Monday, December 5, 2011
Monday, November 21, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
Traitors and Spies -- History Seminar Series, Oct. 28
GORDON MORRELL
British Traitors and Soviet Spies in the 1930s
A RESPONSE TO CHRISTOPHER ANDREW'S AUTHORIZED HISTORY OF MI5
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2011
4:00-5:30 PM
ROOM A122
THE HISTORY SEMINAR SERIES
4:00-5:30 PM
ROOM A122
THE HISTORY SEMINAR SERIES
EVERYONE WELCOME
REFRESHMENTS PROVIDED
CONTACT: DEREK NEAL
REFRESHMENTS PROVIDED
CONTACT: DEREK NEAL
The History Club presents Difficult Wars: Nov. 2
DIFFICULT WARS:
A CONVERSATION WITH
CONFLICT VETERANS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
3:30-5:00PM
ROOM A137
Join us for an engaging conversation with Colonel David
W. Taylor, USA (ret.), a veteran of the Vietnam War and
Corporal Jeff Lehoux, Canadian Army (ret.), a veteran
of Afghanistan as they discuss their experiences of
conflict and after.
Presented by the Nipissing University History Club
Facilitators: Dr. Stephen Connor, John Picard, Bryce Simpson
A CONVERSATION WITH
CONFLICT VETERANS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
3:30-5:00PM
ROOM A137
Join us for an engaging conversation with Colonel David
W. Taylor, USA (ret.), a veteran of the Vietnam War and
Corporal Jeff Lehoux, Canadian Army (ret.), a veteran
of Afghanistan as they discuss their experiences of
conflict and after.
Presented by the Nipissing University History Club
Facilitators: Dr. Stephen Connor, John Picard, Bryce Simpson
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
From the History Club
Hello everyone!
I hope everyone is having a
great start to their school year. If anyone wants to be removed from the
e-mail list just send an e-mail letting us know. First of all I would
like to invite you to the first history club meeting which will be held
October 3, 2011, 11:30-12:30 in room A143.
On
Tuesday October 4m 2011, 3:30-6:30 in room A118 we will be holding the
annual Meet and Greet. Come out to get to know other history students
and meet some of the profs! There will be refreshment serves and games
played.
Finally, this year's seminar series will be starting on this
Friday, September 30, 2011, Room A122, from 2:30–4:00 pm. The Department
of History is happy to present Dr. Maartje Abbenhuis, visiting from the
University of Auckland (New Zealand), and Dr. Sarah Winters of our own
Department of English Studies, in this presentation about the challenges
posed by depictions of Nazi figures (and those like them) in various
media including film and print. Drs. Abbenhuis and Winterswill talk
about their contributions to a recent edited collection
entitled Monsters in the Mirror: Representations of Nazism in Post-War
Popular Culture (Praeger, 2010) and discuss some of the implications of
their research for teaching on Nazi Germany and Nazi themes.
The talk is free of charge, refreshments are provided, and everyone is welcome. Questions may be directed to Dr. Derek Neal <derekn@nipissingu.ca>.
The talk is free of charge, refreshments are provided, and everyone is welcome. Questions may be directed to Dr. Derek Neal <derekn@nipissingu.ca>.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Friday seminar -- Teaching Evil
The History Seminar Series begins this Friday, September 30, 2011, in Room A122, 2:30–4:00 pm, with a joint presentation called "Teaching about Evil: Discussing Nazism in Contemporary Culture."
We are happy to present Dr. Maartje Abbenhuis, visiting from the University of Auckland (New Zealand), and Dr. Sarah Winters of our own Department of English Studies, in this presentation about the challenges posed by depictions of Nazi figures (and those like them) in various media including film and print. Drs. Abbenhuis and Winters will talk about their contributions to a recent edited collection entitled Monsters in the Mirror: Representations of Nazism in Post-War Popular Culture (Praeger, 2010) and discuss some of the implications of their research for teaching on Nazi Germany and Nazi themes.
The talk is free of charge, refreshments are provided, and everyone is welcome. Questions may be directed to Dr. Derek Neal .
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Professor John Long wins a history prize
Congratulations to Dr. John Long, associate professor in the Schulich School of Education at Nipissing University, who won the Fred Landon Award honouring the best book on regional history by the Ontario Historical Society, for his book, Treaty No. 9: Making the Agreement to Share the Land in Far Northern Ontario in 1905 (McGill-Queen’s University Press).
The award will be presented at the 2011 Ontario Historical Society Annual General Meeting and Awards Ceremony in June.
In his book, Long reveals the complete story behind the signing of one of North America's largest land treaties, Treaty No. 9.
More details here.
The award will be presented at the 2011 Ontario Historical Society Annual General Meeting and Awards Ceremony in June.
In his book, Long reveals the complete story behind the signing of one of North America's largest land treaties, Treaty No. 9.
More details here.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Graduate Research Conference, April 19, 2011
The conference will take place at the Monastery, Room M106
9:45-10:00
Welcome & Opening Remarks from Dean Bavington, MA History Graduate Advisor
10:00 – 11:00
Newspapers & History
Chair: Derek Neal
Whitney Croskery
“Constructing the Beastess: The Trial of Irma Grese and the British Media, 1945”
Rory Currie
"North Bay Ontario: The Victory Bond campaign during the Second World War”
11:00 – 11:15
Break
11:15 - 12:15
The Cold War in Foreign Policy and on the Big Screen
Chair: Steven Connor
Matthew Laur
“Multilateralism and Red Fear: Canada and the Indonesian Revolution”
Sterling Crowe
“Dying Hard: Popular Culture as Cold War Weapon, 1984-1989”
12:15-1:15
Lunch
1:15-2:15
The Local Angle: From Fisheries Management to Fishers of Men
Chair: Françoise Noël
Nancy Pottery
“Crises and Control: Fisheries Management on Lake Nipissing, 1968-2008”
Jakob Bauer
“Opposition from ‘Enemies’ and ‘Scoundrels’: Resistance to Rev. William Bell and his Religious Enterprise in Perth ON 1817-1833”
2:15-2:30
Coffee Break
2:30-3:30
Reading Discourses of Nationalism
Chair: Anne Clendinning
Jordan Crosby
“The good Canadian nationalist first must be a good Imperialist: Sam Hughes and the South African War, 1899-1900”
Ian Laplante
"The Violent Poetics of Space: Reading the Battle of the Bogside, 1969"
3:30 – 3:45
Closing Remarks from Nathan Kozuskanich, 2011-2012 MA History Graduate Advisor
9:45-10:00
Welcome & Opening Remarks from Dean Bavington, MA History Graduate Advisor
10:00 – 11:00
Newspapers & History
Chair: Derek Neal
Whitney Croskery
“Constructing the Beastess: The Trial of Irma Grese and the British Media, 1945”
Rory Currie
"North Bay Ontario: The Victory Bond campaign during the Second World War”
11:00 – 11:15
Break
11:15 - 12:15
The Cold War in Foreign Policy and on the Big Screen
Chair: Steven Connor
Matthew Laur
“Multilateralism and Red Fear: Canada and the Indonesian Revolution”
Sterling Crowe
“Dying Hard: Popular Culture as Cold War Weapon, 1984-1989”
12:15-1:15
Lunch
1:15-2:15
The Local Angle: From Fisheries Management to Fishers of Men
Chair: Françoise Noël
Nancy Pottery
“Crises and Control: Fisheries Management on Lake Nipissing, 1968-2008”
Jakob Bauer
“Opposition from ‘Enemies’ and ‘Scoundrels’: Resistance to Rev. William Bell and his Religious Enterprise in Perth ON 1817-1833”
2:15-2:30
Coffee Break
2:30-3:30
Reading Discourses of Nationalism
Chair: Anne Clendinning
Jordan Crosby
“The good Canadian nationalist first must be a good Imperialist: Sam Hughes and the South African War, 1899-1900”
Ian Laplante
"The Violent Poetics of Space: Reading the Battle of the Bogside, 1969"
3:30 – 3:45
Closing Remarks from Nathan Kozuskanich, 2011-2012 MA History Graduate Advisor
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
All candidates' meeting Thursday 1 pm
Good Day,
On behalf of the student-organized Nipissing Voting Initiative, and in the run-up to the federal election, it is my pleasure to invite you and your students to a debate among the candidates for election in the riding of Nipissing-Temiskiming, this Thursday at 1PM in the Nipissing Theatre.
The debate will be moderated by Political Science student Andrej Litvinjenko, and will focus on issues of importance to the student voter demographic. This will be a significant opportunity to bring youth- and education-related issues to the center of the political agenda, with the aim of mobilizing the student vote here on campus.
If you or your students have questions you would like raised to the candidates, please submit them in advance to:
nipissingvotes@gmail.com
All questions must be attributed, and will be vetted beforehand. There will also be an opportunity to introduce questions in writing at the debate.
Following the event at 2PM there will be a reception at the Wall, with appetizers provided and opportunities to engage in political discussions about what kind of Canada you would like to be a part of. Both the debate and the reception are free, and all are welcome. Many thanks to the Office of the Vice-President Academic and Research for supporting this event.
Please pass this notice on to your students so that they can become better aware of the choices available to them in this election, with the encouragement to get out to vote!
all the best regards,
Toivo Koivukoski
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