Academic literature on the topic 'Canadian Historians'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Mashevs’kyi, Oleg, and Myroslav Baraboi. "Anglo-Canadian Historiography Genesis of the French Canadian Nationalism." European Historical Studies, no. 7 (2017): 64–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2017.07.64-83.

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The article investigates the genesis of the French-Canadian nationalism in the Anglo-Canadian historiography. The essence of debate that arose among English-Canadian historians about the conquest of New France (Quebec) by Great Britain as one of the main causes of the French-Canadian problem is analyzed. In particular, as opposed to the pro-British point of view, which considers this conquest as a progress and benefit for the residents of French Canada, its opponents considered the issue as a tragedy for the French Canadians. Particularly the attention is drawn to the changes of the historiographical paradigm after the Second World War, when even pro-British historians had to reconsider their attitude to conquest Canada by Great Britain and recognize its consequences for the French Canadians. Special attention is paid to the reflection of the Anglo-Canadian historiography upon the uprising in 1837-1838 in Quebec on as one of the first manifestations of the radical French-Canadian nationalism. The basic approach in the Anglo-Canadian historiography about members of radical and liberal leaders of French-Canadian nationalism (H. Bourassa, L. Groulx, J. P Tardivel, H. Mercier), which contributed to the institutionalization and politicization of French-Canadian nationalism have been disclosed. The article also clarifies the position of the Anglo-Canadian historiography about the genesis of the “Quiet revolution” in Quebec as of the highest expression of French-Canadian nationalism.
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Buckner, Phillip. "The Canadian Civil Wars of 1837–1838." London Journal of Canadian Studies 35, no. 1 (November 30, 2020): 96–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ljcs.2020v35.005.

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Canadian historians have traditionally stressed that the rebellions of 1837 and 1838 in Upper and Lower Canada were revolts against British imperial authority. Less stressed has been the fact that the rebellions were also civil wars and that British troops were aided by substantial numbers of loyalists in defeating the rebels. In recent years historians have tended to downplay the importance of French-Canadian nationalism, but by 1837–8 the rebellion in Lower Canada was essentially a struggle between French-Canadian nationalists and a broadly-based coalition of loyalists in Lower Canada. Outside Lower Canada there was no widespread support for rebellion anywhere in British North America, except among a specific group of American immigrants and their descendants in Upper Canada. It is a myth that the rebellions can be explained as a division between the older-stock inhabitants of the Canadas and the newer arrivals. It is also a myth that the rebels in the two Canadas shared the same objectives in the long run and that the rebellions were part of a single phenomenon. French-Canadian nationalists wanted their own state; most of the republicans in Upper Canada undoubtedly believed that Upper Canada would become a state in the American Union. Annexation was clearly the motivation behind the Patriot Hunters in the United States, who have received an increasingly favourable press from borderland historians, despite the fact that they were essentially filibusters motivated by the belief that America had a manifest destiny to spread across the North American continent. Indeed, it was the failure of the rebellions that made Confederation possible in 1867.
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Finlayson, Alan James. "Major John Richardson." Ontario History 111, no. 1 (May 23, 2019): 80–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1059967ar.

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Major John Richardson has been recognized as “the father” of Canadian literature as well an early historian of the War of 1812 but his writings, rich in detail and highly autobiographical, have not been sufficiently appreciated by historians as valuable historical source materials. Yet they provide accurate portrayals of contemporary Upper Canadian perceptions and attitudes similar to those found in the writings of the more popular Brock, Strachan, Mackenzie, Robinson, Baldwin, and Ryerson. Richardson also deserves greater recognition for his role as a Canadian patriot and nationalist. Despite living abroad, he consistently proclaimed himself “a Canadian”, and hoped, through his works, to “infuse” into the Canadian community “a spirit of National literature.” His writings reflect the pride and emerging Canadian national spirit and as such merit greater attention by historians.
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Bicha, Karel D. "Five Canadian Historians and the U.S.A." American Review of Canadian Studies 29, no. 2 (August 1999): 195–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02722019909481628.

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Trudel, Marcel. "Un historien se penche sur son passé." Historical Papers 17, no. 1 (April 26, 2006): 132–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/030887ar.

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Abstract Every historian ought to be invited to appear before his peers, as formal retirement looms, to present his reflections on his discipline. Looking backwards is, of course, an historian's profession; to do so in individual terms is, however, a deep personal pleasure. This is especially true when so much has taken place during one lifetime, both to the profession of which one is a part, and the society within which one grew. The younger generation of historians should remember how different things were. It was common to come, as the author did, to the profession with a training in a different academic discipline; unlike today's teachers, one could and did become a Canadian historian without the intense formal study which marks the contemporary graduate school. Choosing a profession research in Canadian history was the result of happenstance; selecting a sub-field — in the author's case, the history of the French régime — was a personal one, resulting from a need to know much more about the origins of the society which developed along the St. Lawrence. This lack of a formal historical profession in French Canada did not reflect a disinterest in the past; to the contrary, the society's culture was firmly rooted in its past. But it was a history of a special type, and its advocates were vigorously opposed to any reassessment which challenged their cherished notions. Today's younger historians must not forget the handicaps which their predecessors had to overcome. There was a day, not so very long ago, when, to write the history of French Canada, one had to be both French Canadian and an active Catholic. Behind each completed monograph stands a litany of obstacles: the precarious nature of an academic career, the chronic inadequacy of its wages, the unsatisfactory quality of archival institutions (and sometimes of their staffs), the diplomacy required to obtain the evidence one needed, and the difficulties in finding a publisher and seeing the manuscript to printing. The joy in the process rested with the personal achievement, and its acceptance by the few whose judgement you respected. Only the obstinate and truly devoted scholar survived such circumstances. What has been achieved? History in French Canada has made enormous strides since the Second World War, in part because of the influence of a "scientific" view of historical study, in part through the cross-fertilisation of associated disciplines, in part because of the scholarly standards of contemporary historians. Ideological dogmatism, which has itself been a danger to the integrity of the history that has been written, has largely been overcome. The task of the historian remains the objective assessment of evidence, so that the integrity of history does not itself become the historian's first victim. To assist in this difficult task historians must continue to call on the resources of sister disciplines, such as geography, sociology, economics and law. These serve to broaden one's perspective, even though some of these techniques frankly mystify us with their complexity. Sometimes it appears that the use of social science methods obscures actual results, that effective communications has been weakened by jargon, and that overspecialisation threatens the meaningful generalisation. Yet in the end one trusts that an intelligible history results. So long as the historian refuses to serve a political or ideological master, we all have a future. If the historian, on the other hand, seeks the role of prophet, he departs from his proper place.
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Fingard, Judith. "Presidential Address: The Personal and the Historical." Ottawa 1998 9, no. 1 (February 9, 2006): 3–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/030489ar.

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Abstract In her 1998 Presidential Address to the Canadian Historical Association, Judith Fingard poses a question which has been on our collective minds for some time: “Does the personal history of the historian determine the choice of her or his subject matter, approach, and ongoing professional development?” By delving into the personal reflections of celebrated Canadian historians, Fingard has been able to shed light on this contentious issue. According to Fingard, the personal and professional intersect at several key points (or at least have for her sample of historians working in Canada in the past twenty years). The obvious, it seems, is true. Gender, class and stage of life all influence scholarly pursuits whether it be in terms of subject matter chosen or the amount of time one is able to devote to research and writing. Certainly the past twenty years has seen great change in Canadian academia; particularly, one can argue, in the field of history. It is clear that those sampled in Fingard's survey drew upon their personal backgrounds not only to forge a passion for the past - sometimes against all odds - but a professional identity based on the study of history of the margins. Ultimately, we can conclude that social historians of the past twenty years personify the field they played such a role in developing. To varying degrees, the profession is indeed personal.
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Dyck, Erika. "Canada Dry or High Times?: A Historiographical Look at Drugs and Alcohol in Canada." Canadian Historical Review 102, s2 (July 1, 2021): s339—s363. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-2020-0035.

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Drugs and alcohol have been featured in Canadian history as critical commodities that influenced legal decisions, social interactions, medical options, and even trade decisions. Canadian historians have examined alcohol, drugs, temperance reformers, and intoxicated Canadians in ways that deepen our understanding of how mind-altering products have influenced our Canadian values and how those ideas have changed over time. In this historiographical article, I examine how Canadian historians have responded to trends in historical scholarship that embrace a focus on social history, labour, women, medicine, colonialism, and culture. I argue that alcohol and drugs are ubiquitous in these historiographical shifts but that the uneven pace of decriminalizing intoxication has also led to new sources of information, new historical voices, and perhaps the need to rethink how our attitudes towards psychoactivity have affected our understanding of Canadian history.
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Noll, Mark A. "What Happened to Christian Canada?" Church History 75, no. 2 (June 2006): 245–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000964070011131x.

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By asking “what happened to Christian Canada,” I begin with an assumption that there once was a Christian Canada which is now gone. That assumption is intentional. It is intended to highlight not only the dramatic changes that have taken place in Canadian religious life over the last sixty years, but also substantial contrasts between the religious histories of Canada and the United States, which otherwise are so similar in so many respects. This paper explores the question primarily with American observers in mind, for whom the Canadian past is often as much a shadowy mystery as the great expanse of Canadian geography. But I hope Canadians who read this account may benefit from observing how one sympathetic American views their history and also from realizing that the splendid array of marvelous historical studies that have been produced by a splendid array of marvelous Canadian historians have reached at least some appreciative readers in the United States.
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Savard, Pierre. "Discours du président : Splendeurs et misères de Clio." Historical Papers 16, no. 1 (April 26, 2006): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/030865ar.

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Abstract Clio in Canada today has notable strengths and weaknesses. Historiography itself has been greatly enriched as younger historians using better methods have opened up many new frontiers in labour, urban, Northern, and women's history, among others. As well, historians have had an important part in the flowering in many disciplines over the past decade of ethnic, regional, and Canadian studies-all leading to a fuller understanding of our heritage and nation. The last twenty years have seen a great expansion, too, in the numbers of historians, not only in the colleges and universities, but also among archivists (normally first trained in history) and government researchers (especially at the Department of National Defence and Parks Canada). As it approaches its sixtieth anniversary with well over two thousand members, the Canadian Historical Association itself is very healthy, a leader among learned societies in Canada and a strong force uniting far-flung historians through its annual meeting, its publications, and its defence of historians' interests, as in our recent representations in Ottawa regarding Bill C-43. But all is not well among Clio's Canadian disciples. Historians of countries other than Canada and especially francophone Quebeckers are still very much underrepresented in the CHA, despite laudable attempts to make the association more appealing to them. Our profession is more deeply threatened by attempts by the media through television soap operas and historical novels to equate history with a romantic popularization of the past, at the possible expense of reflective contemplation based on careful research and analysis. And if nineteenth-century historians too often came to history after a full career in public life, which led to obvious biases in their writings, do we now not risk the opposite extreme? Too many historians today are cold analysts removed from the world on isolated campuses, writing only for each other in specialized journals quite divorced from contemporary society. The natural critical capacity of historians — their training to take no evidence or information at face value — is too often lost in the affairs of the world. Despite our differences of temperament, ideology, subject fields, ages, and languages, we as historians in Canada are united in the belief that the past has more to teach us than the present. The lessons so gleaned we must make a source of wisdom for our contemporaries.
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MCKERCHER, ASA, and TIMOTHY ANDREWS SAYLE. "SKYHAWK, SKYSHIELD, AND THE SOVIETS: REVISITING CANADA'S COLD WAR." Historical Journal 61, no. 2 (November 9, 2017): 453–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x17000292.

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AbstractFor the past two decades, Canadian international historians have largely missed the Cold War, or at least a significant portion of it. Certainly, there has been no shortage of studies of Canadian foreign policy featuring the bipolar struggle, and yet historians have largely confined their attention to Canada's admittedly crucial relationship with the United States, while Canadian–Soviet relations have been ignored. Indeed, in the historiography of Canada's Cold War international relations, the communist powers are largely missing. Hoping to challenge this limited focus, we frame our article around two Canada–US air defence exercises held in 1959 and 1960. While historians have viewed these exercises within the context of Canada's relationship with the United States, we highlight the wider Cold War framework in which Canadian policy was formed. After all, these exercises occurred during the mini-détente of the late 1950s and the collapse of the Paris summit in May 1960. As we demonstrate, the failure to take full account of the Cold War is a shortcoming of much of the writing on Canadian international relations, and so we offer an example of the need to take seriously Canada's foreign policy toward the communist bloc.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Cook, Tim Humanities &amp Social Sciences Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. "Canadian official historians and the writing of the world wars." Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2005. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38660.

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This dissertation analyses academic military history and the writing of the World Wars in Canada. While there have been hundreds of books devoted to Canada???s role in the World Wars, few historians have examined the writing of that same history, or the archival records that were used to construct these narratives. It has been the official historians of the Department of National Defence who, for much of the twentieth century, have controlled the historical writing of the World Wars, and that military history has been narrowly defined as the history of military operations. Training, administrating and operational war-fighting remained the focus. Only recently have academic military historians pushed the discipline of military history to explore the impact of the World Wars on Canadian society. Nonetheless, it remains the publications of A.F. Duguid, C.P. Stacy, Gilbert Tucker, Fred Hitchins, Joseph Schull, and more recent official historians that provide the central narrative when examining the writing on Canada???s World Wars. An exploration of key historians and their works reveals historical themes underpinning how memory and narrative of the World Wars has been constructed within historical writing. The official historians were the guardians of memory and controllers of the past. Caught within the battles of reputations that followed the World Wars, they were forced to carefully navigate through these contested issues. Laying an interpretative frame-work, the official historians allowed subsequent generations to build upon and rework their findings, through writing their histories but also by acting as the archivists for their respective services. While the official histories have their flaws, they are also exceptionally important foundational studies that deserve greater attention and study in their own right.
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Kokotailo, Philip 1955. "Appreciating the present : Smith, Sutherland, Frye, and Pacey as historians of English-Canadian poetry." Thesis, McGill University, 1992. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=39772.

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This thesis argues that as historians of English-Canadian poetry, A. J. M. Smith, John Sutherland, Northrop Frye, and Desmond Pacey explicitly promote the value of past conflict reconciled into present harmony. They do so by claiming that such reconciliation marks the maturity of English-Canadian culture. This thesis also argues, however, that the interactive progression of their histories implicitly undermines this value. It does so because each critic appreciates a different group of poets for realizing their shared cultural ideal, thereby establishing contradictory representations of what they all claim to be the culmination of English-Canadian literary history. The thesis concludes that while their lingering sense of present cultural maturity should now be fully renounced, the value these critics place on reconciliation is well worth preserving and transforming.
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Mullen, Amanda. "Mythic migrations: Recreating migrant histories in Canadian fiction." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/29240.

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This thesis examines the work of five Canadian writers who use their fiction to recreate an immigrant past and to mythologize an originary moment in Canada: a migrant's arrival and settlement in a new land. Mordecai Richter's Solomon Gursky Was Here (1989), Sky Lee's Disappearing Moon Cafe (1990), Jane Urquhart's Away (1993), Lawrence Hill's Any Known Blood (1997), and Nino Ricci's trilogy, Lives of the Saints (1990), In a Glass House (1993), and Where She Has Gone (1997) each express a nostalgic longing for an authenticating mythology that will give a previously silenced ethno-cultural group a place in the national narrative. Nostalgia literally means a painful return home, and the narrators of these novels express a bittersweet longing for a Canadian past, for a Canadian home. While nostalgia has traditionally played a central role in ethnic literature, this longing has typically rested on a nostalgic desire to return to a distant homeland. Yet the narrators of this study express a nostalgia for a different kind of origins---for origins in a new land. Richter, Lee, Urquhart, Hill, and Ricci create detailed genealogies in their novels that show how their different groups---Jewish, Chinese, Irish, Black, and Italian---helped build the nation and what roles each of these groups played in Canada's past. This thesis thus reveals that the interrogation of Canada's master narratives is not complete and that, even for later generations of immigrants, there remains a desire to establish their identities as Canadian The five writers of this study are deliberately challenging the authority of Canada's dominant cultural paradigm by recreating the immigrant experiences of their ethno-cultural groups in order to refute the myth of two founding nations and to establish Canada as home for their own particular groups. With their mythologized versions of history, these writers are striving to include neglected and forgotten voices in the story of Canada.
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Cros, Laurence. "La representation du canada dans les ecrits des historiens canadiens anglophones, de la confederation a nos jours." Paris 3, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA030161.

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Le but de ce travail est d'offrir une analyse des representations du canada proposees par les historiens anglophones de ce pays. On a choisi d'etudier les historiens canadiens anglophones, plutot que les intellectuels en general, parce qu'ils se sont tres tot attribue un role moteur dans la definition de la specificite nationale et le renforcement du sentiment d'unite. Ce role apparait essentiel du fait de la situation particuliere du canada : colonie n'ayant pas connue de guerre d'independance. Etat devant se demarquer d'un voisin fort semblable, pays dont la diversite ethnique ne cesse de s'accentuer. Les historiens representent le canada de facon fort variee, mettant en lumiere les caracteristiques politiques, sociales, economiques ou naturelles qu'ils estiment les plus benefiques au developpement national. Cette diversite ne doit cependant pas masquer la continuite de l'effort mis en oeuvre pour forger une specificite nationale face aux trois grands defis poses au canada : la dependance envers la grande-bretagne, l'influence americaine, la presence francophone. Si la primaute accordee a cette recherche identitaire n'est pas surprenante au moment de la formation nationale, il est moins normal de la retrouver apres que le pays a conquis le droit a une existence unie et independante. Il s'agit donc d'une identite continuellement en sursis, qui se trouve menacee au moment meme ou elle croit s'etre le mieux definie. Il s'agit aussi d'une identite relative, puisqu'on montrera qu'elle s'etablit necessairement par rapport a des partenaires (anglais, americains, francophones). Ces caracteres recurrents, identite en sursis, identite relative, finissent par creer l'impression paradoxale que la specificite nationale canadienne existe d'autant plus qu'elle ne cesse de se chercher
The purpose of this work is to offer an analysis of the way canada is represented by english- speaking canadian historians. Historians, rather than intellectuals in general, were chosen as the object of study because since the beginning of historical writing in canada, they chose to describe themselves as key agents in the process of defining a national identity and defending national unity. Such a role is crucial in a country whose identity is particularly fragile, due to the lack of a proper declaration of independence from great britain, the difficulty of differentiating itself from the united states, and the internal pressure of ethnic and regional diversity. Historians represent canada in many varied ways; they focus on the political, social, economic, or environmental characteristics which they each consider beneficial to its national development. This variety, however, should not blur the underlying unity of the shared effort to create a specific national identity. Historians' focus on national identity is not unexpected at the time when canada was built; it is more surprising after the country has proven its existence as a united and independent state on the american continent. The canadian identity, as it is analyzed by historians, seems perpetually threatened, even when it should be well anchored. It is always a relative identity, established in relation with three main partners (great britain, the united states, and the french-speaking community). Ironically, these characteristics seem to show that the canadian identity is all the stronger for always seeking to find itself
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Wilt, Yasmine Elissa Anne. "Dramatising new Canadian histories : a creative practice doctoral thesis." Thesis, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10443/3155.

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This thesis is composed of two primary parts. The first part, which comprises seventy per cent of this doctoral study, is made up of two new history plays, We’re Gonna Make You Whole and The Interrogation. The second part, which makes up the remaining thirty per cent, is a critical analysis that positions my creative writing within the spectrum of Canadian postcolonial drama, alongside other dramatists who employ magical realism and new historicism in their work. I analyse my creative practice and compare and contrast Marie Clements’s Burning Vision with We’re Gonna Make You Whole. In the final chapters I analyse my way of working, looking closely at the construction of The Interrogation. The creation of the two new history plays is my primary contribution to knowledge. Published in 2011 by Oberon Books, the first of my two submission plays, We’re Gonna Make You Whole, is a magical-real new history of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Disaster. This compact, two-act play interrupts and disrupts the mainstream mediatised history of the disaster by deploying an interwoven, alternate perspective of the catastrophe. This interruption aims to make the mainstream history seem uncanny by normalising the alternate, subversive history. Set in the military headquarters of an unidentified military body, The Interrogation, my second play, interrupts the mainstream narrative of the global economic crisis by suggesting a link between the neocolonial attitudes of the UK, US and Germany and the present financial landscape. The play dramatises the brutal interrogation of two soldiers, one junior and the other senior, by a mysterious chameleon interrogator (also a soldier) who assumes the accent, affectations and status of his ‘victims’.
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Meagher, Stephen. "Subjects, Inscriptions, Histories: Sites of Liminality in Three Canadian Autobiographical Fictions." Thesis, McGill University, 1995. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=92142.

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This thesis explores how Beatrice Culleton's In Search of April Raintree, JoyKogawa's Obasan, and Michael Ondaatje's Running in the Family trouble, by emulating and transgressing the protocols of the literary autobiography, formulations of the historical "subject" aligned to those conventions. Consequently, the primary site of interpretation of this thesis is the delineation of the se texts' narrators as "subjects" who both write and are written by history. This thesis will demonstrate how these "autobiographical fictions" in scribe histories which question "official" accounts and probe gender and race articulations both within those official inscriptions as weIl as in their own historically constructed communities. These textual (dis )placements are interpreted in the context of the critical discourses of postmodernism and post-colonialism.
Cette thèse examine comment les ouvrages In Search of April Raintree, de Beatrice Culleton, Obasan, de Joy Kogawa, et Running in the Family, de Michael Ondaatje, perturbent, par leur respect et leur transgression des règles de l'autobiographie littéraire, les formulations du "sujet" historique liées aux conventions propres à ce genre. Le site principal d'interprétation réside donc dans la délimitation des contours des narrateurs de ces textes en tant que "sujets" qui, tout à fois, écrivent l'histoire et sont écrits par elle. Cette thèse démontre que ces "fictions autobiographiques" inscrivent des récits qui remettent en question les comptes rendus "officiels" et examinent les articulations au sexe et à la "race", tant à l'intérieur de ces inscriptions officielles que dans leurs propres collectivités historiquement constituées. Ces dé(placements) textuels sont interprétés à la lumière des discours critiques du post-modernisme et du post-colonialisme. fr
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Auger, Lauren Beth. ""That's my story" : unpacking Canadian war bride veterans' life histories." Thesis, University of Brighton, 2017. https://research.brighton.ac.uk/en/studentTheses/1391ebe3-a133-44d5-aa83-de31e3dfff40.

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This thesis analyzes the life histories of women who served in the Second World War British auxiliary services (the Auxiliary Territorial Service, the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, and the Women’s Royal Naval Service) who migrated to Canada as war brides (the wives or fiancées of Canadian servicemen). It argues that understandings of womanhood which connect ideal femininity with domesticity operate on the ways in which war bride veterans view themselves as veterans and how they remember their experiences as servicewomen. In their oral histories, these women portrayed themselves both in accordance with and in opposition to traditional feminine roles. However, identities associated with traditional femininity such as ‘sweetheart,’ ‘wife,’ ‘mother,’ and ‘grandmother’ were frequently most prevalent. My findings indicate that war brides who had more satisfying and smooth transitions to Canadian life generally remember and emphasize their war bride past over their military history and view themselves as having a Canadian identity. Alternatively, those who had more difficult experiences of migration gain composure in remembering their experiences as servicewomen since these experiences were less troubling and complicated. These women tend to assert their British identities. This project contributes to scholarship in gender history, memory studies, and studies of migration though unpacking how cultural discourses regarding gender in wartime and national identity intersect with stories of migration in the life history narratives of war bride veterans. It provides a new framework for the study of women in war in Britain, as well as war bride history in Canada. This thesis produced and draws from eighteen comprehensive life history interviews with war bride veterans. Part I begins with a chapter exploring theoretical concepts setting out the combined material and cultural epistemology of this project, including popular memory theory, as well as understandings of gender and nationality that assisted the methodology developed for analyzing war bride veterans’ narratives in relation to historical and cultural research. This methodology based on the work of T.G. Ashplant, Graham Dawson, Michael Roper, and Richard Johnson, recognizes the circular and nuanced relationships people have with cultural codes and memories. The historical context chapter examines historical understandings regarding appropriate roles for men and women in wartime through primary source research and contemporary gender historical theory. It also examines how war brides have been recognized in Canadian cultural memory. Part II applies this work with three chapters centred on life history interviews with Wendy Turner, Victoria Sparrow, and Penny MacDonald (pseudonyms).
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Andrews, Katherine Jean. "Not Just the Past, but History: Researcher-Historian Characters in Canadian Postmodern Historical Fiction." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/31696.

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Since the mid-1980s, the study of Canadian postmodern historical fiction has been dominated by Linda Hutcheon’s “historiographic metafiction.” Emphasizing historiography and textuality, critics of historiographic metafiction have flattened the past to text and image, inadvertently severing its active connection with the present and removing it from historical process. This is problematic for the ideological intentions of the texts in question because it is an awareness of the past/present dialectic that incites awareness that present action can lead to future change. This thesis, therefore, examines three novels that have overwhelmingly been viewed as historiographic metafiction for their inclusion of researcher-historian characters: Findley’s The Wars, Bowering’s Burning Water, and Marlatt’s Ana Historic. By opening up these texts to criticism that acknowledges history as process, I demonstrate that there is no need to limit these novels to this problematic framework and that researcher-historian characters are valuable for more than their foregrounding of historiography.
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Elgue, de Martini Cristina. "La re-escritura de la historia en las ficciones argentina y quebequense contemporáneas." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0002/NQ43067.pdf.

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Rivard, Isabelle. "Pierre Daviault (1899--1964), traducteur, auteur, historien, pédagogue et défenseur de la langue française." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26391.

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Pierre Daviault is a household name in the field of translation in Canada. He holds a prominent place thanks to his contribution to the profession itself and to the teaching of professional translation, which he pioneered. He wrote numerous linguistic books to fill a gap in his time---there was no Petit Robert or Robert & Collins in the 1940s. Daviault also developed the very first professional translation course for the University of Ottawa, in the heart of Canada's capital, a bilingual country. Daviault was a published author in other realms of knowledge. His love for the French presence in Canada explains his two biographies of well-known characters of Nouvelle-France. Other works include short stories about famous and less known people of his time and ventures into the literary world in the form of two adventure novels. The entire career of Pierre Daviault spanned from the 1920s to the mid-1960s and revolved around one subject: the French language. Everything he did or created over his long and successful career related, in one way or another, to this passion.
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Books on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Transactions of the Third Canadian Conference of Medieval Art Historians. London, Canada: University of Western Ontario, 1985.

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The writing of Canadian history: Aspects of English-Canadian historical writing since 1900. 2nd ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1986.

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Fighting for Afghanistan: A rogue historian at war. Annapolis, Md: Naval Institute Press, 2011.

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Pierre Berton: A biography. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2008.

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George, Woodcock. Walking through the valley: An autobiography. Toronto: ECW Press, 1994.

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George, Woodcock. Walking through the valley: An autobiography. Toronto: ECW Press, 1994.

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Douglas, Althea. Tools of the trade for Canadian genealogy: A guide for family historians researching in Canada. Toronto: Ontario Genealogical Society, 2000.

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Douglas, Althea. Tools of the trade for Canadian genealogy: A guide for family historians researching in Canada. Toronto: Ontario Genealogical Society, 2004.

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The hero and the historians: Historiography and the uses of Jacques Cartier. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010.

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George, Woodcock. Beyond the blue mountains: An autobiography. Markham, Ont: Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Ginkel, Jan van. "Michael the Syrian and his Sources: Reflections on the Methodology of Michael the Great as a Historiographer and its Implications for Modern Historians." In Journal of the Canadian Society for Syriac Studies 6, edited by Amir Harrak, 53–60. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463216160-006.

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Ginkel, Jan J. Van. "MONK, MISSIONARY, AND MARTYR: JOHN OF EPHESUS, A SYRIAC ORTHODOX HISTORIAN IN SIXTH CENTURY BYZANTIUM." In Journal of the Canadian Society for Syriac Studies 5, edited by Amir Harrak, 35–50. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463216177-004.

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Bullock, Katherine. "To Make a Difference: Oral Histories of Two Canadian Muslim Women and their Organisational Lives." In Muslim Community Organizations in the West, 183–204. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-13889-9_9.

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Pinar, William F. "Curriculum Studies in Canada: Intellectual Histories, Present Circumstances, and Future Prospects." In Encyclopedia of Educational Innovation, 1–6. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2262-4_240-1.

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Shternshis, Anna. "Gender and Identity in Oral Histories of Elderly Russian Jewish Migrants in the United States and Canada." In A Companion to Diaspora and Transnationalism, 277–92. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118320792.ch16.

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Creighton, D. G. "Sir John Macdonald and Canadian Historians (1948)." In The Contested Past, edited by Marlene Shore. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442680906-032.

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Christie, Nancy. "“Unfrenchifying” Quebec." In The Formal and Informal Politics of British Rule In Post-Conquest Quebec, 1760-1837, 347–81. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198851813.003.0007.

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In keeping with the overall theme of the contested nature of British rule, this chapter investigates the establishment of the first French-language newspaper, Le Canadien, demonstrating the way in which the French Canadian political opposition appropriated the tenets of classical republicanism to break the natural equation between Britishness and liberty. Because of this move, the English press was compelled to embrace Court Whig political discourse so that political allegiances and ideologies were now synonymous with two ethnic political factions. The discourse of political opposition was not derived from the model of the American Republic, as historians have previously contended, but was adapted from a longstanding mode of political argument within the colony and was driven by an often stridently anti-Catholic and anti-French British nationalism.
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Trigger, Bruce G. "The Historians' Indian: Native Americans in Canadian Historical Writing from Charlevoix to the Present (1986)." In The Contested Past, edited by Marlene Shore. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442680906-060.

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McGaughey, Jane G. V. "Introduction." In Violent Loyalties, 1–28. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621860.003.0001.

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Benjamin Lett’s escapades on the Canadian frontier, including the destruction of the Brock Monument in 1841, strengthened the stereotype of Irishmen in the Canadas as violent, rebellious, and politically agitated newcomers who created an unsettling presence in the colonies. The violent actions of comparatively few Irishmen in the Canadas were more powerful in the colonial imagination than the lived experiences of hundreds of thousands of their countrymen in Lower and Upper Canada. This chapter introduces the power that this negative stereotype had in shaping the experiences of Irish immigrants in the decades before the Great Irish Famine. It outlines how codes of manliness and constructions of masculinities intersected with popular ideas about Irish violence and loyalty, placing the book’s subsequent case studies in a wider international and comparative framework. It also explores previous historiographies of the Irish in Canada and argues for the influence that gendered analyses can bring to transnational histories.
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McGaughey, Jane G. V. "Conclusion." In Violent Loyalties, 227–34. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621860.003.0009.

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The conclusion of this book re-examines the thematic interplay between gender, violence, and loyalty in shaping evaluations of Irish manliness and constructions of Irish masculinities in Upper and Lower Canada in the first half of the nineteenth century. It questions why Canadian examples of a gendered Irish Diaspora have not gained as much traction as those from colonial Australia or nineteenth century America. The chapter reasserts how the book as a whole has added to various historiographic and gendered debates and emphasises that using a gendered paradigm in concert with cultural analyses of violence and loyalty can weaken predominant local, national, and imperial myths. It closes by asserting that violent Irishmen very much existed in the Canadas. While they did not represent a majority of their countrymen in the colonies, they did represent important aspects of Irish Canadian masculinities that have been underplayed or ignored in national and diasporic histories.
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Conference papers on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Smith, P., and J. Williford. "Case Histories: Liner-Completion Difficulties Resolved With Expandable Liner-Top Technology." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2006-103.

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Metcalf, A. S., S. Orona, and G. Kretzschmer. "Case Histories of Successful Acid Stimulation of Carbonate Completed With Horizontal Openhole Wellbores." In Canadian International Petroleum Conference. Petroleum Society of Canada, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/2007-085.

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Al-Buali, Muhammad Hamad, Alaa Ahmed Dashash, Tarek Ahmed El Gammal, Francisco J. Arevalo, and Juan Torne. "Intelligent Sensors for Evaluating Reservoir and Well Profile in Horizontal Wells: Saudi Arabia Case Histories." In Canadian Unconventional Resources and International Petroleum Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/137202-ms.

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Omatsone, Eseoghene Nene, Mohammad Ali Bagheri, Christopher M. F. Galas, Brad Curtis, and Ken Frankiw. "Redevelopment of the Cardium Formation Using Fractured Horizontal Wells: Reservoir Engineering Perspectives and Early Case Histories." In Canadian Unconventional Resources and International Petroleum Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/137737-ms.

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N. Titkov, A., R. D. Rodnikova, and V. I. Vysotsky. "Strategy of oil and exploration - Case histories from Russia, USA and Canada." In 56th EAEG Meeting. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201410267.

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Longworth, H. L., G. C. Dunn, and M. Semchuck. "Underground Disposal of Acid Gas in Alberta, Canada: Regulatory Concerns and Case Histories." In SPE Gas Technology Symposium. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/35584-ms.

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Zheng, Jingwen, Juliana Y. Leung, Ronald P. Sawatzky, and Jose M. Alvarez. "An AI-Based Workflow for Estimating Shale Barrier Configurations from SAGD Production Histories." In SPE Canada Heavy Oil Technical Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/184984-ms.

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Phillips, G., and H. Maathuis. "Surface And Downhole Em Investigations At Potash Mine Sites In Saskatchewan, Canada: Case Histories." In 10th EEGS Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609-pdb.204.1997_011.

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Phillips, G., and H. Maathuis. "Surface and Downhole EM Investigations at Potash Mine Sites in Saskatchewan, Canada: Case Histories." In Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 1997. Environment and Engineering Geophysical Society, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4133/1.2922480.

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Sutherby, Robert, Tom Jack, Greg Van Boven, and Martyn Wilmott. "CEPA Study on Characterization of Pipeline Pressure Fluctuations in Terms Relevant to Stress Corrosion Cracking." In 2000 3rd International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2000-222.

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Neutral-pH stress corrosion cracking (SCC) is a topic of significant interest to pipeline operators in the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association (CEPA). In recent years there has been a shift in laboratory SCC research toward investigating cracking phenomena under more realistic environmental and physical loading conditions. To support this move, CEPA has been active in collecting pressure-time data from its varied membership of liquid and gas pipeline companies. Histories of pressure fluctuations in operating systems have been characterized in terms of loading cycles, R-values (the ratio of minimum to maximum stress) and strain rates. These parameters are relevant to the design of laboratory experiments for the investigation of SCC. An overview of the data is presented for both liquid and gas pipelines in various service applications.
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Reports on the topic "Canadian Historians"

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Schweger, C. E. Paleoecology of the western Canadian Ice - Free Corridor [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131561.

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Matthews, J. V., and T. W. Anderson. Introductory Comments On the Development of the Canadian Biota Following Ice Retreat [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131567.

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Matthews, J. V., T. W. Anderson, M. Boyko-Diakonow, R. W. Mathewes, J. H. McAndrews, R. J. Mott, P. J H Richard, J. C. Ritchie, and C E Schweger. Summary [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131553.

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Matthews, J. V., and T. W. Anderson. Introduction [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131555.

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Mott, R. J. Late Pleistocene Paleoenvironments in Atlantic Canada [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131565.

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Ritchie, J. C. History of the Boreal Forest in Canada [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131569.

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Matthews, J. V., and T. W. Anderson. Introductory Comments On Glacial Refugia [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131557.

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Matthews, J. V., and T. W. Anderson. Introductory Comments On Interglacial Environments [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131563.

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Anderson, T. W., R. W. Mathewes, and C. E. Schweger. Holocene Climatic Trends in Canada With Special Reference To the Hypsithermal Interval [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131575.

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Mathewes, R. W. The Queen Charlotte Islands Refugium: a Paleoecological Perspective [Chapter 7: Quaternary Environments in Canada As Documented By Paleobotanical Case Histories]. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/131559.

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