Unscrambling the Omelette: Understanding British Columbia’s Agricultural Land Reserve
By Christopher Garrish
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 25-55
Public Acts and Private Languages: Bisexuality and the Multiple Discourses of Constance Grey Swartz
By Karen Duder
By Tanya Behrisch, Roger Hayter
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 73-101
Managing Diversity in the Representation of BC History: Point Ellice House and “Chinatown”
By Misao Dean
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 57-72
Tale-Telling Women and Telling Tales of Women
By Connie Brim
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 103-9
National Parks: What are they good for?
By James Murton
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 111-5
Telling Tales: Essays in Western Women’s History
By Randi R. Warne
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 103-9
Ships of Steel, A British Columbia Shipbuilder’s Story
By Vickie Jensen
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 144-5
The War on Weeds in the Prairie West: An Environmental History
By Tina Loo
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 125-7
Patterns of Vengeance: Cross cultural Homicide in the North American Fur Trade
By Theodore Binnema
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 122-5
Common and Contested Ground: A Human and Environmental History of the Northwestern Plains
By Matthew Evenden
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 120-1
Guardians of the Wild: A History of the Warden Service of Canada’s National Parks
By Mike Schintz
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 111-5
On the Edge of Empire: Gender, Race and the Making of British Columbia, 1849-1871
By Sarah Carter
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 117-9
Direct Action: Memoirs of an Urban Guerrilla
By Scott Beadle
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 146-8
NFB Kids: Portrayals of Children by the National Film Board of Canada, 1939-1989
By Rebecca Coulter
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 140- 1
Bluesprint: Black British Columbian Literature and Culture
By Sneja Gunew
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 138-40
Challenging the Conspiracy of Silence: My Life as a Canadian Gay Activist
By Becki Ross
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 135-8
Sights of Resistance: Approaches to Canadian Visual Culture
By David Millar
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 133-4
Faces in the Forest: First Nations Art Created on Living Trees
By Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 129-31
Playing the Pacific Province: Jim Anthology of British Columbia Plays, 1967-2000
By Jerry Wasserman
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 128-9
By Tanya Behrisch, Roger Hayter
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 73-101
Managing Diversity in the Representation of BC History: Point Ellice House and “Chinatown”
By Misao Dean
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 57-72
Unscrambling the Omelette: Understanding British Columbia’s Agricultural Land Reserve
By Christopher Garrish
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 25-55
Public Acts and Private Languages: Bisexuality and the Multiple Discourses of Constance Grey Swartz
By Karen Duder
BC Studies no. 136 Winter 2002-2003 pp. 3-24
Trevor Barnes has taught in the Department of Geography at the University of British Columbia since 1983. This is his third article in BC Studies. His most recent book is an edited collection with Eric Sheppard,^ Companion to Economic Geography (Blackwell 2000). He is a recipient of the Canadian Association of Geographer’s Award for Scholarly Distinction.
Tanya Behrisch is the international coordinator for Co-operative Education at Simon Fraser University. She is responsible for developing international co-op work opportunities for Simon Fraser University students. Ms. Behrisch is an accomplished oil painter of BC coastal landscapes that can be viewed at www.behrisch.com.
Connie Brim is an associate professor in the English Department at the University College of the Cariboo.
Misao Dean is a member of the English Department at the University of Victoria. She has published books and articles on early Canadian women writers, and is interested in post-colonial studies and material culture.
Joe Denham lives on the Sunshine Coast. His first collection of poetry is due out with Nightwood Editions in the fall of 2003.
Karen Duder is a sessional lecturer in the Gender and Women’s Studies Programme and the Visual Culture Programme at the University of Otago, New Zealand. Her article “‘Two middle-aged & very good looking females that spend all their week-ends together’: female professors and same-sex relationships in Canada, 1910 -1950,” will be published later this year in Historical Identities: The Professoriate in Canada (University of Toronto Press 2003).
Rishma Dunlop is a professor of Literary Studies in the Faculty of Education at York University, Toronto. She is the author of two volumes of poetry, Boundary Bay (Staccato/Turnstone Press 1999) and The Body of My Garden (Mansfield Press 2002). The poem “Esperanza” in this issue of BC Studies is from a manuscript in progress.
Christopher Garrish recently completed a Masters degree in history at the University of Saskatchewan that explored the impact of the Agricultural Land Reserve upon the Okanagan fruit industry. He is currently enrolled in the Urban Studies Program at Simon Fraser University.
Karin Gray is in the final year of her MFA in Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia and has had poems appear in Room of Ones Own, Wascana Review, Fugue, Wreck, Comfort Zone, and Bywords. Her thesis is a book-length work of poetry that explores changes in habits and patterns of living when moving house.
Roger Hayter has taught in the Department of Geography at Simon Fraser University since 1976. He recently authored Flexible Cross Roads: The Restructuring of BCs Forest Economy (UBC Press 2000), and is a recipient of the Canadian Association of Geographer’s Award for Scholarly Distinction.
Amielle Lake has lived in Vancouver for over 15 years. A recent graduate of the University of British Columbia English Literature program, she is currently pursuing her Masters in International Business Administration in Europe. This is her first published poem.
James Murton recently completed his PhD in History at Queens University, examining British Columbia’s engineering of environmental change for early 20th century agricultural settlement. He is the author of the award-winning article, “La Normandie du Nouveau Monde: la société Canada Steamship Lines, l’antimodernisme et la promotion du Québec ancien,” in the Revue d’histoire de l’Amérique française. He grew up in Port Alberni, near Pacific Rim National Park.
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