BC’s 1944 “Zombie” Protests Against Overseas Conscription
By Peter Russell
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 49-76
British Columbia First Nations and the Influenza Pandemic of 1918-19
By Mary-Ellen Kelm
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 23-48
Henry G. Peabody and the Detroit Publishing Company in British Columbia
By John V. Jezierski
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 77-84
Canada and Asia: Guide to Archive and Manuscript Sources in Canada
By George Brandak
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 109-110
Native Visions: Evolution in Northwest Coast Art from the Eighteenth through the Twentieth Century
By Charlotte Townsend-Gault
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 111-113
Colonizing Bodies: Aboriginal Health and Healing in British Columbia, 1900-50
By Mary-Ellen Kelm
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 114-115
Clearcutting of the Pacific Rain Forest: Production, Science, and Regulation
By Richard A. Rajala
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 89-92
Talk and Log: Wilderness Politics in British Columbia
By Briony Penn
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 93-5
The Wealth of Forests: Markets, Regulation, and Sustainable Forestry
By Mike Harcourt
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 95-7
Aging in British Columbia: Burden or Benefit?
By Megan Davies
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 99-100
Holding One’s Time in Thought: The Political Philosophy of W.J. Stankiewicz
By Margaret Prang
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 100-2
The Hotel Georgia: A Vancouver Tradition
By Rhodri Liscombe
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 107-9
By John Barker
BC Studies no. 122 Summer 1999 pp. 116-7
Daniel Clayton is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. His book, Islands of Truth: The Imperial Fashioning of Vancouver Island, will be published by UBC Press later this year.
Gordon Hak teaches in the History Department at Malaspina University-College.
Mary-Ellen Kelm is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Northern British Columbia. Her recent book, Colonizing Bodies: Aboriginal Health and Healing in British Columbia, 1900-1950, won the CHA’s Sir John A. MacDonald Prize for 1998.
Adele Perry is completing a post-doctoral fellowship at UBC and finishing a book on gender, race, and the making of British Columbia. She will shortly take up a position in the Department of History at the University of Manitoba.
Peter A. Russell teaches at Okanangan University College. He has published widely on twentieth century Canadian protest politics and nineteenth century agricultural history.
John Jezierski is a Professor of History at Saginaw Valley State University in Michigan. He is completing a major study of Henry G. Peabody.
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