Conference Program

11th Annual Univ. of maine/ UNB History Graduate Student Conference Program

UNB logo

11th Annual University of Maine / University of New Brunswick

International History Graduate Student Conference

University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB

25-27 September 2009

University of Maine logo


FRIDAY, 25 SEPTEMBER


3:00pm – 4:45 pm

Welcome and Registration

[Memorial Hall]

5:00pm – 6:00pm

Keynote Address

[Memorial Hall]

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.”

6:00pm – 7:30pm

Wine and Cheese Reception                             

[Memorial Hall]

 

 

SATURDAY, 26 SEPTEMBER


8:35am – 9:00am

Refreshment Break

[Tilley Hall]            

9:00am – 9:50am

Session 1 — Media and Regionalism

[Tilley 104]

Chair: David Bent



Paul Collins, Memorial University, “Canada’s Plan to Torch St. John’s: Upper Canadian Arrogance or Tabloid Journalism?”

Ashley Harding, University of New Brunswick, “Nathan Cohen is for Mourning: A Cape Breton Play in Toronto, 1953”

9:50am – 10:05am

Break

[Tilley Hall]

10:05am – 10:55am

Session 2 — Memory and Landscape

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Patrick Webber



Robert Hodges, University of Maine, “An Exploration into Historical Memory: Lumber, Roadside Attractions, and the World's Largest Axe!”

Robert Gee, University of Maine, “Scenic Overlook: Economic Development and Landscape Change in Coastal Maine”

10:55am – 12:00pm

Session 3 — New Brunswick Activism

[Tilley 104]

Chair: William Pratt



Patrick Webber, University of New Brunswick, “‘Not So Provincial’: Activism at the University of New Brunswick, 1961-1972”

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”

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”

12:00pm-12:45pm

Lunch

[Tilley Hall]

12:45pm-1:35pm

Session 4 — North American Unions in the Twentieth Century

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Iain O’Shea



Paul Gibson, University of Maryland, “‘We Always Win’: The Baltimore Police Strike and the Decline of Public Unionization”

Patrick Marsh, University of New Brunswick, “The Historiography of Machinists: A Survey of Moncton as a Rail Town”

1:35pm-1:45pm

Break


1:45pm-2:35pm

Session 5 — The Rise and Fall of Nations


Chair: Don Nerbas



Mischa Evan Kaplan, University of Toronto, “Defining the Limits of Cold War Categorization: The Nigerian Civil War 40 Years On”

James Horncastle, University of New Brunswick, “The Balkan Paper Tiger: An Evaluation of the JNA’s Strength Prior to the Collapse of Yugoslavia”

2:35pm-2:50pm

Refreshment Break

[Tilley Hall]

2:50pm-4:05pm

Session 6 — The Power of Language

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Anthony Hampton



Gay Fanjoy, University of New Brunswick, “Labeling Female Offenders and Victims in the Saint John Courts, 1870-1908”

Aneesh Murali Mohan and Benedict Gauthier, University of Western Ontario, “Antisemitism: Policy and Public Speeches in Britain during the 1930s”

Gregory Jones-Katz, University of Maine, “Toward a Re-Enchantment of the Past”

4:05pm-4:15pm

Break

[Tilley Hall]

4:15pm-5:20pm

Session 7 — National and International Policy Making

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Mark McLaughlin



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”

Steven Haynes, Kent State University, “Opportunity in Crisis: The United States and the Tacna-Arica Dispute”

Tyler J. Turek, University of Ottawa, “The Irony of Constraint: Canada-US Relations During the Korean War”

7:00pm

BANQUET


The Garrison District Ale House, 426 Queen St.

 

SUNDAY, 27 SEPTEMBER


8:15am-8:45am

Refreshment Break

[Tilley Hall]                     

8:45am-9:35am

Session 8 — Female Agency and Activism

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Patrick Marsh               

Peggy Solic, University of Maine, “Feminist Solidarity and Global Sisterhood: The Development of an Idea in US Feminist Thought.”

Bonnie Morgan, University of New Brunswick, “Agency and Anglicans: Women’s Resistance to Prescriptive Ideology in the 1930s Coastal Newfoundland Community”

9:35am-9:40am

Break

9:40am-10:45am

Session 9 — The Borderland Experience

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Thomas Wendleboe

David Stanley, Dalhousie University, “Cross-Border Collaborators in Canadian Shipbuilding, 1880-95”

Gary Campbell, University of New Brunswick, “Cat and Mouse: The Dynamic of Cutting Trespass Timber in the Disputed Territory”

Peg Kearney, University of Maine, “Land, Loyalty, and Self-Interest: One Family’s Journey from Neutrality to Exile”

10:45am-11:00am

Refreshment Break

[Tilley Hall]

11:00am-11:50am

Session 10 — Health, Sexuality and Race

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Michelle McDonald

Thomas Wendleboe, University of New Brunswick, “Hard Sell: Constructing the Male Body in Cold War Popular Culture”

Mike Aloisio, University of Western Ontario, “Black Heath in Detroit 1915-1930”

11:50am-12:35pm

Lunch

[Tilley Hall]

12:35pm-1:25pm

Session 11 — The Canadian War Experience: Discourses and Reflections

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Ashley Harding

Katrina Ackerman, University of New Brunswick, “‘Daddy, What Did YOU Do in the Great War?’ Fatherhood, Propaganda and the First World War”

Michael deJong, University of New Brunswick, “Memory, Memorials and the Politics of History: The Canadian War Museum and the Holocaust Gallery Controversy”

1:25pm-2:15

Session 12 — The Canadian War Experience: Canada on the Front Line

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Craig Johnson

Alex Souchen, University of Ottawa, “Canadians at the Sharp End: D-Day, 6 June 1944”

William Pratt, University of New Brunswick, “The Experience of Armoured Warfare: 1 Canadian Armoured Brigade”

2:15pm-2:30pm

Break

[Tilley Hall]

2:30pm-3:20pm

Session 13 — The Influence of the Media in International Affairs

[Tilley 104]

Chair: Mike Aloisio

Lucas Calhoun, University of Maine, “Framers of the News: Media and Governmental Actors Shaping Coverage of Tiananmen Square”

Iain O’Shea, University of New Brunswick, “Training Equality: The 1901 Selborne Scheme and the Periodical Discourse on the Naval Training Reforms”

3:20pm-3:30pm

Closing Remarks

[Tilley 104]