By Yvonne Wakabayashi, Nicola Levell
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021
BC Studies no. 210 (Summer 2021) features cover art by Yvonne Wakabayashi, a reflection by Adele Perry, articles by Jennifer Iredale, Frank Leonard, and Roshon Singh Nandhra, and a Soundwork by Jacek Smolicki.
To read the full issue online, visit our OJS site.
In This Issue
Remains of Children of Kamloops Residential School Discovered
By Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc (Kamloops Indian Band)
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 7-10
The Nikkei Called It Gon Island: A Story of Settlement and Dispossession on Mayne Island
By Jennifer Iredale
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 21-44
High Finance and Low Modernism: The Failure of the Wenner-Gren British Columbia Project, 1956–61
By Frank Leonard
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 45-71
Transversing Settler Colonial Capital: Indigenous Dispossession and Non-White Labour Exploitation
By Roshon Singh Nandhra
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 73-99
Intertidal Room: A Soundwalk through Timescapes of Vancouver’s Coastline
By Jacek Smolicki
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 101-106
Whiteness and BC History in the Age of COVID-19
By Adele Perry
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 11-20
The Nameless Collective Podcast: Exploring History
By Satwinder Kaur Bains
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 108-109
Landscapes of Injustice: A New Perspective on the Internment and Dispossession of Japanese Canadians
By Jonathan van Harmelen
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 111-112
Cataloguing Culture: Legacies of Colonialism in Museum Documentation
By Joy Davis
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 112-113
Decolonizing Discipline: Children, Corporal Punishment, Christian Theologies, and Reconciliation
By Alex Gagne
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 113-115
By Patricia E. Roy
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 115-116
Victoria Unbuttoned: A Red-Light History of BC’s Capital City
By Janet Nicol
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 117-118
Paradise Won: The Struggle to Create Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve
By Madison Heslop
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 118-119
Deep and Sheltered Waters: The History of Tod Inlet
By Jacquelyn Miller
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 119-120
Big Promises, Small Government: Doing Less with Less in the BC Liberal New Era
By Stephen Phillips
BC Studies no. 210 Summer 2021 pp. 120-122
Jennifer Iredale is a heritage professional, curator, and the former director of the BC Heritage Branch. She has been involved in provincial and national heritage initiatives for more than forty years. Since retiring, she engages in history research and writing projects and in heritage and cultural initiatives on Mayne Island, Victoria, and the Fraser Canyon. Some recent articles include “Mali Quelqueltalko: The Writings of a Nineteenth-Century Nlaka’pamux Woman” in BC Studies 203 (Autumn 2019), and “An Eye for a Good Picture: The Legacy of John Aitken” in British Columbia History magazine (Autumn 2018). Jennifer sits on several boards has been honoured with a BC Museums Association Distinguished Service Award. Jennifer is grateful to the Songhees, Esquimalt, and WSÁNEĆ peoples on whose territory she resides.
Frank Leonard is an adjunct associate professor in the department of history of the University of Victoria. He has investigated elements of infrastructure development in western Canada and the United States by using different types of business records to illuminate contradictions within road, rail, and energy projects.
Roshon Singh Nandhra is a South Asian and Southern European settler on the territories of the Lekwungen and WSÁNEĆ peoples. He is currently in the social and political thought MA program at York University. Last year, he graduated from the University of Victoria with a bachelor of arts degree in political science and economics with a minor in philosophy. His research focuses on historical folds in the expansion of empire, complex in-tandem developments of colonialisms and racisms, uneven circulations of power and capital, postcolonial theories on the limits of commensurability and translation between plural life-worlds, and resistance and solidarity frameworks in settler colonial contexts.
Jacek Smolicki is an interdisciplinary artist, designer, educator, and soundwalker. His works bring historical, critical, and ethical dimensions to recording practices and technologies in diverse contexts. He is currently enrolled in an international postdoctorate funded by the Swedish Research Council. His project explores the history and prospects of soundwalking and field-recording practices from the perspective of media arts, environmental humanities, and philosophy of technology. He is also an associate scholar at the Informatics and Media Hub for Digital Existence at Uppsala University in Sweden. He has exhibited internationally and recently co-founded the Walking Festival of Sound (wfos.net), a transdisciplinary event focusing on the creative and critical potential of walking through and listening to our everyday surroundings.
Adele Perry is a settler historian of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century North American west. She was born and raised in British Columbia and has taught at the University of Manitoba since 2000, where she is the current director of the Centre for Human Rights Research. Perry is a past-president of the Canadian Historical Association and the author, among other things, of Colonial Relations: The Douglas-Connolly Family and the Nineteenth-Century Imperial World (Cambridge University Press, 2015) and Aqueduct: Colonialism, Resources, and the Histories We Remember (Winnipeg, ARP, 2016).
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