By Sean Carleton
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 101-130
“My Name Is Stanley”: Twentieth-Century Missionary Stories and the Complexity of Colonial Encounters
By Emma Battell Lowman
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 81-99
Making the Inscrutable, Scrutable: Race and Space in Victoria’s Chinatown, 1891
By Jason A. Gilliland, Donald J. Lafreniere, John Sutton Lutz, Patrick A. Dunae
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 51-80
Making Space in Vancouver’s East End from Leonard Marsh to the Vancouver Agreement
By Karen Bridget Murray
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 7-49
By Robert Russo
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 131-141
Inside Chinatown: Ancient Culture in a New World
By Larry Wong
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 157-158
Chinese Community Leadership: Case Study of Victoria in Canada
By Larry Wong
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 158-161
Peter O’Reilly: The Rise of a Reluctant Immigrant
By Cole Harris
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 156-157
Forestry and Biodiversity: Learning How to Sustain Biodiversity in Managed Forests
By David Brownstein
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 145-147
A Thousand Dreams: Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside and the Fight for Its Future
By Gordon Roe
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 161-162
The Aquaculture Controversy in Canada: Activism, Policy, and Contested Science
By Jaime Yard
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 148-152
Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Northwest Coast of America
By I.S. MacLaren
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 152-155
BravO! The History of Opera in British Columbia
By Jane Hastings
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 164-165
Profit and Ambition, The North West Company and the Fur Trade 1779-1821
By Marie Elliott
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 155-156
Voices of British Columbia: Stories from Our Frontier
By Jean Barman
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 176-177
Burlesque West: Showgirls, Sex, and Sin in Postwar Vancouver
By Lara Campbell
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 162-164
Living Proof: The Essential Data-Collection Guide for Indigenous Use-and-Occupancy Map Surveys
By Thomas McIlwraith
BC Studies no. 169 Spring 2011 pp. 143-145
Emma Battell Lowman received her MA in History from the University of Victoria in 2008 and is currently a PhD candidate in Sociology at the University of Warwick (UK). Her research focus is the application of Indigenous methodologies to missionary histories in British Columbia.
Sean Carleton is a doctoral student in the Frost Centre for Canadian and Indigenous Studies at Trent University. His current research examines the relationship between colonialism, capitalism, and the rise of state schooling in British Columbia.
Patrick A. Dunae is a research associate at Vancouver Island University and adjunct associate professor in History at the University of Victoria. A native of Victoria, he is interested in digital humanities, public history, heritage conservation and the built environment. He is editor of the Vancouver Island digital archive, viHistory.ca.
Jason A. Gilliland is an associate professor and director of the Urban Development Program in the Department of Geography at the University of Western Ontario. His professional and academic background is in architecture, urban planning and human geography and his research can be characterized as an integration of all three disciplines. His recent publications include historical gis studies of Montreal and London, Ontario.
Donald J. Lafreniere is a Vanier Canada Scholar and PhD candidate in the Department of Geography at the University of Western Ontario. His research focuses on the uses of gis to explore the daily activity spaces of Canadians in nineteenth-century Canadian cities. He is chair of the Historical Geography Network of the Social Science History Association.
John S. Lutz is an associate professor in the Department of History at the University of Victoria. He has written extensively on topics relating to racial discourse and Indigenous-European Contact, and is the author of Makúk: A New History of Aboriginal White Relations (2008). He is a co-director of the internet-based teaching project, Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History.
Karen Bridget Murray is an associate professor of Political Science at York University where she researches and teaches in the areas of urban governance, women and politics, and Canadian government. Long before Karen was born, her mother and grandmother lived and “made space” together in the area now known as Grandview-Woodland.
Robert Russo is a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Law of the University of British Columbia. For the past five years, Mr. Russo has been studying the application of national and international laws to temporary migrant workers in Canada with recent publications in Windsor Review of Legal and Social Issues, International Journal of Human and Social Science, and The Law and Business Review of the Americas. His current focus is on the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program and Temporary Foreign Worker Program for agricultural workers.
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