997), the Pat Lowther Award (Thirsty, 2005), the City of Toronto Book Award
(What We All Long For, 2006), and the Harbourfront Festival Award (2006), given in recogni-
tion of her substantial contribution to literature. Currently she is a professor in the School of
English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph.
Leslie C. Sanders is a professor at York University, where she teaches African American
and Black Canadian literature. She is the author of The Development of Black Theatre in
America, the editor of two volumes of Langston Hughes performance works, and a gen-
eral editor of the Collected Works of Langston Hughes. She has written essays on African
American and Black Canadian literature.
From Logos to Christos is a collection of essays in Christology written by friends and col-
leagues in memory of Joanne McWilliam. McWilliam was a pioneer woman in the aca-
demic study of theology, specializing in Patristic studies and internationally recognized for
her work on Augustine. For countless students she was a teacher, a mentor, an inspiration.
These fourteen essays are a fitting tribute to her memory.
Written by recognized North American scholars, the essays explore various aspects
of Christology, inviting the reader to probe the meaning and significance of Jesus Christ
for today. They address a broad range of issues, including the Christology of the Acts of
Thomas, Hooker on divinization, and Christ figures in contemporary Canadian culture.
Teachers of theology and religious studies, pastors, and informed general readers
will find the essays stimulating and instructive. They present the readers with considered,
mature, and current scholarship. These are the questions that engaged Joanne McWilliam
throughout her life, and she was happy to know that the critical dialogue would continue
in this volume as friends and colleagues wrestled with Christological questions. For her,
“In Jesus we come to know the compassion, the power, the wisdom, the love, and the
faithfulness of God.”
Ellen M. Leonard is a Sister of St. Joseph of Toronto. She is professor emerita at the University
of St. Michael’s College, Faculty of Theology, where she has taught since 1977. Her areas
of research include Roman Catholic Modernism, Christology, ecclesiology, and feminist
theology. Her publications include a number of chapters in collected works as well as three
books, the latest being Creative Tension: The Spiritual Legacy of Friedrich von Hugel (1997).
She was the 2004 recipient of the Catholic Theological Society of America’s Ann O’Hara
Graff award for her ministries with and on behalf of women and the 2005 YWCA Woman
of Distinction award for her contribution to women and education.
Kate Merriman is an Anglican priest who works in the Diocese of Toronto. She has engaged
in a wide range of ministries—hostel worker at the Fred Victor Centre, parish priest in the
Yukon, chaplain at Trinity College, Field Education Director at Huron College, and parish
priest in the city of Toronto. In 2007 she was made a Canon of the Diocese of Toronto in rec-
ognition of her work in the areas of sexual misconduct and affordable housing. In 2008 she
received the Davenport Community Builders Award for her work in affordable housing.
One of the most widely read German authors in the world, Hermann Hesse (1877–1962)
won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946. After his death, his novels enjoyed a revival
of popularity, becoming a staple of popular religion and spirituality in Europe and North
America.
Veneration and Revolt: Hermann Hesse and Swabian Pietism is the first compre-
hensive study of the impact of German Pietism (the religion of Hesse’s family and native
Swabia) on Hesse’s life and literature. Hesse’s literature bears witness to a lifelong con-
versation with his religious heritage despite that in adolescence he rejected his family’s
expectation that he become a theologian, cleric, and missionary.
Hesse’s Pietist upbringing and broader Swabian heritage contributed to his moral
and political views, his pacifism and internationalism, the confessional and autobiographi-
cal style of his literature, his romantic mysticism, his suspicion of bourgeois culture, his
ecumenical outlook, and, in an era scarred by two world wars, his hopes for the future.
Veneration and Revolt offers a unique perspective on the life and works of one of the twen-
tieth century’s most influential writers.
“Taking his title from Hesse, Barry Stephenson has given us the first thorough appreciation
of the Nobel Prize–winner within the religious culture from which he emerged. Hesse’s debt
to pietism, against which he rebelled yet which he always venerated as his spiritual heritage,
was long a commonplace. But no previous scholar approached the problematic topic with
the requisite background in religious studies that informs this book. Beginning with the his-
tory of pietism and its role in Swabia and German Romanticism, it moves through Hesse’s
life and oeuvre, exposing significant new dimensions from his early ‘religion of art’ to The
Glass Bead Game. This major and highly readable contribution forces us to contemplate
Hesse’s novels in a wholly original and edifying light.”
– Theodore Ziolkowski (emeritus), Princeton University, author of Modes of Faith (2007),
and Minos and the Moderns (2008)
Barry Stephenson teaches in the Department of Religion and Culture at Wilfrid Laurier
University, Waterloo, ON, and conducts research in religion, and literature and ritual stud-
ies. He is presently completing a book and DVD on Luther-themed festivity and religious
tourism in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany.
This book examines the impact place and displacement can have on the composition and
interpretation of Western art music, using as its primary objects of study the work of Istvan
Anhalt (1919–) and György Kurtág (1926–). Although both composers are of Hungarian ori-
gin, their careers followed radically different paths. Kurtág remained in Budapest for most
of his career, whereas Anhalt left in 1946 and immigrated to Canada, where he became one
of the country’s leading composers.
In the first section, “Place and Displacement,” the contributors examine what hap-
pens when composers and their music migrate in the culturally complex world of the late
twentieth century. The past one hundred years produced record numbers of refugees, and
this fact is now beginning to resonate in the study of music. However, as Anhalt himself
forcefully asserts, not all composers who emigrate should be understood as exiles. The
book explores some of the problems and questions surrounding this issue.
Essays in the second section, “Cultural Perspectives and Interpretation,” look at
how performing acts of interpretation on music implies bringing the time, place, and iden-
tity of the musician, the analyst, and the teacher to bear on the object of study. Like Kodály,
Kurtág considers his work to be “naturally” embedded in Hungarian culture (both recent
and remote). But he is also a quintessentially European artist. Much of his production—he
is one of the twentieth century’s most prolific composers of vocal music—involves the set-
ting of Hungarian texts, but in the late 1970s his cultural horizons expanded to include texts
Of Related Interest
in Russian, German, French, English, and ancient Greek. The books explores how musicolo- Eagle Minds: Selected Correspondence of Istvan
gists’ divergent cultural perspectives impinge on the interpretation of this work. Anhalt and George Rochberg (1961–2005)
Alan M. Gillmor, editor
2007 | Cloth $85.00
Friedemann Sallis obtained his PhD in musicology under the direction of the late Carl
470 pp. | 6 x 9
Dahlhaus at the Technische Universität Berlin. His writings include a book on the early works 978-1-55458-018-7
of György Ligeti and numerous articles. He is the co-editor of A Handbook to Twentieth-
Century Musical Sketches (2004).
Robin Elliott taught at University College Dublin for six years before assuming the Jean
A. Chalmers Chair in Canadian Music at the University of Toronto in 2002. He has edited
several books, including two with Gordon E. Smith: Istvan Anhalt: Pathways and Memory
(2001) and Music Traditions, Cultures, and Contexts (WLUP, in press).
Kenneth DeLong is a professor of music history at the University of Calgary, Alberta. He has
published extensively on Romantic Czech music. He is also a music critic for the Calgary
Herald and Opera Canada. Recent publications include chapters in The Unknown Schubert,
edited by Barbara M. Reul and Lorraine Byrne Bodley (2008), and Henry Irving: a Re-Evaluation
of the Pre-Eminent Victorian Actor-Manager, edited by Richard Foulkes (2008).
Backpacks Full of Hope: The UN Mission in Haiti describes the experience of a Chilean
general as Deputy Force Commander of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH) during the particularly turbulent year September 2005 to September 2006.
It details the realities of commanding more than 7,000 men from eleven countries while
working to fulfill the mandate of the United Nations in Haiti — to ensure a secure and stable
environment, to support the transitional government in a democratic political process, and
to promote and protect the human rights of the Haitian people.
Despite the enormous challenges of a complex scenario that included local violence
and extreme poverty, the UN command succeeded in its mission, stabilizing the local situ-
ation and paving the way for Haiti to hold a presidential election.
Originally published as Mision en Haiti, con la mochila cargada de esperanzas, this
work provides a new audience with insight on the peace operation and sheds light on the
long-term endeavour of civilians, military, and local and international agencies to support
Haiti’s path to prosperity.
Major General Eduardo Aldunate has served as a Chilean Army officer since 1973. He has
been an instructor and commander in mountain infantry units and special forces units For more volumes in the Studies in International
Governance series, see pages 14, 15, 22, and 28.
and was the Deputy Force Commander of MINUSTAH between September 2005 and
September 2006. He is currently Commander of Military Schools for the Chilean Army. He
has written books and academic articles on military leadership and strategic and civilian–
military relations for civilian and military publications.
Jeremy de Beer is an associate professor of law at the University of Ottawa. His research
and recent publications relate mainly to the intersection of intellectual property, technology,
and international development.
Two high-level commissions—the Sutherland report in 2004, and the Warwick Commission
report in 2007—addressed the future of the World Trade Organization and made proposals
for incremental reform. This book goes further; it explains why institutional reform of the
WTO is needed at this critical juncture in world history and provides innovative, practical pro-
posals for modernizing the WTO to enable it to respond to the challenges of the twenty-first
century. Contributors focus on five critical areas: transparency, decision- and rule-making pro-
cedures, internal management structures, participation by non-governmental organizations
and civil society, and relationships with regional trade agreements.
Debra Steger is a professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa, where she
teaches international trade, international dispute settlement, and international investment
law. She is also the founder and director of the EDGE Network on the emerging, dynamic,
global economies—a multidisciplinary research network focused on institutional reform
of the World Trade Organization. She served recently as chair of a WTO panel and from
1995 to 2001 was the first director of the Appellate Body Secretariat of the World Trade
Organization in Geneva. She is the author of Peace through Trade: Building the World Trade
Contributors
Organization (2004) and co-editor of Law in the Service of Human Dignity: Essays in Honour
Debra P. Steger | University of Ottawa, Canada
of Florentino Feliciano (2005). Manfred Elsig | World Trade Institute, Bern, and Graduate
Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Switzerland
Thomas Cottier | University of Bern, World Trade Institute and
Co-published with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) NCCR-Trade, Bern, Switzerland
Yves Bonzon | University of Lausanne, Switzerland and
and the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) Georgetown University Law Center, Washington
Padideh Ala’i | American University, Washington DC
Heng Wang | Southwest University of Political Science and Law,
Chongqing, China
Alberto Alvarez | University of Ottawa, Canada
Peter Van den Bossche | Institute for Globalisation and
International Regulation, Maastricht University, Netherlands
Carolyn Deere | Oxford University, UK, and International Centre
for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD), Geneva,
Switzerland
Seema Sapra | Indian Centre for Research on International
Economic Relations (ICRIER), Delhi, India
Henry Gao | Singapore Management University and University
Hong Kong University
Lim Chin Leng | University of Hong Kong ,
Diana Tussie | Latin American Trade Network (LATN), Argentina
Pablo Heidrich | The North–South Institute, Ottawa
Gerhard Erasmus | Trade Law Advisory Centre for Southern
Africa (TRALAC) and Professor Emeritus, University of
Stellenbosch
Natalia Shpilkovskaya | University of Ottawa and International
Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD),
Geneva, Switzerland
The Nightingale School relates Nightingale’s experience of nursing Extending Nursing reports Nightingale’s work to take trained nursing
in Paris, London, and Kaiserswerth and how it influenced her own from its base at St. Thomas’ Hospital in London to other hospitals in
approach to the teaching of nursing. It describes the formation, in 1860, London, elsewhere in England, and into Wales, Scotland, and Ireland.
of the Nightingale School at St. Thomas’ Hospital, the world’s first non- It goes on to European countries (initially Sweden and Germany, later
sectarian nursing school, and its stormy ups and downs for the rest of France and Italy), to Australia, the United States, Canada, and other
Nightingale’s working life, effectively to 1900. It gives an intimate look countries of the then British Empire. Also featured is material on how
at Nightingale as a nursing leader, as she had to deal with sometimes Nightingale methods were taken up in Japan and China.
difficult (male) doctors and cost-cutting hospital administrators. This volume relates the difficulty of bringing trained nursing into
The volume relates the near breakdown of the school in the early the abysmal workhouse infirmaries, and it includes a section on the
1870s and the measures taken to re-establish it and improve instruction. development of “district nursing,” or nursing in the homes of the poor,
The volume includes the extensive correspondence on Nightingale’s as well as material on “health missioners,” who taught better health
own relations with the matron, senior nurses, and pupils. practices at the homes of the rural poor. An appendix gives biographical
The second edition of Nightingale’s most famous book, Notes sketches of major nursing leaders.
on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is Not, is presented, with compari- Extending Nursing shows Nightingale promoting the core princi-
sons with the first. Her later articles on nursing, in Quain’s Dictionary ples of nursing as a profession, independent of medicine, and providing
of Medicine (1883 to 1894), are also reported and serve to show the well-paid career jobs for women. Here the case had to be made politi-
evolution of nursing practice from its modest start. Her public letters to cally to a range of elected officials, hospital administrators, and health
nurses are reprinted. care reformers. At the same time, Nightingale had to attend to the health
The volume also covers the controversy over the state registra- and safety of nurses (as well as patients), for hospitals continued to be
tion of voters. Also included is an appendix with biographical sketches dangerous places everywhere.
of her major colleagues.
Lynn McDonald, director of the Collected Works of Florence Nightingale,
is university professor emerita at the University of Guelph. She is a
former member of parliament, former president of the National Action
Committee on the Status of Women, and a long-time activist on wom-
en’s issues. She has an honorary doctorate from York University.
“This study is remarkable on several fronts. No study to date has analyzed concomitantly
the evolving social perceptions of youth, and the changing attitudes and activities of teen-
agers alongside an analysis of wider social developments in such depth and over such an
extended period of time…. Not unrelated … is her impressive use of extensive and varied
sources…. [Comacchio’s] study lays new ‘historiographical ground work’ that will assuredly
become a mandatory point of departure for future scholars.”
– Nicole Neatby, Simon Fraser University, The Canadian Historical Review
“This book about the creation and social construction of adolescence in Canada will appeal
to historians who are increasingly turning their attention to the second half of the 20th cen-
tury, where youth experiences and youth culture surface as major themes. As Comacchio
clearly demonstrates, the 1950s and 1960s did not mark the emergence of a youth culture
in Canada because a separate youth culture predated that period by as much as 30 years.
The Dominion of Youth clearly and convincingly establishes the fact and therefore it should
become a standard reference on 20th-century youth and popular culture.”
– Linda M. Ambrose, Laurentian University, Labour/Le Travail
April 2009 | Paper $29.95 November 2008 | Paper $14.95 April 2009 | Paper $14.95
218 pp. | 6 x 9 90 pp. | 6 x 9 80 pp. | 6 x 9
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320 pp. | 6 x 9 392 pp. | 6 x 9 348 pp. | 6 x 9
978-1-55458-052-1 978-1-55458-057-6 978-1-55458-011-8
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Co-published with the Centre for International Co-published with the Centre for International Co-published with the Centre for International
Governance Innovation (CIGI) Governance Innovation (CIGI) Governance Innovation (CIGI)
The Young, the Restless, Harmony and Dissent Programming Reality Image and Territory
and the Dead Film and Avant-garde Art Movements Perspectives on English- Essays on Atom Egoyan
Interviews with Canadian Filmmakers in the Early Twentieth Century Canadian Television Monique Tschofen and
George Melnyk, editor R. Bruce Elder Zoë Druick and Aspa Kotsopoulos, Jennifer Burwell, editors
editors
2008 | Paper $18.95 | 150 pp. 2008 | Cloth $85.00 | 516 pp. | 6 x 9 2006 | Paper $29.95 | 426 pp. | illus.
46 b/w illustrations | 6.75 x 6.75 978-1-55458-028-6 2008 | Paper $34.95 | 354 pp. | photos 6 x 9 | 978-0-88920-487-4
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Open Wide a Wilderness Wider Boundaries of Daring All These Roads The Crisp Day Closing on My Hand
Canadian Nature Poems The Modernist Impulse in Canadian The Poetry of Louis Dudek The Poetry of M. Travis Lane
Nancy Holmes, editor Women’s Poetry Selected with an introduction Selected with an introduction by
Introduction by Don McKay Di Brandt and Barbara Godard, by Karis Shearer Jeanette Lynes
editors Afterword by Frank Davey
2009 | Paper $38.95 | 504 pp. | 6 x 9 2007 | Paper $14.95 | 102 pp. | 6 x 9
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Environmental Humanities series 978-1-55458-032-3 978-1-55458-039-2 Laurier Poetry series
Laurier Poetry series
By Word of Mouth Earthly Pages Children of the Outer Dark Desire Never Leaves
The Poetry of Dennis Cooley The Poetry of Don Domanski The Poetry of Christopher Dewdney The Poetry of Tim Lilburn
Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by
Nicole Markotić Brian Bartlett Karl E. Jirgens Alison Calder
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Laurier Poetry series Laurier Poetry series Laurier Poetry series Laurier Poetry series
Field Marks The More Easily Kept Illusions Speaking of Power Before the First Word
The Poetry of Don McKay The Poetry of Al Purdy The Poetry of Di Brandt The Poetry of Lorna Crozier
Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by Selected with an introduction by
Méira Cook Robert Budde Tanis MacDonald Catherine Hunter
Afterword by Russell Morton Brown
2006 | Paper $14.95 | 88 pp. | 6 x 9 2006 | Paper $14.95 | 72 pp. | 6 x 9 2005 | Paper $14.95 | 80 pp. | 6 x 9
978-0-88920-494-2 2006 | Paper $14.95 | 96 pp. | 6 x 9 978-0-88920-506-2 978-0-88920-489-8
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Committed to the Sane Asylum Asian Canadian Writing The Agent in the Margin The Last Effort of Dreams
Narratives on Mental Wellness Beyond Autoethnography Nayantara Sahgal’s Gandhian Fiction Essays on the Poetry of
and Healing Eleanor Ty and Christl Verduyn, Clara A.B. Joseph Pier Giorgio Di Cicco
Susan Schellenberg and editors Francesco Loriggio, editor
Rosemary Barnes 2008 | Cloth $85.00 | 222 pp. | 6 x 9
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Home Words Unsettling Narratives Speaking in the Past Tense Romantic Hospitality and the
Discourses of Children’s Literature Postcolonial Readings of English Canadian Novelists on Writing Resistance to Accommodation
in Canada Children’s Literature Historical Fiction Peter Melville
Mavis Reimer, editor Clare Bradford Herb Wyile
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colour illus. | 6 x 9 | 978-1-55458-016-3 978-0-88920-507-9 978-0-88920-511-6
Studies in Childhood and Family
in Canada series
Food That Really Schmecks Becoming My Mother’s Daughter 163256 Johanna Krause Twice Persecuted
Edna Staebler A Story of Survival and Renewal A Memoir of Resistance Surviving in Nazi Germany and
Foreword by Wayson Choy Erika Gottlieb Michael Englishman Communist East Germany
Introduction by Rose Murray Carolyn Gammon and
2008 | Paper $24.95 | 188 pp. | colour 2007 | Paper $19.95 | 128 pp. | illus. Christiane Hemker
2006 | Paper $32.95 | 360 pp. | 6 x 9 and b/w illus. | 6 x 9 6 x 9 | 978-1-55458-009-5
978-0-88920-521-5 978-1-55458-030-9 Life Writing series 2007 | Paper $24.95 | 180 pp. | illus.
Life Writing series Life Writing series 6 x 9 | 978-1-55458-006-4
Life Writing series
A Kindly Scrutiny of Human Nature Lines Drawn Upon the Water From the Iron House Words of the Huron
Essays in Honour of Richard Slobodin First Nations and the Great Lakes Imprisonment in First Nations Writing John L. Steckley
Richard J. Preston, editor Borders and Borderlands Deena Rymhs
Karl S. Hele, editor 2006 | Paper $34.95 | 280 pp. | 6 x 9
2009 | Cloth $85.00 | 170 pp. 2008 | Cloth $65.00 | 162 pp. | 6 x 9 978-0-88920-516-1
b/w photographs | 6 x 9 2008 | Cloth $85.00 | 378 pp. 978-1-55458-021-7 Aboriginal Studies series
978-1-55458-040-8 maps, photographs | 6 x 9 Aboriginal Studies series
978-1-55458-004-0
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Essential Song The Long Journey Social Policy and Practice in Canada The Social Origins of the Welfare State
Three Decades of Northern Cree Music of a Forgotten People A History Quebec Families, Compulsory Education, and
Lynn Whidden Métis Identities and Family Histories Alvin Finkel Family Allowances, 1940–1955
Ute Lischke and David T. McNab, Dominique Marshall, translated
2007 | Cloth $85.00 | 192 pp. editors 2006 | Paper $34.95 | 396 pp. | 6 x 9 by Nicola Doone Danby
Includes Audio CD | 6 x 9 978-0-88920-475-1
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Aboriginal Studies series 978-0-88920-523-9 978-0-88920-452-2
Aboriginal Studies series Studies in Childhood and
Family in Canada series
Canadian Social Policy A Question of Commitment Taking Responsibility for Children Moving Toward Positive Systems
Issues and Perspectives, 4th edition Children’s Rights in Canada Samantha Brennan and of Child and Family Welfare
Anne Westhues, editor R. Brian Howe and Robert Noggle, editors Current Issues and Future Directions
Katherine Covell, editors Gary Cameron, Nick Coady, and
2006 | Paper $38.95 | 494 pp. | 6 x 9 2007 | Paper $34.95 | 210 pp. | 6 x 9 Gerald R. Adams, editors
978-0-88920-504-8 2007 | Paper $42.95 | 456 pp. | 6 x 9 978-1-55458-015-6
978-1-55458-003-3 Studies in Childhood and 2007 | Paper $38.95 | 408 pp. | 6 x 9
Studies in Childhood and Family in Canada series 978-0-88920-518-5
Family in Canada series
Flora Tells a Story This Spot of Ground Leaving Fundamentalism Broad Is the Way
The Apocalypse of Paul and Its Contexts Spiritual Baptists in Toronto Personal Stories Stories from Mayerthorpe
Michael Kaler Carol B. Duncan G. Elijah Dann, editor Margaret Norquay
Foreword by Thomas Moore
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11 b/w images, 1 map | 6 x 9 978-1-55458-017-0 2008 | Paper $24.95 | 246 pp. | 6 x 9 b/w photographs | 6 x 9
978-1-55458-044-6 978-1-55458-026-2 978-1-55458-020-0
Studies in Christianity and Life Writing series Life Writing series
Judaism series, Volume 19
Gate of the Heart Readings in Eastern Religions Sacred Sound In Search of Alberto Guerrero
Understanding the Writings of the Báb 2nd edition Experiencing Music in World Religions John Beckwith
Nader Saiedi Harold Coward, Ronald Guy L. Beck, editor
Neufeldt, and Eva K. Neumaier 2006 | Cloth $34.95 | 180 pp. | 6 x 9
2008 | Cloth $85.00 | 432 pp. | 6 x 9 2006 | Paper $39.95 | 232 pp. | 6 x 9 978-0-88920-496-6
978-1-55458-035-4 2006 | Paper $34.95 | 412 pp. | 6 x 9 978-0-88920-421-8
Bahá’í Studies series | Co-published 978-0-88920-435-5 Includes Audio CD
with the Association for Bahá’í Studies
Around the Shores of Lake Superior Vulcans, Earthlings and Marketing ROI Onward to the Olympics Animal Subjects
A Guide to Historic Sites, 2nd edition Getting Finance, Marketing and Historical Perspectives An Ethical Reader in
Margaret Beattie Bogue Advertising onto the Same Planet on the Olympic Games a Posthuman World
David Rutherford and Gerald P. Schaus and Jodey Castricano, editor
2007 | Paper $37.95 | 398 pp. Jonathan Knowles Stephen R. Wenn, editors
colour illus., maps | 8 x 10 2008 | Paper $38.95 | 324 pp. | illus.
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Wisconsin Press | Canadian rights only Environmental Humanities series
Can the World Be Governed? Critical Mass Exporting Good Governance Canada and the Middle East
Possibilities for Effective Multilateralism The Emergence of Global Civil Society Temptations and Challenges In Theory and Practice
Alan S. Alexandroff, editor James W. St.G. Walker and in Canada’s Aid Program Paul Heinbecker and
Andrew S. Thompson, editors Jennifer Welsh and Ngaire Woods, editors Bessma Momani, editors
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978-1-55458-041-5 978-1-55458-022-4 978-1-55458-029-3 978-1-55458-024-8
Studies in International Governance Studies in International Governance Studies in International Governance Studies in International Governance
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Minds of Our Own The Language of Canadian Politics German Diasporic Experiences Uneasy Partners
Inventing Feminist Scholarship A Guide to Important Terms and Identity, Migration, and Loss Multiculturalism and Rights in Canada
and Women’s Studies in Canada Concepts, 4th edition Mathias Schulze, James M. Janice Gross Stein, David Robertson
and Québec, 1966–76 John McMenemy Skidmore, David G. John, Grit Cameron, John Ibbitson, Will Kymlicka,
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The Wartime Letters of Leslie and Love and War in London Incorrigible Vimy Ridge
Cecil Frost, 1915–1919 A Woman’s Diary, 1939–1942 Velma Demerson A Canadian Reassessment
R.B. Fleming, editor Olivia Cockett Geoffrey Hayes, Andrew Iarocci, and
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The Selected Papers of Sir Arthur Currie The Canadian Battlefields in Normandy The Canadian Battlefields in Italy I Luoghi della Battaglia Ortona
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Ministry, 1917–1933 Terry Copp and Mike Bechthold Eric McGeer with Matt Symes Translated by Angela Arnone
Mark Osborne Humphries, editor 2007 | Paper $28.00 | 85 pp. | Colour 2008 | Paper $14.00 | 52 pp. | Colour
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