
11th Annual University of Maine / University of New Brunswick
International History Graduate Student Conference
University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB
25-27 September 2009

FRIDAY, 25 SEPTEMBER
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3:00pm – 4:45 pm |
Welcome and Registration |
[Memorial Hall] |
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5:00pm – 6:00pm |
Keynote Address |
[Memorial Hall] |
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Dr. Stephen Hornsby, University of Maine, Director of the Canadian-American Center, “Surveyors of Empire: Samuel Holland, J.F.W. Des Barres and the Mapping of Northeastern North America.” |
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6:00pm – 7:30pm |
Wine and Cheese Reception |
[Memorial Hall] |
SATURDAY, 26 SEPTEMBER
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8:35am – 9:00am |
Refreshment Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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9:00am – 9:50am |
Session 1 — Media and Regionalism |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: David Bent |
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Paul Collins, Memorial University, “Canada’s Plan to Torch St. John’s: Upper Canadian Arrogance or Tabloid Journalism?” |
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Ashley Harding, University of New Brunswick, “Nathan Cohen is for Mourning: A Cape Breton Play in Toronto, 1953” |
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9:50am – 10:05am |
Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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10:05am – 10:55am |
Session 2 — Memory and Landscape |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Patrick Webber |
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Robert Hodges, University of Maine, “An Exploration into Historical Memory: Lumber, Roadside Attractions, and the World's Largest Axe!” |
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Robert Gee, University of Maine, “Scenic Overlook: Economic Development and Landscape Change in Coastal Maine” |
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10:55am – 12:00pm |
Session 3 — New Brunswick Activism |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: William Pratt |
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Patrick Webber, University of New Brunswick, “‘Not So Provincial’: Activism at the University of New Brunswick, 1961-1972” |
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Christy Clarke, University of New Brunswick, “Jack and Jill Went up the Hill to Stop an International Slaughter: Two Seal Pups Awaken Global Concern for Seals in the Canadian North Atlantic” |
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Anthony Hampton, University of Guelph, “‘I don’t think Canadians are going to sit still and let it happen’: The New Brunswick Ad Hoc Committee on the Constitution and Citizens’ Response to the Meech Lake Accord” |
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12:00pm-12:45pm |
Lunch |
[Tilley Hall] |
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12:45pm-1:35pm |
Session 4 — North American Unions in the Twentieth Century |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Iain O’Shea |
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Paul Gibson, University of Maryland, “‘We Always Win’: The Baltimore Police Strike and the Decline of Public Unionization” |
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Patrick Marsh, University of New Brunswick, “The Historiography of Machinists: A Survey of Moncton as a Rail Town” |
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1:35pm-1:45pm |
Break |
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1:45pm-2:35pm |
Session 5 — The Rise and Fall of Nations |
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Chair: Don Nerbas |
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Mischa Evan Kaplan, University of Toronto, “Defining the Limits of Cold War Categorization: The Nigerian Civil War 40 Years On” |
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James Horncastle, University of New Brunswick, “The Balkan Paper Tiger: An Evaluation of the JNA’s Strength Prior to the Collapse of Yugoslavia” |
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2:35pm-2:50pm |
Refreshment Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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2:50pm-4:05pm |
Session 6 — The Power of Language |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Anthony Hampton |
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Gay Fanjoy, University of New Brunswick, “Labeling Female Offenders and Victims in the Saint John Courts, 1870-1908” |
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Aneesh Murali Mohan and Benedict Gauthier, University of Western Ontario, “Antisemitism: Policy and Public Speeches in Britain during the 1930s” |
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Gregory Jones-Katz, University of Maine, “Toward a Re-Enchantment of the Past” |
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4:05pm-4:15pm |
Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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4:15pm-5:20pm |
Session 7 — National and International Policy Making |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Mark McLaughlin |
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Brent Clowater, University of New Brunswick, “Of Car Parts and Cuisinarts: The Science Council of Canada, the 1965 Auto Pact, and the Truncation of Canadian Industry” |
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Steven Haynes, Kent State University, “Opportunity in Crisis: The United States and the Tacna-Arica Dispute” |
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Tyler J. Turek, University of Ottawa, “The Irony of Constraint: Canada-US Relations During the Korean War” |
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7:00pm |
BANQUET |
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The Garrison District Ale House, 426 Queen St. |
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SUNDAY, 27 SEPTEMBER
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8:15am-8:45am |
Refreshment Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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8:45am-9:35am |
Session 8 — Female Agency and Activism |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Patrick Marsh |
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Peggy Solic, University of Maine, “Feminist Solidarity and Global Sisterhood: The Development of an Idea in US Feminist Thought.” |
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Bonnie Morgan, University of New Brunswick, “Agency and Anglicans: Women’s Resistance to Prescriptive Ideology in the 1930s Coastal Newfoundland Community” |
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9:35am-9:40am |
Break |
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9:40am-10:45am |
Session 9 — The Borderland Experience |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Thomas Wendleboe |
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David Stanley, Dalhousie University, “Cross-Border Collaborators in Canadian Shipbuilding, 1880-95” |
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Gary Campbell, University of New Brunswick, “Cat and Mouse: The Dynamic of Cutting Trespass Timber in the Disputed Territory” |
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Peg Kearney, University of Maine, “Land, Loyalty, and Self-Interest: One Family’s Journey from Neutrality to Exile” |
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10:45am-11:00am |
Refreshment Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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11:00am-11:50am |
Session 10 — Health, Sexuality and Race |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Michelle McDonald |
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Thomas Wendleboe, University of New Brunswick, “Hard Sell: Constructing the Male Body in Cold War Popular Culture” |
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Mike Aloisio, University of Western Ontario, “Black Heath in Detroit 1915-1930” |
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11:50am-12:35pm |
Lunch |
[Tilley Hall] |
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12:35pm-1:25pm |
Session 11 — The Canadian War Experience: Discourses and Reflections |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Ashley Harding |
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Katrina Ackerman, University of New Brunswick, “‘Daddy, What Did YOU Do in the Great War?’ Fatherhood, Propaganda and the First World War” |
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Michael deJong, University of New Brunswick, “Memory, Memorials and the Politics of History: The Canadian War Museum and the Holocaust Gallery Controversy” |
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1:25pm-2:15 |
Session 12 — The Canadian War Experience: Canada on the Front Line |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Craig Johnson |
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Alex Souchen, University of Ottawa, “Canadians at the Sharp End: D-Day, 6 June 1944” |
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William Pratt, University of New Brunswick, “The Experience of Armoured Warfare: 1 Canadian Armoured Brigade” |
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2:15pm-2:30pm |
Break |
[Tilley Hall] |
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2:30pm-3:20pm |
Session 13 — The Influence of the Media in International Affairs |
[Tilley 104] |
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Chair: Mike Aloisio |
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Lucas Calhoun, University of Maine, “Framers of the News: Media and Governmental Actors Shaping Coverage of Tiananmen Square” |
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Iain O’Shea, University of New Brunswick, “Training Equality: The 1901 Selborne Scheme and the Periodical Discourse on the Naval Training Reforms” |
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3:20pm-3:30pm |
Closing Remarks |
[Tilley 104] |