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This collection reveals what preoccupies curriculum studies scholars in the present historical moment.
People, Places, and Belonging deepens our understanding of the complex and dynamic ways in which place fundamentally shapes our personal and public lives.
Bringing together authors from diverse fields such as child and youth care, education, and social work, this book seeks to challenge conventional notions of the "helping professions" as inherently caring.
This book examines shifts in urban mobility with a focus on technological disruption, pandemic-induced travel change, and the climate crisis in twenty-first century Canadian cities.
On Speaking Terms examines the sociolinguistic and non-verbal codes that enact interpersonal avoidance relationships in more than one hundred societies.
This collection brings together leading anthropologists and fresh new voices in the discipline to consider freedoms of speech with a wide comparative lens.
Identifying a period before the Stone Age that represents a key turning point in human evolution, The Botanic Age provides a fascinating new look at the first three million years of hominin existence.
Using Ontario as a case study, this book sheds light on the delivery of innovation policy in politically complex environments.
Essential reading for history students, this collection examines the evolution of Ontario since Confederation, demonstrating how earlier changes inform present-day Ontario.
An intimate co-creation of three graphic novelists and four Holocaust survivors, But I Live consists of three illustrated stories based on the experiences of each survivor during and after the Holocaust. David Schaffer and his family survived in Romania due to their refusal to obey Nazi collaborators. In the Netherlands, brothers Nico and Rolf Kamp were separated from their parents and hidden by the Dutch resistance in thirteen different places. Through the story of Emmie Arbel, a child survivor of the Ravensbrück and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps, we see the lifelong trauma inflicted by the Holocaust. To complement these hauntingly beautiful and unforgettable visual stories, But I Live includes historical essays, an illustrated postscript from the artists, and personal words from each of the survivors. As we urgently approach the post-witness era without living survivors of the Holocaust, these illustrated stories act as a physical embodiment of memory and help to create a new archive for future readers. By turning these testimonies into graphic novels, But I Live aims to teach new generations about racism, antisemitism, human rights, and social justice.
Essential reading for history students, this collection examines the evolution of Ontario since Confederation, demonstrating how earlier changes inform present-day Ontario.
Canada's Air Force tells the full story of the RCAF from its founding to its 100th anniversary.
Shedding light on the unseen world around us, Fur, Fleas, and Flukes reveals the role parasites play in shaping the lives of wild mammals.
Drawing on archival material, this collection analyses German unification and European integration as interconnected processes.
Drawing on British Romantic literature and art, Blank Splendour opens up a new phase in contemporary posthuman studies.
This book traces the transnational arc of the Neapolitan clown Pulcinella in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, exploring how this unlikely hero and his brood engaged with questions that defined the Enlightenment in Europe.
A must-read for students, decision-makers, and specialists studying Canadian politics, the fifth edition of this best-selling textbook provides a thorough overview of the evolution of party politics in Canada.
Bringing together authors from diverse fields such as child and youth care, education, and social work, this book seeks to challenge conventional notions of the "helping professions" as inherently caring.
Food and Emotions in Italian Women's Writing analyses the themes of food and emotion in fiction, poetry, and historical writing by Italian women over a period of one hundred years.
This book examines how individuals produce and use historical knowledge to position themselves on historically rooted social problems.
Bringing together leading subject experts, this book compares and situates Canadian municipal institutions, urban governance systems, and policy-making in global debates about democratic governance.
Bringing together leading subject experts, this book compares and situates Canadian municipal institutions, urban governance systems, and policy-making in global debates about democratic governance.
Drawing on contemporary debates in philosophy and cultural theory, Dreams of Presence revives the concept of culture as an existential phenomenon and explores geography's role in making it present as an abiding force in everyday social life.
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