By Stan Douglas
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21
BC Studies no. 208 (Winter 2020/21) features cover art from Stan Douglas and articles by Luke Clossey, Karen Ferguson, David Meren, Helen Vandenberg, and Geertje Boschma. This issue also contains a soundwork by Julie Andreyev, a research note by Eileen Delehanty Pearkes, and a review essay by Roger Fernandes.
To read the full issue online, visit our OJS site.
In This Issue
Federal Court File No. T-1750-19 5
By La Rose et al. v. Her Majesty the Queen
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 5-16
By Luke Clossey and Karen Ferguson
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 17-44
By David Meren
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 45-72
The Evolution of Early Hospitals in British Columbia, 1855–1918
By Helen Vandenberg and Geertje Boschma
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 73-118
By Julie Andreyev
Letter from the Interior: James Teit and the “Injustice of Displacement”
By Eileen Delehanty Pearkes
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 127-134
A Weaving of Books; What Basket Have We Made?
By Roger Fernandes
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 135-140
Spirits of the Coast: Orcas in Science, Art and History
By Meghan Walley
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 143-144
Complicated Simplicity: Island Life in the Pacific Northwest
By Nicholas Stanger
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 144-145
In Nature’s Realm: Early Naturalists Explore Vancouver Island
By Nicholas Stanger
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 145-147
He Speaks Volumes: A Biography of George Bowering
By Nicholas Bradley
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 147-148
Postsecondary Education in British Columbia: Public Policy and Structural Development, 1960-2015
By Donald Fisher
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 148-149
The Sleeping Giant Awakens: Genocide, Indian Residential Schools and the Challenge of Conciliation
By Chris Martin
BC Studies no. 208 Winter 2020/21 pp. 150-151
Julie Andreyev, PhD, is an artist-activist, researcher, writer, and educator. Her work explores more-than-human ways of knowing and creating in her multispecies studio called Animal Lover (www.animallover.ca). Andreyev is associate professor at Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver, where she teaches courses in the new media and sound arts major, and in critical studies.
Geertje Boschma is professor at the School of Nursing at the University of British Columbia. Her research centres on nursing and health care history, with particular emphasis on mental health care and mental health nursing. She is lead faculty of the UBC School of Nursing Consortium for Nursing History Inquiry.
Luke Clossey is associate professor of history at Simon Fraser University, where he works on global history and the history of religion. He is currently collaborating with Karen Ferguson on Buddhist monasticism in the Americas.
Karen Ferguson is professor of urban studies and history at Simon Fraser University. She studies the history of Buddhist monasticism in North America with her colleague Luke Clossey.
Roger Fernandes is a Native American artist, storyteller, and educator whose work focuses on the Coast Salish tribes of the western Washington region. He is an enrolled member of the Lower Elwha S’Klallam Tribe and has a degree in Native American studies from The Evergreen State College and a masters degree in whole systems design from Antioch University. He teaches classes and workshops and seminars in Native storytelling and Coast Salish art and design at several local colleges and universities.
David Meren is associate professor in the Département d’histoire at Université de Montréal. He is the author of With Friends Like These: Entangled Nationalisms and the Canada-Quebec-France Triangle, 1944–1970 (UBC Press, 2012); a co-editor of Dominion of Race: Rethinking Canada’s International History (UBC Press, 2017); and has published articles in the Canadian Historical Review, the Journal of Canadian Studies, and Histoire sociale / Social History. His current research explores the entangled histories of settler colonialism and Canadian international development.
Eileen Delehanty Pearkes has spent more than two decades researching and travelling across the upper Columbia River Basin on both sides of the international boundary. Born in the United States and educated at Stanford University and the University of British Columbia, her books include A River Captured (2016), The Geography of Memory (2002), and Heart of a River (2004 and 2015). An exhibit she curated on the history of the 1961 Columbia River Treaty received the 2015 Canadian Museum Association’s prize for excellence.
Helen Vandenberg is assistant professor at the College of Nursing, University of Saskatchewan. She specializes in the history of hospitals in Western Canada. Her previous work focused on the history of Chinese and Japanese hospitals in British Columbia.
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