History: Dr. Alan McDougall on Angela Merkel's Early Days

Our own Dr. Alan McDougall is quoted in a recent McLean's article on the political biography of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Read the article at McLean's.

Our own Dr. Alan McDougall is quoted in a recent McLean's article on the political biography of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Read the article at McLean's.
Our Associate Professor Karyn Freedman has just won the BC National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction for her memoir One hour in Paris: a true story of rape and recovery (University of Chicago Press, US publisher; Freehand Books
Our own Alice Glaze has won the Women's History Scotland Leah Leneman Essay Prize 2014 for her essay: "Women and Kirk Discipline: Prosecution, Negotiation and the Limits of Control." This prize is very prestigious and embellishes the Department's role as a preeminent site for Scottish Studies worldwide!
Alice is a third-year PhD candidate studying women's social and economic networks in seventeenth-century Scotland. Her work uses digital humanities tools such as mapping and network visualization to understand women's ties of kinship, trade and support in the town of Canongate, now part of Edinburgh's Royal Mile. Her winning essay explores the ambiguous and often contradictory relationship between the Canongate kirk session (local church court) and its female parishioners.
Congratulations from all of us! For more on the prize visit Women's History Scotland

Registration for the 2015 Tri-University History Conference is now open! The Conference will be held on March 7 at at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo. The theme of the conference is War, Memory and Commemoration.
Visit the Tri-U website to register.
Our Associate Professor Karen Wendling has published (February 2015) her edited anthology Ethics in Canada: Ethical, Social, and Political Perspectives (Oxford University Press).
by Teresa Pitman for @Guelph
African Canadians in Union Blue by Richard Reid, Professor Emeritus looks at why so many black Canadians left the safety of home to serve in a foreign war.
Each year Canada honours the legacy of black Canadians during Black History Month in February, and Canadians can gain insight into the experiences of black Canadians and their vital role in the country’s history. But what many people might not know is these contributions extended beyond the border. In the years before the American Civil War, many African-Americans moved to Canada – or, more accurately, the territories that would become Canada in 1867 – seeking a better life without slavery or restrictive laws. Racism was still a reality in Canada, but it was not institutionalized as it was in the U.S.
read the rest of the story @Guelph
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Our Winter 2015 Newsletter is now out! Thanks again to our Newsletter editor, Dr. Femi Kolapo, and all our contributors who keep us in the loop with their accomplishments and events. If you have news for future issues - let us know!
Get the Newsletter .pdf.

from @Guelph
Hatching the Cowbird’s Egg: The Creation of the University of Guelph, a book commemorating the University’s 25th anniversary in 1989, is now available as an e-book through the Internet Archive.
Written by David Murray, a retired U of G history professor and former dean of the College of Arts, and published by the University of Guelph, the book chronicles the formal creation of the university in 1964 and the contributions and obstacles faced by those involved in the transformation of three colleges into a university. Visit the digitized version of the Hatching the Cowbird’s Egg at the Internet Archive.
This summer the Department offers the following Research Assistantships:
Dear Diary Archive: Discover and Transcribe Rural Ontario’s Past, Research Assistant and Social Media Coordinator, Supervisor Dr. Catharine Wilson
Childhood Origins of Adult Health, Supervisor Dr. Kris Inwood
Gender, Sexuality and Propaganda in Late Medieval Europe, Supervisor Dr. Christine Ekholst
Morality and Health: The Health League of Canada, Supervisor Dr. Catherine Carstairs
For more information on these projects and how to apply by February 2, 2015, visit our job postings page

Call For Papers: Artifacts in Agraria Symposium
University of Guelph, 17-18 October 2015
A pottery jug, rag rug, handmade nightdress, coal-oil lamp, plow, buggy, barn…. Some experiences of the agrarian past have escaped being put into language but survive long after the period under study as artifacts.
We invite proposals that begin with a material artifact of everyday life, either made or used, and explore it as a valid historical source that gathers meaning when understood in the context of surviving written records, family history, fashion trends and international commerce. How is the artifact conceived and used by particular groups? How does it connect aesthetic and cultural beliefs, symbolize self-identity, affirm values, tell stories, purvey heritage and have meaning ascribed to it through display? We encourage papers that provide a better understanding of rural life in and beyond Canada, and that explore new methods or ways of viewing and contextualizing artifacts. Though organized by historians, we welcome ethnologists, archaeologists, art historians, cultural geographers, museum professionals and connoisseurs.
Please submit a 400 word proposal and 1 page CV to C. Wilson, cawilson@uoguelph.ca
For more information visit: www.uoguelph.ca/ruralhistory/
Deadline for proposals is 26 January 2015.
Sponsored by the Redelmeier Professorship in Rural History