Academic literature on the topic 'Women artists – British Columbia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Women artists – British Columbia"

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Collier de Mendonça, Maria, and Gisela Castro. "Envelhecimento, idadismo e a invisibilidade dos idosos na mídia: entrevista com Laura Hurd Clarke." Comunicação Mídia e Consumo 13, no. 38 (2016): 152. http://dx.doi.org/10.18568/cmc.v13i38.1173.

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Doutora em Sociologia da Universidade de British Columbia, Laura Hurd Clark pesquisa as experiências de homens e mulheres durante o processo de envelhecimento. Autora de Facing Age: women growing older in an anti-ageing culture e artigos em periódicos de gerontologia social, sociologia do envelhecimento, estudos femininos e outros campos.Esta entrevista foi conduzida em Vancouver, como parte das atividades GRUSCCO (Grupo CNPq de Pesquisa em Subjetividade, Comunicação e Consumo), liderado pela Profa. Dra. Gisela Castro no PPGCOM ESPM, São Paulo.Palestrante convidada do Simpósio Internacional Comunicação, Consumo e Modos de Envelhecimento, evento que compõe a programação do COMUNICON, a Dra. Clark estará em São Paulo em outubro de 2016.
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McKenna, KatherineM. "British Columbia Reconsidered: Essays on Women." Women's Studies International Forum 18, no. 1 (1995): 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0277-5395(95)80012-3.

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Dwyer, Melva J. "Fine arts libraries in British Columbia: culture on the West Coast of Canada." Art Libraries Journal 24, no. 3 (1999): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200019556.

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Fine arts and culture have existed in British Columbia from the time that the First Peoples came to the North Pacific coast of Canada. Vancouver’s first fine arts library was established in 1930 at the Vancouver Public Library; significant collections have subsequently been developed at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Emily Carr Institute of Art & Design and the University of British Columbia. They serve a diverse clientele: students, artists and researchers. Outlook, a province-wide network, provides access via the Internet to library catalogues of public, college and institution libraries throughout the Province.
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Davy, Jack. "The “Idiot Sticks”: Kwakwaka'wakw Carving and Cultural Resistance in Commercial Art Production on the Northwest Coast." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 42, no. 3 (2018): 27–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicrj.42.3.davy.

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“Idiot sticks” was a derogatory term used to describe miniature totem poles made as souvenirs for white tourists by the artists of the Kwakwaka'wakw people of British Columbia in the early twentieth century. Tracking the post-contact history of the Kwakwaka'wakw using a combination of historical accounts and interviews with contemporary Kwakwaka'wakw artists, this article explores the obscured subversive and satirical nature of these objects as a form of resistance to settler colonialism, and in doing so reconsiders who really could be considered the “idiot” in this exchange.
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Coldman, Andrew, Norm Phillips, Linda Warren, and Lisa Kan. "Breast cancer mortality after screening mammography in British Columbia women." International Journal of Cancer 120, no. 5 (2006): 1076–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.22249.

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Donaldson, Mira A., Amber R. Campbell, Arianne Y. Albert, et al. "Comorbidity and polypharmacy among women living with HIV in British Columbia." AIDS 33, no. 15 (2019): 2317–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/qad.0000000000002353.

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PERRY, G. "'The British Sappho': Borrowed Identities and the Representation of Women Artists in late Eighteenth-Century British Art." Oxford Art Journal 18, no. 1 (1995): 44–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxartj/18.1.44.

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Nestor, Pauline. "Unfolding the South: Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers and Artists in Italy (review)." Victorian Studies 48, no. 2 (2006): 348–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/vic.2006.0097.

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Chunn, Dorothy E. "Regulating (Hetero)Sexual Offences in British Columbia, 1885-1940." Israel Law Review 35, no. 2-3 (2001): 285–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002122370001222x.

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Since the late twentieth century, much literature and debate has addressed the use and misuse of science and expertise in the courts and the relationship between science and law in the determination of legal outcomes. Feminists have examined these issues in relation to the adjudication of criminal cases involving women accused (battered woman syndrome – BWS; pre-menstrual syndrome – PMS) and women complainants/victims (rape trauma syndrome – RTS) as well as cases in other areas of law such as sex discrimination and sexual harassment. Their research demonstrates that expert testimony reflects class-based, gendered, racialized, and sexualized assumptions and is clearly important to case outcomes. On one hand, judges often are swayed by expert testimony given at trial and/or submitted at the pre-trial or pre-sentence stage of the criminal process. On the other hand, non-legal experts often act like legal agents on behalf of either the prosecution or the defense. Indeed, the issue of competing experts is central to much discussion and debate about their place in criminal proceedings.
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Iverson, Grant L., and Ronald Remick. "Diagnostic Accuracy of the British Columbia Major Depression Inventory." Psychological Reports 95, no. 3_suppl (2004): 1241–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.95.3f.1241-1247.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the diagnostic accuracy and clinical usefulness of the British Columbia Major Depression Inventory. Participants were 62 patients with depression referred by their psychiatrist or family physician, 19 general medical outpatients with no psychiatric problems referred by their family physicians, and 49 community control subjects. Mean age for the control subjects was 50.2 yr. ( SD = 11.8), and mean education was 14.6 yr. ( SD = 2.8). Approximately 59% were women. Mean age for the patients with depression was 41.1 yr. ( SD = 12.5), and mean education was 14.6 yr. ( SD = 3.2). Approximately 71% were women. Scores of 9 or less are considered broadly normal. Applying this cut-off, the sensitivity of the test to detect depression was .92, and the specificity was .99. Thus, the test did not identify approximately 8% of the cases of depression, with 1.5% false positives. This inventory is a relatively new depression screening test patterned after the DSM–IV criteria for major depression. This study adds to a growing literature on the reliability, validity, and clinical usefulness of the test.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Women artists – British Columbia"

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Ewing, Gillian. "Secondary school art education : the artist’s viewpoint." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25386.

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Artists are seldom consulted in the making of school art programs yet many are vitally concerned with the need for a visually literate public. This study summarizes the history of art education, examines recent issues documented by art educators, looks at opinions of artists of this century on the teaching of art, and presents interviews with six British Columbian artists to elicit their thoughts on what is necessary in a secondary school art curriculum. The interviews are essentially informal in nature and only those remarks dealing with secondary school education, or related concepts, are included. The final chapter contains an infusion of the artists' ideas under headings suggested by issues raised by art educators. An evaluation of the data collected from the interviews leads to recommendations for consideration for secondary school programs and the conviction that artists should be encouraged to participate in matters relating to art education.<br>Education, Faculty of<br>Graduate
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Nielsen, Carol. "A strategy for increasing employment and crisis housing options for women." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25478.

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This thesis examines the strategy of community economic development (CED) to potentially alleviate some of the hardships women experience in obtaining both adequate income through employment and access to transitional (crisis) housing. These two distinct yet inter-related problems have been selected to provide a manageable scope for this thesis and as a result of my own keen interest and involvement in these two areas: employment and crisis housing for women. Indeed, as a comprehensive development strategy, CED may provide the means to effectively deal with the broader complex of disadvantages such as social and economic dependency, marginalization and isolation by providing opportunities for independence and social change. Women are concentrated in low paid occupations, earn 62% of what men earn (1980), experience high unemployment and a number of employment barriers including subtle and/or overt discrimination and a double burden of work and family responsibilities. Women earn 30% (1980) of the total income in B.C., experience a disproportionate amount of poverty as individuals and as single parent family heads, and are twice as likely as men to report government transfer payments as our main source of income. In addition, one in ten women who are married or in a live-in relationship with a lover is battered, and only 50% have access to a transition house or hostel which accepts women who are battered. Due to full capacities, those houses that do exist regularly must refuse access. CED is a very simple concept intended to address very serious and complex economic and social conditions. The ultimate goal is to improve the quality of life of community members through community initiated and supported economic and social activity which generates employment, wealth, community benefit and a great degree of self-esteem. Community is defined here as women who share a common view or ideology and interest in employment and crisis housing provisions. Through the development of women's enterprises, employment may be generated and profits channelled to the creation and operation of transition houses. CED provides a means for incremental change through planning, and specifically, women planning for women to take greater control of our lives. Having entered a "new reality" within this province complete with restraint and privatization and increasing unemployment with associated economic and social costs, CED appears increasingly favourable, particularly for women. Unemployment and violence is increasing while resources and solutions lacking. The opportunity to examine the potential of CED to meet the objectives as stated is provided through the development of a potential scenario and considerations which must be made to increase the probability of success. If women are to experiment with CED, thorough planning must occur within a long-term development strategy. CED is not easy and provides no quick-fix solution to the disadvantages women experience. When consideration of organizational activities, capacity levels and other factors required for success is undertaken, in addition to a realistic examination of the potential and obstacles for CED, good results may occur. CED should be approached both enthusiastically and cautiously. It is my hope that women's organizations will take up the challenge and test the potential.<br>Applied Science, Faculty of<br>Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of<br>Graduate
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Chambers, Carmel M. "Rhetoric in British Columbia : an analysis of its influence upon adult education and women." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25364.

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The topic under consideration is the rhetoric of British Columbia's political leaders and their strategic use of language whereby the government maintains its position of power and authority, implements its own ideological priorities, even if unpopular, and deprives the opposition of its ability to effectively mount a counter strategy. Aspects of political philosophies, human nature, scientific knowledge, education, and alternate feminist political philosophical views are presented. Brief sketches of Constitutionalism, The Rule of Law and ideological bases of modern political systems, liberalism and socialism, are considered in the context of a political spectrum that spans communism to fascism. An analytical framework adapted from the classical rhetoric of Aristotle and the new rhetoric of Kenneth Burke is used to examine the rhetoric and actions of the political leaders of British Columbia. Findings indicate that the strategies employed are effective and persuasive to the dominant majority of the populace. Components of strategy are identified which are deemed necessary in order that a democratically elected government may pursue successfully, a revolutionary political ideological change in its philosophy. Priorities and areas of social concern are identified in terms of their esteem for the present government leaders. The market principle and technology are the sacred cows. Education of a liberal kind, women, the welfare state, are a sow's ear. One recommendation is that adult education unite with movements that espouse and practice like philosophies so that it is strengthened and rejuvenated in its mandate and not precipitated to bend to the prevailing political ideology.<br>Education, Faculty of<br>Educational Studies (EDST), Department of<br>Graduate
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Buksh, Seema M. "Sexual Desire as Experienced by South Asian Women Living in British Columbia." Antioch University / OhioLINK, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1576162139475512.

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Stewart, Lee Jean. "The experience of women at the University of British Columbia, 1906-1956." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/26611.

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This study of the coeducational experience of women at the University of British Columbia from 1916 to 1956 is threefold. It examines how the institution adapted to the female presence, the ways women assimilated or accommodated themselves to their environment, and the relationship of the changing climate of social expectations of women to the purposes of women's education and their experience at university. The study is placed in both a thematic and a regional context. The thematic framework is suggested by the historiography concerned with women's admission to universities in the nineteenth century. This literature establishes the role of the "uncompromising" and "separatist" feminists, partisan politics, public opinion, social definitions of femininity, and institutional structures in determining the form and content of women's education. The social, economic and political factors that account for the development of higher education in the province define the regional context. This study finds that separatist feminists exerted a significant influence in defining women's education in the early part of the twentieth century. However, social, political and economic considerations guided the establishing of Nursing and Home Economics Departments at UBC. Institutional modifications such as the appointment of a Dean of Women and the building of women's residences, similarly depended on practical economic solutions to appease feminist agitation. Irrespective of the equality that is implied by coeducation, social expectations of women continued to act as obstacles to women's participation in higher education and ensured their secondary status. Female students devised strategies to ease the contradictory expectations of the academic and the social community. They chose nonconformity to gender expectations, conformity to standards of femininity, the precarious balance of double conformity to academic and feminine standards, and separatist feminism to redress the inequity of women's secondary status within higher education.<br>Arts, Faculty of<br>History, Department of<br>Graduate
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Moore, Jacky. "The hidden voices of Nuu'Chah'Nulth women." Thesis, Canterbury Christ Church University, 2013. http://create.canterbury.ac.uk/12766/.

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The role of women among Nuu’Chah’Nulth culture has received little attention. As Perdue (1) discusses, few sources exist from the eighteenth century about the lives of Aboriginal women, and what does exist has, in the main, been written from white European and male viewpoints, obscuring women’s voices and thinking. I will examine the roles and responsibilities of Nuu’Chah’Nulth women today and over the last two hundred years since Cook’s arrival in Nootka Sound on the west-coast of Vancouver Island, during the turbulent, colonial times of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, to the traumatic era of the lives of Nuu’Chah’Nulth women in the second half of the twentieth century, times of intense cultural change. Whilst building on the research and written observations of explorers, naturalists, fur-traders and Indian agents I hope to give a unique and complex view of how the arrival of the mamalhn’i2 affected the lives of Nuu’Chah’Nulth women, how these women adapted change to their advantage wherever possible through the inspiring words of the women themselves. Thought-provoking, in-depth interviews with thirteen Nuu’Chah’Nulth women conducted over a three year span form the heart of this thesis, adding originality to a sound historical base. I will argue Nuu’Chah’Nulth conceptions of gender roles have persisted until the twenty-first century despite the traumatic influence of colonialism and residential schooling. Maintaining traditional gender roles has allowed Nuu’Chah’Nulth women to adapt to changing circumstances and adopt new industries and practices whilst upholding their cultural identities as First Nation women. The strengths of their traditions empowered the women to resist change, including pressure from federal government to relinquish culture and language, bringing to life women long ago consigned to the shadows of historical anonymity. Continuity and diversity mark the lives of Nuu’Chah’Nulth women, their strengths creating the values and behaviours necessary to restore balance to their families and communities. By examining women’s role in community and family life over the last two hundred years, I will argue Nuu’Chah’Nulth women were co-equal contributors to Nuu’Chah’Nulth life, balancing the areas in which women were (and are) the anchors of their culture whilst also acknowledging their interactions with new influences from the twenty-first century. (1) Perdue, Theda (1998) Cherokee Women: Gender and Culture Change, 1700-1835. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.
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Tseng, Ling-I. Olivia. "Bone health and osteoporosis in women diagnosed with breast cancer in British Columbia." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/62872.

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Background: Women diagnosed with breast cancer are at higher risk of osteoporosis and osteoporotic fractures. Information is lacking on utilization of bone mineral density testing in British Columbia, and fracture risks associated with tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors to plan care. Methods: Three studies were conducted on women diagnosed with breast cancer. Study 1, a retrospective cross-sectional study evaluated the utilization of bone mineral density testing in 1995-2008 and identified factors associated with different testing rates using secondary data-linkage in older women aged ≥65 and diagnosed with breast cancer for ≥3 years in British Columbia, Canada. Study 2, a pilot randomized controlled trial, assessed the feasibility of a protocol designed to improve bone health management, especially bone mineral density testing rates, with educational material in older women aged ≥65 and diagnosed with breast cancer for ≥3 years. And study 3, a systematic review with meta-analysis, estimated fracture risks associated with tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors in younger women aged ≤65. Results: In older women aged ≥65, proportions of women with ≥1 bone mineral density test per calendar year increased from 1.0% in 1995 to 10.1% in 2008. Women with lower socio-economic status or rural residence were significantly less likely to have a bone mineral density test. The study protocol is feasible with a promising effect of educational material on bone mineral density testing rates (17%, 95%CI=6 to 33) in the 54 participants during the pilot study six-month follow-up period. In younger women aged ≤65, fracture risk did not differ between the tamoxifen and no-tamoxifen groups. Aromatase inhibitor-associated fracture risk was 17% and 35% higher than the risks in the no-aromatase inhibitor group and tamoxifen group respectively. The higher aromatase inhibitor-associated fracture risk compared with tamoxifen descreased slowly over time. The risk was significantly higher during the treatment period, but not the post-treatment period. Conclusions: Increased risk of fractures is reported in women diagnosed with breast cancer and treated with aromatase inhibitors, while screening for osteoporosis with bone mineral density testing is sub-optimal. There is a need to improve bone health management programs which should include educational materials.<br>Medicine, Faculty of<br>Graduate
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Falcon, Paulette Yvonne Lynnette. "If the evil ever occurs : the 1873 Married Women's Property Act : law, property and gender relations in 19th century British Columbia." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30571.

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This study will examine the circumstances surrounding the passage of the British Columbia Married Women's Property Act, 1873 and the judicial response to it. The statute was an attempt on the part of legislators to clarify and facilitate married women's actions in the marketplace, while accomodating new ideas about women's place in society. But despite the rhetoric about women's rights and the bill's more egalitarian potential, it precipitated no domestic revolution. The courts, in turn, ignored the legislation's more liberal provisions and interpreted it solely as a protective measure. Notwithstanding their different views on gender relations and marital property reform, legislators and judges shared common beliefs about the importance of family life. Consequently, the law defended women's legal rights as family members more than as individuals. Overall, the bill represented a compromise. Although it was meant to alleviate some of a wife's legal disabilities so that she could participate more freely in the economic life of the community, it was also grounded in the Victorian paternalism of the legislators who enacted it and the judges who enforced it. As a result, despite the challenge presented by the provisions of the Married Women's Property Act, the doctrine of marital unity proved remarkably resilient.<br>Arts, Faculty of<br>History, Department of<br>Graduate
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Lewis, Sheila Elaine. "White picket fences : whiteness, urban Aboriginal women and housing market discrimination in Kelowna, British Columbia." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23248.

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This thesis analyses hegemonic whiteness as a socio-spatial structure and discursive formation, and the way that whiteness interlocks with other axes of identity, such as class and gender, to affect accessibility to the housing market for urban Aboriginal women in Kelowna, BC, Canada. Twelve participants were recruited and interviewed through the Ki-Low-Na Friendship Society. The research methods for this thesis involved discourse analysis of embodied practices (after Kirsten Simonsen). Interviews with Aboriginal women about their experiences in the housing market revealed two clear patterns of gendered, classed, and racialized divisions of urban space. Aboriginal women note that the housing search, and subsequent residence in Kelowna (often as opposed to residence on a local ‘Indian Reserve’ outside the city), places them in a situation that they define as being under surveillance. Aboriginal women are particularly aware of how they are being watched or monitored by what most of them refer to as the ‘mainstream society’ in Kelowna, by which they mean white residents of the city. In a similar fashion, Aboriginal women are very clear about the fact that their participation in the housing market is racialized, and they are subject to a number of problematic constructions of their identity when searching for housing. In recounting Aboriginal women’s experiences, I attempt to provide an analysis of the classed, gendered, and racialized processes that work in interlocking fashion to produce the white landscape of housing in Kelowna, BC, Canada.
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Pearce, Margo Elaine. "Women at greatest risk: reducing injection frequency among young aboriginal drug users in British Columbia /." Burnaby B.C. : Simon Fraser University, 2006. http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/2718.

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Books on the topic "Women artists – British Columbia"

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Morys-Edge, Derek. Artists of British Columbia. Chartwell Pub. Co., 1986.

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Proximate causes. Harbour Pub., 1999.

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British Columbia Working Group on Gender Equality. British Columbia Working Group report. Canadian Bar Association, 1993.

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Press, Women's. British women artists diary 1987. Women's Press, 1986.

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Mastin, Catharine M. Art and Artists of British Columbia: [exhibition catalogue]. Art Gallery of Windsor, 1991.

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The dictionary of British women artists. Lutterworth Press, 2009.

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Gold, Melanie. Great work!: An overview of contemporary British Columbia artists. Melanie Gold Artadvisory Ltd., 1996.

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Gray, Sara. The dictionary of British women artists. Lutterworth Press, 2009.

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Gray, Sara. The dictionary of British women artists. Lutterworth Press, 2009.

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Victorian women artists. Women's Press, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Women artists – British Columbia"

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MacKenzie, Catherine. "Securing Shanghai: British Women Artists and ‘Their’ City." In The British Abroad Since the Eighteenth Century, Volume 1. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137304155_9.

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Whitehead, Margaret. "6. 'Let the Women Keep Silence': Women Missionary Preaching in British Columbia, 1860s-1940s." In Changing Roles of Women within the Christian Church in Canada, edited by Elizabeth G. Muir and Marilyn F. Whiteley. University of Toronto Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442672840-010.

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Fuller, Colleen. "The Information Gap: The Impact of Health Care Reform on British Columbia Women." In Exposing Privatization, edited by Pat Armstrong, Carol Amaratunga, Jocelyne Bernier, Kay Willson, Karen R. Grant, and Ann Pederson. University of Toronto Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442602557-010.

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"Artists’ Biography." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0025.

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Fortnum, Rebecca. "Introduction." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0004.

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"Anya Gallaccio." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0005.

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"Christine Borland." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0006.

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"Jane Harris." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0007.

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"Hayley Newman." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0008.

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"Maria Lalić." In Contemporary British Women Artists. I.B.Tauris, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755604203.0009.

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Conference papers on the topic "Women artists – British Columbia"

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Martin, L., B. Banno, M. Joffres, F. Wong, and C. Sherriff. "Wait Times and Diagnostic Pathways among Women with Invasive Breast Cancer in a Population-Based Publicly Funded Cancer Centre, British Columbia, Canada." In Abstracts: Thirty-Second Annual CTRC‐AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium‐‐ Dec 10‐13, 2009; San Antonio, TX. American Association for Cancer Research, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.sabcs-09-3083.

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