Você está na página 1de 36

Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Fall/Winter 2011

TransformingIdeas

Wilfrid Laurier University Press is grateful for the support it receives from Wilfrid Laurier University; the Canada Council for the Arts; the Aid to Scholarly Publications Programme, with funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; and the Ontario Arts Council. The Press acknowledges the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and Livres Canada Books. The Press also acknowledges the assistance of the OMDC Book Fund, an initiative of the Ontario Media Development Corporation.

Contents

Aboriginal studies. See Indigenous studies Anthropology 2122, 25, 29 Arctic studies 25 Asian studies 14 Auto/biography 24, 20, 22, 26 Battlefield guides 17 Book history 18 Child studies 15, 1920, 24, 29 Church history 15, 25 Collected Works of Florence Nightingale 30 Communication studies 9 Cultural geography 1, 27 Cultural policy 10 Cultural studies 1, 9, 11, 2224, 27 Dance 22 Development 28 Environment 18 Family studies 8, 20, 29 Film and media studies 9, 2122, 27 Florence Nightingale 30 Gender studies 3, 8, 18, 20, 22, 24, 27 German studies 4, 16, 21, 22, 26 Indigenous studies 21, 25, 29 Jewish studies 14, 22, 26 Journals 31 Life writing 23, 8, 20, 22, 26 Literary criticism 8, 1011, 1820, 23, 26 Masculinity 24 Mental health 24, 29 Military history 4, 1617, 20 Multiculturalism 3, 23 Music education 12 Music history 2, 23 Performing arts 11, 22 Poetry 58 Political studies 25, 2829 Popular culture 9, 27 Psychology 24, 29 Regional studies 1, 18, 2526, 28 Religious studies 1415, 19, 25, 28 Social history 4, 15, 19, 22, 2425, 27, 29 Social policy 13, 15, 19, 29 Social welfare 13, 19, 29 Social work 13, 29 Sociology 15, 29 Translation studies 3 Visual art 27 Viticulture 1 Womens studies, 3, 8, 18, 20, 22, 27

Series
Cultural Studies Cultural Studies is the multi- and inter-disciplinary study of culture, defined anthropologically as a way of life, performatively as symbolic practice, and ideologically as the collective product of varied media and cultural industries. Wilfrid Laurier University Press invites submissions of manuscripts concerned with critical discussions on power relations concerning gender, class, sexual preference, ethnicity, and other macro and micro sites of political struggle. Environmental Humanities Features research that adopts and adapts the methods of the humanities to clarify the cultural meanings associated with environmental debate. It addresses the way film, literature, television, webbased media, visual arts, and physical landscapes reflect how ecological relationships and identities are lived and imagined. Series editor: Cheryl Lousley Film and Media Studies Critically explores cinematic and new media texts, their associated industries, and their audiences. The series also examines the intersections of effects, nature, and representation in film and new media. Series editors: Philippa Gates, Russell Kilbourn, and Ute Lischke German Studies In partnership with the Waterloo Centre for German Studies (WCGS), this series publishes work in the field of German studies, including applied linguistics, cultural studies, the history of Germanspeaking countries and peoples, literature and film studies, intellectual history, and theory. Series editor: John H. Smith , Diefenbaker Chair of German Literary Studies, University of Waterloo Indigenous Studies The Indigenous Studies series seeks to be responsive and responsible to the concerns of the Indigenous community at large and to prioritize the mentorship of emerging Indigenous scholarship Series editor: Deanna Reder

Laurier Poetry Laurier Poetry brings the excitement of contemporary Canadian poetry to an audience that might not otherwise have access to it. Selected and introduced by a prominent critic, each volume presents a range of poems from across the poets career and an afterword by the poet. Economically priced. Series editor: Neil Besner Life Writing This series includes autobiographical accounts, diaries, letters, and testimonials by (or told by) individuals whose philosophical or political beliefs have driven their lives. Life Writing also includes theoretical investigations in the field. Series editor: Marlene Kadar Studies in Childhood and Family in Canada Topics included in this interdisciplinary series are theoretical investigations of gender, race, sexuality, geography, language, and culture within the experience of childhood and family. Series editor: Cynthia Comacchio TransCanada The study of Canadian literature can no longer take place in isolation. Pressures of multiculturalism put emphasis upon discourses of citizenship and security, while market-driven factors increasingly shape the publication, dissemination, and reception of Canadian writing. The goal of the TransCanada series is to publish forward-thinking critical interventions that investigate these paradigm shifts in interdisciplinary ways. Series editor: Smaro Kamboureli Other Series Collected Works of Florence Nightingale Series published for the Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion Comparative Ethics Editions SR Studies in Christianity and Judaism Studies in Women and Religion

Cover image: Iva Zimova/Panos Pictures. Also used on the cover of Canadian Social Policy: Issues and Perspectives, 5th edition, edited by Anne Westhues and Brian Wharf, with cover design by Blakeley Words+Pictures. See page 13 for more information about Canadian Social Policy

Cultural Studies / Viticulture

The World of Niagara Wine


Michael Ripmeester, Phillip Gordon Mackintosh, and Christopher Fullerton, editors

Michael Ripmeester, Phillip Gordon Mackintosh, and Christopher Fullerton are faculty members in the Department of Geography at Brock University. Table of Contents
Preface | Konrad Ejbich The Early History of Wine Making in Niagara | Alun Hughes From Prohibition to Baby Duck | Dan Malleck The Growing Place of Wine in the Economic Development of the Niagara Region | Christopher Fullerton The History of the VQA | Linda Bramble Niagara Wines in the Marketplace | Astrid Brummer Ontario Wine Regions Search for Identity | Maxim Voronov and Dirk de Clerq

The World of Niagara Wine is a transdisciplinary exploration of the Niagara wine industry. In the first section, contributors explore the history and regulation of wine production as well as its contemporary economic significance. The second section focuses on the entrepreneurship behind and the promotion and marketing of Niagara wines. The third introduces readers to the science of grape growing, wine tasting, and wine production, and the final section examines the social and cultural ramifications of Niagaras increasing reliance on grapes and wine as an economic motor for the region. The original research in this book celebrates and critiques the local wine industry and situates it in a complex web of Old World traditions and New World reliance on technology, science, and taste as well as global processes and local sociocultural reactions. Preface by Konrad Ejbich.

April 2012 Paper $28.95 295 pages 20 b/w photos and maps 6x9 978-1-55458-360-7 Of related interest

A Geospatial Perspective on Wine Production in the Niagara Region | Marilyne Jollineau and Victoria Tasker The Niagara Peninsula Appellation: A Climatic Analysis of Canadas Largest Wine Region | Anthony Shaw The Wine-Growing Soils of Niagara | Darryl Dagesse Viticultural and Vineyard Management Practices and Their Effects on Grape and Wine Quality | Andy Reynolds The Language of Taste | Ronald Jackson Vintning on Thin Ice: The Making of Canadas Iconic Dessert Wine | Debbie Inglis and Gary Pickering The Evolution of Wine and Culinary Tourism in Niagara | David Telfer and Atsuko Hashimoto Conflict in the Countryside: Securing the Land Base for the Wine Industry | Hugh Gayler The Niagara Wine Festivals Grande Parade: The Public Geography of a Grape and Wine Controversy | Phillip Gordon Mackintosh Wine as Heritage: Exploring the Roots of Wine Heritage in Niagara | Michael Ripmeester and Russell Johnston Constructing Authenticity: Architecture and Landscape in Niagara Wineries | Nicolas Baxter-Moore and Caroline Charest

Covering Niagara: Studies in Local Popular Culture


Joan Nicks and Barry Keith Grant, editors 2010 Paper $34.95 408 pages colour and b/w illustrations 6 x 9 978-1-55458-221-1 Cultural Studies series

Fall/Winter 2011

Life Writing / Autobiography

Unheard Of
Memoirs of a Canadian Composer John Beckwith

Canadian composer John Beckwith recounts his early days in Victoria, his studies in Toronto with Alberto Guerrero, his first compositions, and his later studies in Paris with the renowned Nadia Boulanger, of whom he offers a comprehensive personal view. In the memoirs central chapters Beckwith describes his activities as a writer, university teacher, scholar, and administrator. Then, turning to his creative output, he considers his compositions for instrumental music, his four operas, choral music, and music for voice. A final chapter touches on his personal and family life and his travel adventures. For over sixty years John Beckwith has participated in national musical initiatives in music education, promotion, and publishing. He has worked closely with performing groups such as the Orford Quartet and the Canadian Brass and conductors such as Elmer Iseler and Georg Tintner. A former reviewer for the Toronto Star and a CBC scriptwriter and programmer in the 1950s and 60s, he later produced many articles and books on musical topics. Acting under Robert Gill and Dora Mavor Moore in student days and married for twenty years to actor/director Pamela Terry, he witnessed first-hand the growth of Toronto theatre. He has collaborated with the writers Jay Macpherson, Margaret Atwood, Dennis Lee, and bpNichol, and teamed repeatedly with James Reaney, a close friend. His life story is a slice of Canadian cultural history.

February 2012 Paper $29.95 268 pages b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-358-4 Life Writing series By the same author

Weinzweig: Essays on His Life and Music


John Beckwith and Brian Cherney, editors 2011 Hardcover $50.00 420 pages Audio CD 1 colour and 25 b/w illustrations 6 x 9 978-1-55458-256-3

In his sixty-year career, John Beckwith has drawn attention with performances, broadcasts, and recordings of his more than 150 compositions and with his critical and research writings on personalities and issues of Canadian music past and present. Associated from 1952 to 1990 with the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, he was a witness of, and often a participant in, the excitement of new creative directions in theatre, painting, and music (as he once put it) of late-twentiethcentury Canada. John Beckwith is a member of the Order of Canada and holds honorary doctorates from five universities.

In Search of Alberto Guerrero


John Beckwith 2006 Hardcover $45.00 180 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-496-6

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Life Writing / Autobiography

Borrowed Tongues
Life Writing, Migration, and Translation Eva C. Karpinski

Borrowed Tongues is the first consistent attempt to apply the theoretical framework of translation studies in the analysis of self-representation in life writing by women in transnational, diasporic, and immigrant communities. It focuses on linguistic and philosophical dimensions of translation, showing how the dominant language serves to articulate and reinforce social, cultural, political, and gender hierarchies. Drawing on feminist, poststructuralist, and postcolonial scholarship, this study examines Canadian and American examples of traditional autobiography, autoethnography, and experimental narrative. As a prolific and contradictory site of linguistic performance and cultural production, such texts challenge dominant assumptions about identity, difference, and agency. Using the writing of authors such as Marlene NourbeSe Philip, Jamaica Kincaid, Laura Goodman Salverson, and Akemi Kikumura, and focusing on discourses through which subject positions and identities are produced, the study argues that different concepts of language and translation correspond with particular constructions of subjectivity and attitudes to otherness. A nuanced analysis of intersectional differences reveals gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, culture, and diaspora as unstable categories of representation.

February 2012 Paper $39.95 260 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-357-7 Life Writing series

Eva C. Karpinski teaches feminist theory and autobiography in the School of Womens Studies at York University. She has published articles in Literature Compass, Men and Masculinities, Studies in Canadian Literature, Canadian Woman Studies, and Resources for Feminist Research, among others. She is the editor of Pens of Many Colours: A Canadian Reader, a popular college anthology of multicultural writing.

Fall/Winter 2011

Autobiography / German Studies

Liberty Is Dead
A Canadian in Germany, 1938 Margaret E. Derry, editor

In the spring and summer of 1938, a third-generation German Canadian took an unforgettable road trip in Europe. Franklin Wellington Wegenast drove through Austria, Italy, France, Luxembourg, and Germany. He stopped to talk to people along the way and offered rides to those requesting them. He listened to what his passengers had to say about their lives, the conditions they lived under, and their views on what was happening in Europe. Wegenast heard Hitler speak in Innsbruck, and so witnessed first-hand Nazi power as Austrias independence crumbled. In his journal he noted the sheer animal force in the cries of the crowd, and foresaw the collision course that was shaping up between the Germans who supported Hitlers ideology and the rest of the world. Wegenast was unable to publish the journal he kept on his journey, and at the time of his death in 1942 it was in an unorganized state. It is published here for the first time alongside commentary that puts the entries in the contexts of Wegenasts life experiences, the prevailing attitudes of the day, both in North America and Europe, and modern scholarship on Germany in the 1930s. The book includes correspondence Wegenast had with a young German for a few months after his return to Canada, correspondence that reveals even more clearly the intensity of his feelings and his fear for the future. Newly released government documents and diaries kept by Germans during the interwar period have meant a considerable outpouring in recent years of material on German sentiment in the 1930s. Wegenasts diaries and letters corroborate modern assessments of German thinking and add insightful commentary, providing an outsider/insider view on the brewing conflict.

March 2012 Paper $24.95 190 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-053-8 German Studies series Of related interest

Franklin Wellington Wegenast was a third-generation German Canadian but intensely loyal to Britain. After an early career as a music teacher, he became a lawyer and the author of several books on Canadian law. Wegenast had broad interests that encompassed French architecture and the history of religion; he also kept wild ducks and bred sheep. He travelled many times throughout Europe before his last trip in 1938. Margaret E. Derry is a historian, artist, and livestock breeder. She writes about the history of agricultural breeding and has given lectures on the subject around the world. Derry has also written about the history of Georgian Bay. Her work on the Wegenast papers has taken her into the field of German history.

German Diasporic Experiences: Identity, Migration, and Loss


Mathias Schulze, James M. Skidmore, David G. John, Grit Liebscher, and Sebastian SiebelAchenbach, editors 2008 Hardcover $85.00 540 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-027-9 German Studies series

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Poetry

Chronicles
Early Works Dionne Brand

One of Canadas most distinguished poets, Dionne Brand explores and chronicles how history shapes human existence, in particular the lives of those ruptured and scattered by New World slaveries and modern crises. This republication of three early volumes presents a view of the trajectory of her poetic journey. Read retrospectively, the earlier work is haunting, a testament to a historical moment in which change seemed possible, even imminent, a belief nourished by the various social movements that galvanized a generation. Individually and as a whole, Brands work charts a collective as well as a personal journey, delving into the burdens of history and the fugitive, contingent, dynamic, and mutable geographies of the African diaspora. She locates herself within matrices of language, place, gender, sexuality, and politics and maps what she calls the murmurous genealogy of her city, Toronto, and the denizencitizenship of the contemporary global.

November 2011 Paper $24.95 168 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-374-4 By the same author

Fierce Departures: The Poetry of Dionne Brand


Selected with an introduction by Leslie C. Sanders 2009 Paper $16.95 60 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-038-5 Laurier Poetry series See also page 6

Dionne Brand is internationally known for her poetry, fiction, and essays. She has received many awards, notably the Governor Generals Award for Poetry, the Trillium Award (Land to Light On, 1997), the Pat Lowther Award (thirsty, 2005), the City of Toronto Book Award (What We All Long For, 2006), and the Harbourfront Festival Award (2006), given in recognition of her substantial contribution to literature. She is a professor in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph.

Fall/Winter 2011

Laurier Poetry Series

This project is one of the most exciting, cooperative, communal, and familial endeavours coming out of the poetry establishment in the past few years. Jason Ranon Uri Rotstein PoetryReviews.ca

From Room to Room


The Poetry of Eli Mandel Selected with an introduction by Peter Webb Afterword by Andrew Stubbs
Verse and Worse
Selected and New Poems of Steve McCaffery 19892009 Selected with an introduction by Darren Wershler
2010 Paper $16.95 90 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-188-7

The False Laws of Narrative


The Poetry of Fred Wah Selected with an introduction by Louis Cabri
2009 Paper $16.95 102 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-046-0

Mobility of Light
The Poetry of Nicole Brossard Selected with an introduction by Louise H. Forsyth
2009 Paper $18.95 144 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-047-7

Fierce Departures
The Poetry of Dionne Brand Selected with an introduction by Leslie C. Sanders
2009 Paper $16.95 60 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-038-5

Blues and Bliss


The Poetry of George Elliott Clarke Selected with an introduction by Jon Paul Fiorentino
2008 Paper $16.95 90 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-060-6

All These Roads


The Poetry of Louis Dudek Selected with an introduction by Karis Shearer Afterword by Frank Davey
2008 Paper $16.95 90 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-039-2

2011 Paper $16.95 84 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-255-6

Earthly Pages
The Poetry of Don Domanski Selected with an introduction by Brian Bartlett
2007 Paper $16.95 78 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-008-8

By Word of Mouth
The Poetry of Dennis Cooley Selected with an introduction by Nicole Markoti
2007 Paper $16.95 84 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-007-1

Children of the Outer Dark


The Poetry of Christopher Dewdney Selected with an introduction by Karl E. Jirgens
2007 Paper $16.95 78 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-515-4

Desire Never Leaves


The Poetry of Tim Lilburn Selected with an introduction by Alison Calder
2006 Paper $16.95 64 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-514-7

The Crisp Day Closing on My Hand


The Poetry of M. Travis Lane Selected with an introduction by Jeanette Lynes
2007 Paper $16.95 102 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-025-5

The More Easily Kept Illusions


The Poetry of Al Purdy Selected with an introduction by Robert Budde Afterword by Russell Morton Brown
2006 Paper $16.95 96 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-490-4

Field Marks
The Poetry of Don McKay Selected with an introduction by Mira Cook
2006 Paper $16.95 88 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-494-2

Speaking of Power
The Poetry of Di Brandt Selected with an introduction by Tanis MacDonald
2006 Paper $16.95 72 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-506-2

Before the First Word


The Poetry of Lorna Crozier Selected with an introduction by Catherine Hunter
2005 Paper $16.95 80 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-489-8

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Laurier Poetry Series

Leaving the Shade of the Middle Ground


The Poetry of F.R. Scott Selected with an introduction by Laura Moss Afterword by George Elliott Clarke

Leaving the Shade of the Middle Ground contains thirty-five of F.R. Scotts poems from across the five decades of his career. Scotts artistic responses to a litany of social problems, as well as his emphasis on nature and landscapes, remain remarkably relevant. Scott weighed in on many issues important to Canadians today, using different terms, perhaps, but with no less urgency than we feel now: biopolitics, neoliberalism, environmental concerns, genetic modification, freedom of speech, civil rights, human rights, and immigration. Scott is best remembered for The Canadian Authors Meet, W.L.M.K, and Laurentian Shield, but his poetic oeuvre includes significant occasional poems, elegies, found poems, and pointed satires. This selection of poems showcases the politics, the humour, and the beauty of this central modernist figure. The introduction by Laura Moss and the afterword by George Elliott Clarke provide two distinct approaches to reading Scotts work: in the contexts of Canadian modernism and of contemporary literary history, respectively.

October 2011 Paper $16.95 80 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-367-6 Laurier Poetry series By the same author

Laura Moss is an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia and the former director of the UBC International Canadian Studies Centre. She is the associate editor of the journal Canadian Literature, co-editor (with Cynthia Sugars) of the twovolume Canadian Literature in English: Texts and Contexts (2008, 2009), and the editor of Is Canada Postcolonial? Unsettling Canadian Literature (WLU Press, 2003). George Elliott Clarke is the inaugural E.J. Pratt Professor of Canadian Literature at the University of Toronto. Named a Trudeau Foundation Fellow in 2005, Clarke is a revered poet, librettist, and novelist. For his collection Execution Poems, he received the Governor Generals Award for Poetry in 2001. His bestselling poetry-novel, Whylah Falls, is a major text in Canadian literature. Born in 1899 in Quebec City, Francis Reginald (Frank) Scott was a public poet, an accomplished editor and mentor of a generation of writers, an influential professor of constitutional law, and a founding member of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF). Emerging as one of the Montreal Group of modernist poets of the 1920s, Scott spent the next five decades writing poetry and working to transform both Canadian poetics and politics. With a penchant for satire, Scotts work is sometimes playful and witty and sometimes gravely concerned with the legacies of political ineptitude and the fragility of both humanity and the environment. Fall/Winter 2011 7

Is Canada Postcolonial? Unsettling Canadian Literature


Laura Moss, editor 2003 Paper $42.95 376 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-416-4

Literary Criticism

The Daughters Way


Canadian Womens Paternal Elegies Tanis MacDonald

The Daughters Way investigates negotiations of female subjectivity in twentieth-century Canadian womens elegies with a special emphasis on the fathers death as a literary and political watershed. The book examines the work of Dorothy Livesay, P.K. Page, Jay Macpherson, Margaret Atwood, Kristjana Gunnars, Lola Lemire Tostevin, Anne Carson, and Erin Mour as elegiac daughteronomiesliterary artifacts of mourning that grow from the poets investigation into the function and limitations of elegiac convention. Some poets treat the father as a metaphor for socio-political power, while others explore more personal iterations of loss, but all the poets in The Daughters Way seek to redefine daughterly duty in a contemporary context by challenging elegiac tradition through questions of genre and gender. Beginning with psychoanalytical theories of filiation, inheritance, and mourning as they are complicated by feminist challenges to theories of kinship and citizenship, The Daughters Way debates the efficacy of the literary work of mourning in twentieth-century Canadian poetry. By investigating the way a daughters filial piety performs and sometimes reconfigures such work, and situating melancholia as a creative force in womens elegies, the book considers how elegies inquire into the rhetoric of mourning as it is complicated by fatherdaughter kinship.

February 2012 Hardcover $85.00 270 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-362-1 By the same author

Tanis MacDonald is an associate professor in the Department of English and Film Studies at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo. She is the author of three books of poetry, most recently Rue the Day (Turnstone Press, 2008), and the editor of Speaking of Power: The Poetry of Di Brandt (WLU Press, 2006).

Speaking of Power: The Poetry of Di Brandt


Selected with an introduction by Tanis MacDonald 2006 Paper $16.95 72 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-506-2 Laurier Poetry series See also page 6

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Communication / Popular Culture / Media studies

Canadian Television
Text and Context Marian Bredin, Scott Henderson, and Sarah A. Matheson, editors

Editors Marian Bredin, Scott Henderson, and Sarah A. Matheson are associate professors in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film, and the MA Program in Popular Culture at Brock University. Table of Contents Foreword: One Thing about Television and Ten Things about Canadian TV | John Doyle Part I: Television Studies in the Canadian Context: Challenges and New Directions Introduction | Marian Bredin, Scott Henderson, and Sarah A. Matheson From Kine to Hi-Def: A Personal View of Television Studies in Canada | Mary Jane Miller What Remains to Be Seen: Archives and Other Practical Problems for Canadian Television Studies | Jen VanderBurgh Part II: Contexts of Television Production and Policy in Canada Television, Film, and the Canadian Star System | Liz Czach Producing Aboriginal Television in Canada: Obstacles and Opportunities | Marian Bredin Hypercommercialism and Canadian Childrens Television | Kyle Asquith Part III: Contexts of Criticism: Genre, Narrative, and Form Canadianizing Canadians: Television, Youth, Identity | Michele Byers How Even American Reality TV Can Perform a Public Service on Canadian Television | Derek Foster Television, Nation, and the Situation Comedy in Canada: Cultural Diversity and Little Mosque on the Prairie | Sarah A. Matheson Come On Eileen: Making Shania Canadian Again | Scott Henderson

Canadian Television: Text and Context explores the creation and circulation of entertainment television in Canada from the interdisciplinary perspective of television studies. Each chapter connects arguments about particular texts of Canadian television to critical analysis of the wider cultural, social, and economic contexts in which they are created. The book surveys the commercial and technological imperatives of the Canadian television industry, the shifting role of the CBC as Canadas public broadcaster, the dynamics of Canadas multicultural and multiracial audiences, and the function of televisions star system. Foreword by The Globe and Mails television critic, John Doyle.
Of related interest

November 2011 Paper $39.95 210 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-361-4 Film and Media Studies series

Feeling Canadian: Television, Nationalism, and Affect


Marusya Bociurkiw 2011 Paper $32.95 192 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-268-6 Film and Media Studies series See also page 27

Programming Reality: Perspectives on EnglishCanadian Television


Zo Druick and Aspa Kotsopoulos, editors 2008 Paper $42.95 354 pages 28 b/w photos 6 x 9 978-1-55458-010-1 Film and Media Studies series

Fall/Winter 2011

English / Literary Studies

Shifting the Ground


Nation-State, Indigeneity, Culture Smaro Kamboureli and Robert Zacharias, editors

Shifting the Ground is a collection of interdisciplinary essays that examine the various contextspolitical, social, and culturalthat have shaped the study of Canadian literature and the role it plays in our understanding of the Canadian nation-state. The essays are tied together as instances of critical practices that reveal the relations and exchanges that take place between the categories of the literary and the nation, as well as between the disciplinary sites of critical discourses and the porous boundaries of their methods. They are concerned with the material effects of the imperial and colonial logics that have fashioned Canada, as well as with the paradoxes, ironies, and contortions that abound in the general perception that Canada has progressed beyond its colonial construction. Smaro Kambourelis introduction demonstrates that these essays engage with the larger realm of human and social practicesthrone speeches, book clubs, policies of accommodation of cultural and religious differences, Indigenous thought about justice and ethicsto show that literary and critical work is inextricably related to the Canadian polity in light of transnational and global forces.

March 2012 Paper $42.95 310 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-365-2 TransCanada series By the same author

Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of Canadian Literature


Smaro Kamboureli and Roy Miki, editors 2007 Paper $38.95 252 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-513-0 TransCanada series

Smaro Kamboureli is Canada Research Chair in Critical Studies in Canadian Literature at the University of Guelph. Her publications include Scandalous Bodies: Diasporic Literature in English Canada, which won the Gabrielle Roy Prize, and, with Roy Miki, Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of Canadian Literature (WLU Press, 2007). She is currently completing a new edition of her anthology Making a Difference: Canadian Multicultural Literature. Robert Zacharias is a postdoctoral fellow at the Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies at the University of Toronto. His research interests include migration literature, Canadian literature (with a focus on Mennonite literature), 18th-century studies, and critical pedagogy. His work has been published in Mosaic and Studies in Canadian Literature, as well as in the edited collections Embracing Otherness and Narratives of Citizenship.

Scandalous Bodies: Diasporic Literature in English Canada


Smaro Kamboureli 2009 Paper $42.95 288 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-064-4 TransCanada series

10

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Literary Studies / Performance Studies

Listening Up, Writing Down, and Looking Beyond


Interfaces of the Oral, Written, and Visual Susan Gingell and Wendy Roy, editors

Listening Up, Writing Down, and Looking Beyond is an interdisciplinary collection that gathers the work of scholars and performance practitioners who together explore questions about the oral, written, and visual. Its contributions address the politics and ethics of the utterance and text: textualizing orature and orality, simulations of the oral, the poetics of performance, and reconstructions of the oral.
Wendy Roy is an associate professor of Canadian Literature at the University of Saskatchewan. Susan Gingell teaches and researches decolonizing and transnational literatures at the University of Saskatchewan.

March 2012 Hardcover $85.00 378 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-364-5

Table of Contents Introduction: Three Senses Worth | Susan Gingell with Wendy Roy Listening Up: Performance Poetics Bring Da Noise: The Poetics of Performance, chez dbi. young and Oni Joseph | George Elliott Clarke Poetry Performances on the Page and Stage: Insights from Slam | Helen Gregory Poetry and Overturned Cars: Why Performance Poetry Cant Be Studied (and Why We Should Study It Anyway) | Hugh Hodges Ecohomony: A Poetics of Ethos, Eros, and Erasure | Adeena Karasick Dialect Poetry and the Need for Performance: The Case of William Barnes | T.L. Burton The SpeechMusic Continuum | Paul Dutton Writing Down: Textualized Orature and Orality Writing and Rapping for a New South Africa: The Poetry of Lesego Rampolokeng | Gugu Hlongwane Pleasure for our sense, health for our hearts: Inferring Pronuntiatio and Actio from the Text of John Donnes Second Prebend Sermon | Brent Nelson The Ballad as Site of Rebellion: Orality, Gender, and the Granuaile Aislingi | Naomi Foyle The Power and the Paradox of the Spoken Story | Wendy Roy Towards an Open Field: The Ethics of the Encounter in Life Lived Like a Story | Emily Blacker Whats in a Frame?: Textualized Orality and the Significance of Paraholophrases in Louise Bernice Halfes Blue Marrow | Mareike Neuhaus Looking Beyond: Adding the Visual Becoming the Storyteller: Meaning-Making and Our Age of Resistance | Waziyatawin Re-si(gh)ting the Storyteller in Textualized Orature: Photographs in The Days of Augusta | Cara DeHaan Traditionalizing Modernity and Sound Identity in Neal McLeods Writing of the Oral | Susan Gingell A Nexus of Connections: Acts of Recovery, Acts of Resistance in Native Palimpsest | Kimberly Blaeser

Fall/Winter 2011

11

Music Education

Critical Perspectives in Canadian Music Education


Carol A. Beynon and Kari K. Veblen, editors

Musician, educator, researcher, and advocate, Carol Beynon serves as the vice provost of graduate and post-doctoral studies at the University of Western Ontario. She is coartistic director of the award-winning Amabile Boys Choirs. Her research interests include Canadian music education, arts education, teacher identity, and gender issues. Kari Veblen, the associate dean of graduate studies and research at the Don Wright Faculty of Music, University of Western Ontario, teaches cultural perspectives in music education, elementary methods, and graduate courses. Musician and educator, Veblen studies international trends in community music. Contributors Carol Beynon, University of Western Ontario, London, ON Benjamin Bolden, University of Victoria, BC Wayne Bowman, Brandon University, MB June Countryman, University of Prince Edward Island David Elliott, New York University, NY Elizabeth Gould, University of Toronto, ON Elizabeth Hanley, University of Victoria, BC Alex Hickey, Newfoundland and Labrador Teachers Association Anne Kinsella, University of Western Ontario, London, ON Andrew Mercer, Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Education Mary Piercey, Memorial University, St. Johns, NL Andrea Rose, Memorial University, St. Johns, NL R. Murray Schafer, composer, Toronto, ON Patricia Shand, University of Toronto, ON Kari Veblen, University of Western Ontario, London, ON Betty Anne Younker, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

Music education in Canada is a vast enterprise that encompasses teaching and learning in thousands of public and private schools, community groups, and colleges and universities. It involves participants from infancy to the elderly in formal and informal settings. Nevertheless, as post-secondary faculties of music and programs are growing significantly, academic books and materials grounded in a Canadian perspective are scarce. This book attempts to fill that need by offering a collection of essays that look critically at various global issues in music education from a Canadian perspective. Topics range from a discussion of the roots of music education in Canada and analysis of music education practices across the country to perspectives on popular music, distance education, technology, gender, globalization, Indigenous traditions, and community music in music education. Foreword by composer R. Murray Schafer.

December 2011 Paper $39.95 210 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-366-9

12

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Social Policy / Social Work

Canadian Social Policy


Issues and Perspectives, 5th edition Anne Westhues and Brian Wharf, editors

Social policy shapes the daily lives of every Canadian citizen and should reflect the beliefs of a majority of Canadians on just approaches to the promotion of health, safety, and well-being. Too often, those on the front linessocial workers, nurses, and teachersobserve that policies do not work well for the most vulnerable groups in society. In the first part of this new edition of Canadian Social Policy, Westhues and Wharf argue that service deliverers have discretion in how policies are implemented, and this exercise of discretion is how citizens experience policy whether or not it is fair and reasonable. They show the reader how social policy is made and encourage active citizenship to produce policies that are more socially just. New material includes an examination of the reproduction of systemic racism through the implementation of human rights policy and a comparative analysis of the policy-making process in Quebec and English Canada. The second part of the book discusses policy issues currently under debate in Canada, including new chapters that explore parental leave policies and housing as a determinant of health. All chapters contain statistical data and research and policy analysis updated since the publication of the previous edition in 2006. A reworked section on the process of policy-making and the addition of questions for critical reflection enhance the suitability of the book as a core resource in social policy courses. The final chapter explores how front-line workers in the human services can advocate for change in organizational policies that will benefit the people supported.

March 2012 Paper $52.95 494 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-359-1 Of related interest

Anne Westhues is a professor in the Faculty of Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier University, where she teaches research and social policy. Brian Wharf is a professor emeritus in the Faculty of Human and Social Development at the University of Victoria. Contributors Mike Burke, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON Marilyn Callahan, University of Victoria, BC Peter A. Dunn, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON Patricia Evans, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON Usha George, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON Jill Grant, University of Windsor, ON Joan Wharf Higgins, University of Victoria, BC Garson Hunter, University of Regina, SK Carol Kenny-Scherber, Ministry of Agriculture, ON Iara Lessa, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON Delores Mullings, Memorial University, St. Johns, NL Tonya Munro, University of Windsor, ON Geoffrey Nelson, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON Sheila Neysmith, University of Toronto, ON Brian ONeill, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC Mac Saulis, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON Susan Silver, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON Karen Swift, York University, Toronto, ON Yves Vaillancourt, Universit du Qubec Montral Fay Weller, University of Victoria, BC Anne Westhues, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON Brian Wharf, University of Victoria, BC

One Hundred Years of Social Work: A History of the Profession in English Canada, 19002000
Therese Jennissen and Colleen Lundy 2011 Paper $38.95 378 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-186-3 See also page 29

Child Welfare: Connecting Research, Policy, and Practice, 2nd edition


Kathleen Kufeldt and Brad McKenzie, editors 2011 Paper $54.95 694 pages 1 photo, 35 tables, 31 figures 6 x 9 978-1-55458-330-0 See also page 29

Fall/Winter 2011

13

Religious Studies

The Theology of the Chinese Jews, 10001850


Jordan Paper

A thousand years ago, the Chinese government invited merchants from one of the Chinese port synagogue communities to the capital, Kaifeng. The merchants settled there and the community prospered. Over many centuries, with government support, the Kaifeng Jews built and rebuilt their synagogue, which became perhaps the worlds largest. Some studied for the rabbinate; others prepared for civil service examinations, leading to a disproportionate number of Jewish government officials. While continuing orthodox Jewish practices, they added rituals honouring their parents and the patriarchs in accord with Chinese customs. Thus they remained fully Jewish while harmonizing with the family-centred religion of China. Based on the theology they brought from Baghdad, the Chinese Jews developed a theology that bypassed the horrors of Christian persecution and expressed it in literary Chinese using Daoist terminology. The Theology of the Chinese Jews traces the history of Jews in China and explores how their theologys focus on love, rather than on the fear of a non-anthropomorphic God, may speak to contemporary liberal Jews. By the mid-eighteenth centurycut off from Judaism elsewhere for two centuries, their synagogue destroyed by a major flood, their community impoverished and dispersed by a civil war that devastated Kaifeng their Judaism became defunct.

April 2012 Hardcover $85.00 175 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-372-0 Co-published with the Centre for Studies in Religion and Society

Jordan Paper is a professor emeritus at York University (East Asian and Religious Studies) and a fellow at the Centre for Studies in Religion and Society at the University of Victoria. As a graduate student, he studied classical Chinese at the Oriental Institute and religion at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. He studied Buddhist Chinese at and received his doctorate in Chinese Language and Literature from the University of Wisconsin (Madison). His many books on religion and Chinese philosophy include The Fu-Tzu: A PostHan Confucian Text, The Spirits Are Drunk: Comparative Approaches to Chinese Religion, The Chinese Way in Religion (2nd edition), and The Mystic Experience: A Descriptive and Comparative Approach.

14

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Religious Studies / Child Studies

Shattering the Illusion


Child Sexual Abuse and Canadian Religious Institutions Tracy J. Trothen

Shattering the Illusion is the first book to gather and comparatively analyze policies addressing child sexual abuse complaints in a selection of religious institutions in Canada. Although there is a substantial body of literature regarding Christianity and sexual abuse, very little of it focuses on religious institutions in Canada and their respective policies. In the foreword, Tracey J. Trothen summarizes the Cornwall Inquiry, out of which this book arose. She then examines the Roman Catholic Church, The United Church of Canada, the Anglican Church, the Mennonite Church, Islam, and the Canadian Unitarian Council/Unitarian Universalist Association, describing in detail the evolution and particular content of policies and procedures that address child sexual abuse complaints directed at paid and volunteer faith community representatives and/ or leaders. She identifies differences and common themes among the approaches taken by the institutions and provides a summary table for an accessible comparative overview. Child sexual abuse is not new, but the emergence of policies to address abuse complaints within religious institutions is. This book identifies significant and shared causal factors behind the emergence of policy and reviews their content carefully. This review will serve as a significant tool for furthering the development of such policies.

February 2012 Paper $32.95 218 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-356-0 Editions SR series By the same author

Tracy J. Trothen is an associate professor of theology and ethics at Queens School of Religion, Queens University, in Kingston, Ontario. She is the author of over twenty scholarly publications, including Linking Sexuality and Gender: Naming Violence against Women in The United Church of Canada (WLU Press, 2003). Her more recent publications are concerned with the intersections of sport, technology, and religion.

Linking Sexuality and Gender: Naming Violence against Women in The United Church of Canada
Tracy J. Trothen 2003 Paper $38.95 176 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-424-9 Studies in Women and Religion series

Fall/Winter 2011

15

German Studies / Military History

Germanys Western Front


Translations from the German Official History of the Great War, 1914, Part 1 Mark Osborne Humphries and John Maker, editors Based on translations by Wilhelm J. Kiesselbach Foreword by Hew Strachan

This multi-volume series in six parts is the first English-language translation of Der Weltkrieg, the German official history of the First World War. Originally produced between 1925 and 1944 using classified archival records that were destroyed in the aftermath of the Second World War, Der Weltkrieg is the inside story of Germanys experience on the Western front. Recorded in the words of its official historians, this account is vital to the study of the war and official memory in Weimar and Nazi Germany. Although exciting new sources have been uncovered in former Soviet archives, this work remains the basis of future scholarship. It is essential reading for any scholar, graduate student, or enthusiast of the Great War. This volume, the second to be published, covers the outbreak of war in JulyAugust 1914, the German invasion of Belgium, the Battles of the Frontiers, and the pursuit to the Marne in early September 1914. The first month of war was a critical period for the German army and, as the official history makes clear, the German war plan was a gamble that seemed to present the only solution to the riddle of the two-front war. But as the MoltkeSchlieffen Plan was gradually jettisoned through a combination of intentional command decisions and confused communications, Germanys hopes for a quick and victorious campaign evaporated.
16 www.wlupress.wlu.ca

April 2012 Hardcover $95.00 500 pages 30 maps and sketches 6x9 978-1-55458-373-7 Co-published with LCMSDS By the same author

Mark Humphries is an assistant professor of history at Memorial University of Newfoundland where he teaches war and society and military history. His books include The Last Plague: Spanish Influenza and the Politics of Public Health (forthcoming) and The Selected Papers of Sir Arthur Currie (2008). His article Wars Long Shadow: Masculinity, Medicine, and the Gendered Politics of Trauma, 1914 1939 won the 2010 Canadian Historical Review Prize. John Maker received his Ph.D. in history from the University of Ottawa in 2010. He currently teaches for the Royal Military College and is a professional researcher in Ottawa, Ontario. Wilhelm J. Kiesselbach (translator) was born in Hamburg, Germany, where he completed a B.A. in English and journalism. After emigrating to the United States he was immediately drafted into the U.S. Army and spent seven years with Seventh Army Headquarters in Germany as translator and interpreter. For his service in Vietnam, he was decorated with the Army Commendation Medal and the Bronze Star.

Germanys Western Front: Translations from the German Official History of the Great War, 1915
Mark Osborne Humphries and John Maker, editors 2010 $85.00 Hardcover 462 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-051-4 Co-published with LCMSDS

Military History

Canadian Battlefields 19151918


A Visitors Guide Terry Copp

Most of the world remembers the First World War as a time when, as historian Samuel Hynes put it, innocent young men, their heads full of high abstractions like Honour, Glory, and England were slaughtered in stupid battles planned by stupid Generals. English-speaking Canadians have for the most part accepted this view and supplemented it with an imaginative version of a war in which their soldiers won great victories and forged a new national identity. Both approaches have served to promote literary, political, and cultural agendas of such power that empirical studies of actual wartime events have had little impact on the historiography. A new generation of scholars has challenged those approaches, however, insisting that the reality of the war and the society that produced it are worthy of study. This guide to the Canadian battlefields in France and Belgium offers a brief critical history of the war and of Canadas contribution, drawing attention to the best recent books on the subject. It focuses on the Ypres Salient, Passchendaele, Vimy, and the Hundred Days battles and considers lesser-known battlefields as well. Battle maps, contemporary maps, photographs, war art, and tourist information enhance the reader experience.

August 2011 Paper $32.99 130 pages 30 illus. incl. war art, 15 maps 6x9 978-1-926804-11-8 Published by the LCMSDS

Terry Copp is the director of the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies and a professor emeritus at Wilfrid Laurier University. He is the author or co-author of fourteen books and many articles on the Canadian role in the Second World War, including travel guides to the Canadian battlefields. Fields of Fire: The Canadians in Normandy won the 2004 Distinguished Book Award for non-US history from the American Society for Military History.
Of related interest

The Canadian Battlefields in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany: A Visitors Guide
Terry Copp and Mike Bechthold May 2011 $39.95 Paper 144 pages Colour & b/w photos, colour maps 8.5 x 11 978-1-926804-02-6 Published by LCMSDS

The Canadian Battlefields in Northern France: A Visitors Guide


Terry Copp and Mike Bechthold July 2011 $85.00 Paper 160 pages Colour & b/w photos, maps 8.5 x 11 978-1-926804-01-9 Published by LCMSDS

Fall/Winter 2011

17

Announcement

Congratulations to our WLU Press authors


Winner of the 2010 ACQL Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism Finalist for the 2010 ACQL Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism

Canadian Women in Print, 17501918


Carole Gerson
May 2011 Now available in paper $38.95 300 pages 12 b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-304-1

Writing in Dust
Reading the Prairie Environmentally Jenny Kerber
March 2011 Now available in paper $38.95 276 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-306-5 Environmental Humanities series

Jury Comments Arguing the ongoing need for recognition of the significance of work done by women, Gerson blends a materialist sociological approach to historical analysis with literary history and biographical research. The result is a deeply rich history of print in Canada. By constructing a historical context for early women writers, the book furthers our understanding of Canadian social history and advances knowledge of Canadian publishing history in general. Winner of the 2009 ACQL Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism Finalist for the Canada Prize in the Humanities (English) Wider Boundaries of Daring The Modernist Impulse in Canadian Womens Poetry Di Brandt and Barbara Godard, editors
2009 Paper $42.95 424 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-032-3

Jury Comments This book enlarges an established critical field by ranging across genres and historical periods in its consideration of Canadian prairie writing. Kerbers material is meticulously researched, and her analysis is both sensitive and rigorous. The text points to how the stories we tell about a place affect what we do with and to that place and, in focusing on environmental concerns, demonstrates the relevance of literary analysis to real-world activities.

Finalist for the 2009 ACQL Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism Unsettled Remains Canadian Literature and the Postcolonial Gothic Cynthia Sugars and Gerry Turcotte, editors
2009 Paper $42.95 324 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-054-5

Finalist for the 2008 ACQL Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism From the Iron House Imprisonment in First Nations Writing Deena Rymhs
2008 Cloth $65.00 162 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-021-7 Indigenous Studies series

18

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Now Available in Paper

Fostering Nation?
Canada Confronts Its History of Childhood Disadvantage Veronica Strong-Boag
January 2012 Paper $38.95 318 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-337-9 Studies in Childhood and Family in Canada

Through a Glass Darkly


Suffering, the Sacred, and the Sublime in Literature and Theory Holly Faith Nelson, Lynn R. Szabo, and Jens Zimmermann, editors
January 2011 Paper $42.95 480 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-305-8

Fostering Nation is an important and passionate book. Veronica Strong-Boag has cast an empathetic and illuminating spotlight on some of the most underprivileged and vulnerable children in Canadian society, focusing her unswerving gaze on harsh treatment and hard hearts and yet at the same time showing us children who emerge from this darkness with hope intact. She alerts us to the uncomfortable fact that caregiving in relatively wealthy capitalist society has limits, that care for children still falls disproportionately on women, and that feminist responses to the inequalities that consign many children to the care system are needed to overturn decades of patriarchal structures at the heart of so much family disintegration. Canadian society, she argues, has all too frequently failed in its responses to vulnerable girls and boys. Lynn Abrams, professor of gender history, University of Glasgow
Veronica Strong-Boag is a professor of Womens and Gender Studies and of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia. She is the co-editor, with Cheryl Krasnick Warsh, of Childrens Health Issues in Historical Perspective (WLU Press, 2005).

Suffering, the sacred, and the sublime are concepts that often surface in humanities research in an attempt to come to terms with what is challenging, troubling, or impossible to represent. These intersecting concepts are used to mediate the gap between the spoken and the unspeakable, between experience and language, between body and spirit, between the immanent and the transcendent, and between the human and the divine. The twenty-five essays in Through a Glass Darkly address the ways in which literature and theory have engaged with these three concepts and related concerns.
Holly Faith Nelson is an associate professor of English at Trinity Western University. Lynn R. Szabo is an associate professor and chair of the English Department at Trinity Western University. Jens Zimmermann is a professor of English at Trinity Western University and Canada Research Chair in Religion, Culture, and Interpretation.

Fall/Winter 2011

19

Now Available in Paper

Burdens of Proof

Just a Larger Family

Faith, Doubt, and Identity in Autobiography Letters of Marie Williamson from the Susanna Egan Canadian Home Front, 19401944 Mary F. Williamson and Tom Sharp, editors
April 2011 Paper $34.95 265 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-333-1 Life Writing series May 2011 Paper $29.95 395 pages 16 b/w illus. 6x9 978-1-55458-323-2 Life Writing series

In this compelling study of the representation and reception of fraudulent identities, Susanna Egan offers a subtle and intelligent reading of the ways in which histories of faith and doubt inform autobiographical practices. Tracing the problematics of ascription, plagiarism, ghosting, invention, or theft in different historical and political climates and across a variety of material cultures, Burdens of Proof provocatively asks readers to extend autobiographys claims to self and truth to themselves. Nancy Pedri, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Susanna Egan recently retired from the Department of English at the University of British Columbia. She has written extensively on autobiography and published two monographs: Patterns of Experience in Autobiography (1980) and Mirror Talk: Genres of Crisis in Contemporary Autobiography (2000).

An extraordinary slice of wartime Canadian life. These splendidly edited letters are full of wonderful detail on attitudes, blackouts, food rationing, gas and coal shortages, and the higher prices of everything, all the manifold details of daily life that normally are forgotten in most accounts. By taking in two British children and regularly keeping their mother overseas up-todate on their progress, Marie Williamson and her family created a record of genuine historical importance. J.L. Granatstein, co-author, The Oxford Companion to Canadian Military History
Mary F. Williamson is a retired fine-arts bibliographer and adjunct faculty in graduate art history at York University. She co-authored Art and Architecture in Canada (1991), and her recent writings on nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century cookery have appeared in Covering Niagara: Studies in Local Popular Culture (WLU Press, 2010) and The Edible City (2009). Tom Sharp is the younger of the two boys who came to live with the Williamsons in Canada. He had a civil service career in trade policy and was awarded the Commander of the British Empire (CBE) in 1987. He was an elected local councillor in Guildford, Surrey, a governor of two local schools, and a citizens advice bureau member.

20

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Previously Announced

Cinema and Social Change in Germany and Austria


Gabriele Mueller and James M. Skidmore, editors

Robert Bresson (Revised)


James Quandt, editor

Reverse Shots
Indigenous Film and Media in an International Context Wendy Gay Pearson and Susan Knabe, editors

This book explores contemporary German and Austrian cinema and the trend away from cinema of consensus, a term coined to describe the popular and commercially oriented filmmaking of the 1990s, toward a more heterogeneous and critical cinema culture. It investigates different thematic and aesthetic strategies and alternative methods of film production and distribution. Functioning both as a product and as an agent of globalizing processes, this new cinema mediates and influences important political and social debates. The contributors illuminate these processes through their analyses of cinemas intervention in discourses on such concepts as national cinema, the effects of globalization on social mobility, and the emergence of a global culture.
Gabriele Mueller is an assistant professor of German Studies and is affiliated with the Canadian Centre for German and European Studies at York University, Toronto. James M. Skidmore teaches German literature, film, and cultural studies at the University of Waterloo.

An excellent collection of interviews. The Village Voice Robert Bresson, published in 1998, remains one of the most acclaimed and thorough examinations of the French directors vision and style. Robert Bresson (Revised) reproduces essential contributions from the original edition and adds new or original material. It features more than thirty key articles by leading critics and scholars, interviews, commentaries by important contemporary filmmakers, and an illuminating symposium on the directors current stature. This book is an invaluable volume for anyone seeking to understand the beauty and austere perfectionism of Bressons singular body of work.
James Quandt is the senior programmer at TIFF Cinematheque (ne Cinematheque Ontario). He has published widely and is a regular contributor to ArtForum International magazine.

From the dawn of cinema, images of Indigenous peoples have been dominated by Hollywood stereotypes and often negative depictions from elsewhere around the world. With the advent of digital technologies, however, many Indigenous peoples are working to redress the imbalance in numbers and counter the negativity. The contributors to Reverse Shots offer a unique scholarly perspective on current work in the world of Indigenous film and media. Chapters cover areas as diverse as the use of digital technology in the creation of Aboriginal art, the healing effects of Native humour in First Nations documentaries, and the representation of the pre-colonial in films from Australia, Canada, and Norway.
Wendy Gay Pearson is an assistant professor at the University of Western Ontario. Susan Knabe is an assistant professor in both Media Studies and Womens Studies at the University of Western Ontario.

August 2011 Hardcover $85.00 328 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-225-9 Film and Media Studies series

September 2011 Paper $39.95 784 pages 135 b/w and colour illustrations 6x9 978-0-9682969-5-0 Published by TIFF Distributed in Canada by Wilfrid Laurier University Press

April 2012 Paper $42.95 256 pages b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-335-5 Film and Media Studies series

Fall/Winter 2011

21

Previously Announced

The Green Sofa


Natascha Wrzbach Translated by Raleigh Whitinger

Beyond Bylines
Media Workers and Womens Rights in Canada Barbara M. Freeman

Fields in Motion
Ethnography in the Worlds of Dance Dena Davida, editor

The Green Sofa covers Natascha Wrzbachs childhood and youth, from 1936 to 1956, offering a perspective on the everyday realities and historical developments in Germany through the war years and into the era of prosperity that followed. The eponymous green sofa is a cherished piece of furniture that accompanied the family from their home in Munich to their exile in the Bavarian countryside following the bombing of the city. The books epilogue presents a retrospective on Wrzbachs father and his longhidden struggle as an unrelenting anti-Nazi.
Natascha Wrzbach was a professor of English literature at Cologne University from 1975 to 1999. She has published on subjects ranging from balladry to modern literature and has published autobiographical stories as well as poems.

Explores the ways in which several of Canadas women journalists, broadcasters, and other media workers reached well beyond the glory of their personal bylines to advocate for the most controversial womens rights of their eras. The book consists of a series of case studies of the women in question as they grappled with the concerns close to their hearts: higher education for women, healthy dress reforms, the vote, equal opportunities at work, abortion, lesbianism, and Aboriginal womens rights. Barbara Freeman takes an interdisciplinary approach, combining biography, history, and communication studies to demonstrate how their use of different media both enabled and limited these women in their ability to be daring advocates for gender equality.
Barbara M. Freeman is a media historian and former newswoman who has spent her teaching career at Carleton University, Ottawa. She is the author of The Satellite Sex: The Media and Womens Issues in English Canada, 19661971 (WLU Press, 2001), and Kits Kingdom The Journalism of Kathleen Blake Coleman (1989).

Fields in Motion examines the deeper meanings and resonances of artistic dance in contemporary culture. The book comprises four sections: methods and methodologies, auto-ethnography, pedagogies and creative processes, and choreographies as cultural and spiritual representations. The contributors bring an insiders insight to their accounts of the nature and function of these artistic practices, giving voice to dancers, dance teachers, creators, programmers, spectators, students, and scholars. International and intergenerational, this collection of groundbreaking scholarly research points to a new direction for both dance studies and dance anthropology. Traditionally the exclusive domain of aesthetic philosophers, the art of dance is here reframed as cultural practice, and its significance is revealed through a chorus of voices from practitioners and insider ethnographers.
Dena Davida is a performing arts presenter and dance educator. She has lectured on contemporary dance and culture and published essays in academic journals and professional periodicals.

September 2011 Paper $24.95 256 pages 5 b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-334-8 Life Writing series

August 2011 Hardcover $85.00 352 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-269-3 Film and Media Studies series

September 2011 Hardcover $95.00 500 pages 36 b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-339-3

22

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Previously Announced

Crosstalk
Canadian and Global Imaginaries in Dialogue Diana Brydon and Marta Dvok, editors

Cultural Grammars of Centre and Periphery, Nation, Diaspora, and Roots and Exile Music Indigeneity in Canada Interpreting theKurtg,of Istvn Anhalt, Gyrgy and
Christine Kim, Sophie McCall, and Melina Baum Singer, editors Sndor Veress Friedemann Sallis, Robin Elliott, and Kenneth DeLong, editors

What are the fictions that shape Canadian engagements with the global? What frictions emerge from these encounters? In negotiating aesthetic and political approaches to Canadian cultural production within contexts of global circulation, this collection argues for the value of attending to narratorial, lyric, and theatrical conventions in dialogue with questions of epistemological and social justice. Using the twinned framing devices of crosstalk and cross-sighting, the contributing authors attend to how the interplay of the verbal and the visual maps public spheres of creative engagement today. Individual chapters present a range of methodological approaches to the understanding of national culture and creative labour in global contexts. Through their collective enactment of methodological crosstalk, they demonstrate the productivity of scholarly debate across differences of outlook, culture, and training.
Diana Brydon is Canada Research Chair in Globalization and Cultural Studies and the director of the Centre for Globalization and Cultural Studies at the University of Manitoba. Marta Dvok is a professor of Canadian and postcolonial literatures in English at the Sorbonne Nouvelle.
December 2011 Hardcover $85.00 286 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-264-8

Cultural Grammars of Nation, Diaspora, and Indigeneity in Canada considers how the terms of critical debate in literary and cultural studies in Canada have shifted with respect to matters of race, nation, and difference. In asking how Indigenous and diasporic interventions have remapped these debates, the contributors argue there is a new cultural grammar at work and attempt to sketch out some of the ways that it operates.
Christine Kim is an assistant professor of English at Simon Fraser University. Her teaching and research focus on Asian North American literature and theory, contemporary Canadian literature, and diasporic writing. Sophie McCall teaches contemporary First Nations and Canadian literatures in the English Department at Simon Fraser University. She is the author of First Person Plural: Aboriginal Storytelling and the Ethics of Collaborative Authorship (forthcoming). Melina Baum Singer is a doctoral candidate in the Department of English at the University of Western Ontario.

This book examines the impact place and displacement can have on the composition and interpretation of Western art music, using as its primary objects of study the work of Istvn Anhalt (b. 1919), Gyrgy Kurtg (b. 1926), and Sndor Veress (19071992), composers of Hungarian origin whose careers followed radically different paths.
Friedemann Sallis obtained his Ph.D. in musicology under the direction of the late Carl Dahlhaus at the Technische Universitt Berlin. He is the co-editor of A Handbook to Twentieth-Century Musical Sketches (2004). Robin Elliott taught at University College Dublin for six years before assuming the Jean A. Chalmers Chair in Canadian Music at the University of Toronto in 2002. He has edited several books, including two with Gordon E. Smith: Istvan Anhalt: Pathways and Memory (2001) and Music Traditions, Cultures, and Contexts (WLU Press, 2010). Kenneth DeLong is a professor of music history at the University of Calgary, Alberta. He has published extensively on Romantic Czech music. He is also a music critic for the Calgary Herald and Opera Canada.

January 2012 Paper $49.95 285 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-336-2 TransCanada series

August 2011 Hardcover $85.00 332 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-148-1

Fall/Winter 2011

23

Previously Announced

Hearing Voices
Qualitative Inquiry in Early Psychosis Katherine M. Boydell and H. Bruce Ferguson, editors

Preventing EatingRelated and WeightRelated Disorders

Making It Like a Man


Canadian Masculinities in Practice Christine Ramsay, editor

Collaborative Research, Advocacy, and Policy Change Gail McVey, Michael P. Levine, Niva Piran, and H. Bruce Ferguson, editors

This book highlights qualitative research in early psychosis. The first half of the book is structured around the individual lived experience of psychosisfrom the perspective of the individual, the family, and the practitioner. The second half focuses on broader system issues, including medical trainees encounters with firstepisode psychosis in the emergency room and the implementation of first-episode clinics in the UK and Australia.
Katherine M. Boydell is a senior scientist in the Community Health Systems Resource Group and Scientific Director of Qualitative Inquiry in Child Health Evaluative Services at the Hospital for Sick Children, and an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry and the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto. H. Bruce Ferguson is the director of the Community Health Systems Resource Group at the Hospital for Sick Children and a professor in the departments of Psychiatry and Psychology and the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto.

This book contains writings by expert researchers from Canada, the United States, and Australia who are committed to finding common cause and common ground in the prevention of eating disorders and obesity. The eleven chapters in this book seek to create a new public health approach to the prevention of weight-related disorders, one that counters the confusion and frustration engendered by public policies, messages, and programs that recipients of prevention efforts often experience.
Gail McVey is a psychologist and health systems scientist in the Community Health Systems Resource Group at the Hospital for Sick Children. Michael P. Levine is Samuel B. Cummings Jr. Professor of Psychology at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. Niva Piran is a professor at the Faculty of Education of the University of Toronto and a school consultant in the area of body image. H. Bruce Ferguson is the director of the Community Health Systems Resource Group at the Hospital for Sick Children.

Making It Like a Man: Canadian Masculinities in Practice is a collection of essays on the practice of masculinities in Canadian arts and cultures, where to make it like a man is to participate in the cultural, sociological, and historical fluidity of ways of being a man in Canada, from the countrys origins in nineteenth-century Victorian values to its immersion in the contemporary post-modern landscape. The book focuses on the ways Canadian masculinities have been performed and represented through five broad themes: colonialism, nationalism and transnationalism; emotion and affect; ethnic and minority identities; capitalist and domestic politics; and the question of mens relationships with themselves and others.
Christine Ramsay is an associate professor in media studies at the University of Regina, Saskatchewan. She is a past president of the Film Studies Association of Canada and a member of the editorial board of Topia: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies.

January 2012 Paper $34.95 166 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-263-1

January 2012 Paper $38.95 292 pages 7 tables 10 charts/illus. 6x9 978-1-55458-340-9

November 2011 Paper $42.95 430 pages 25 b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-327-0 Cultural Studies series

24

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Previously Announced

The Nature of Empires and the Empires of Nature


Indigenous Peoples and the Great Lakes Environment Karl S. Hele, editor

Canada and the Changing Arctic


Sovereignty, Security, and Stewardship Franklyn Griffiths, Rob Huebert, and P. Whitney Lackenbauer

The United Church of Canada


A History Don Schweitzer, editor

Drawing on themes from John MacKenzies Empires of Nature and the Nature of Empires (1997), this book explores, from Indigenous or Indigenous-influenced perspectives, the power of nature and the attempts by empires (United States, Canada, and Britain) to control it. It also examines contemporary threats to First Nations communities from ongoing political, environmental, and social issues, and the efforts to confront and eliminate these threats to peoples and the environment. It becomes apparent that empire, despite its manifestations of power, cannot control or discipline humans and nature. Essays suggest new ways of looking at the Great Lakes watershed and the peoples and empires it contains.
Karl S. Hele, a member of the Garden River First Nation community of Anishinaabeg, is an associate professor and the director of First Peoples Studies at Concordia University. He is the editor of Lines Drawn upon the Water: First Nations and the Great Lakes Borders and Borderlands (WLU Press, 2008).

The changing Arctic region presents Canadians with daunting challenges and tremendous opportunities. In Canada and the Changing Arctic, the authors, all leading commentators on Arctic affairs, grapple with fundamental questions about how Canada should craft a responsible and effective Northern strategy. They outline diverse paths to achieving sovereignty, security, and stewardship in Canadas Arctic and in the broader circumpolar world.
Franklyn Griffiths is a professor emeritus of international politics and the George Ignatieff Chair Emeritus of Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto, from which he retired in 2001. Rob Huebert is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Calgary and associate director of the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies. P. Whitney Lackenbauer is an associate professor and chair of the Department of History at St. Jeromes University (University of Waterloo).

From its inception in the early 1900s, The United Church of Canada set out to become the national church of Canada. This book recounts and analyzes the history of the church of Canadas largest Protestant denomination and its engagement with issues of social and private morality, its evangelistic campaigns, and its response to the restructuring of religion in the 1960s. A chronological history is followed by chapters on the United Churchs worship, theology, understanding of ministry, relationships with the Canadian Jewish community, Israel, and Palestinians, changing mission goals in relation to First Nations peoples, and changing social imaginary.
Don Schweitzer was ordained in The United Church of Canada in 1982. Since 2000 he has taught theology at St. Andrews College in Saskatoon. He is co-editor with Derek Simon of Intersecting Voices: Critical Theologies in a Land of Diversity (2004) and the author of Contemporary Christologies (2010).

December 2011 Hardcover $95.00 288 pages 25 b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-328-7 Indigenous Studies series

October 2011 Paper $34.95 300 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-338-6 Co-published with LCMSDS

October 2011 Hardcover $39.95 445 pages Illustrated 6x9 978-1-55458-331-7

Fall/Winter 2011

25

Recently Published

Accident of Fate
A Personal Account, 19381945 Imre Rochlitz with Joseph Rochlitz
June 2011 Paper $29.95 240 pages 50 b/w photos 5 maps 6x9 978-1-55458-267-9 Life Writing series

Anne of Tim Hortons

Globalization and the Reshaping of Atlantic-Canadian Literature Herb Wyile


May 2011 Paper $42.95 336 pages 1 colour and 19 b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-326-3

Imre Rochlitz was an illegal alien, an inmate of a death camp, a prisoner of Fascist Italy, and finally an officer in Titos Partisans, fighting the Germans. He experienced both extreme brutality and astonishing humanity. This eyewitness narrative covers little-known topics and provides a revealing historical account of the period. The book helps clarify the complexities and contradictions of conflict and genocide in wartime Yugoslavia.

By examining their treatment of work, culture, and history, Wyile highlights how writers such as Michael Winter, Lisa Moore, George Elliott Clarke, Rita Joe, Frank Barry, Alistair MacLeod, and Bernice Morgan, among others, resist the image of Atlantic Canadians as improvident and regressive, if charming, folk. Instead, their Atlantic Canada is caught up in contemporary economic, political, and cultural developments, including economic globalization.

The Arms of the Infinite


Elizabeth Smart and George Barker Christopher Barker
November 2010 Paper $29.95 254 pages 26 b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-270-9 North American rights

We All Giggled
A Bourgeois Family Memoir Thomas O. Hueglin
January 2011 Paper $29.95 246 pages 20 b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-262-4 Life Writing series

A moving account of a man returning to his child self, trying to understand his absconding father, and of an adult searching to forgive. Rosemary Sullivan, author of By Heart: Elizabeth Smart, a Life The Arms of the Infinite takes the reader inside the minds of the authors parents, writer Elizabeth Smart (By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept) and poet George Barker. Barker candidly reveals their volatile love affair and writes evocatively of his unconventional upbringing.
26 www.wlupress.wlu.ca

This book reminds us what the ideal family actually is: a collection of colourful, delightfully imperfect people who have, for better and worse, made up the music of our lives. May we all remember and honour our families with such care, respect, and willingness to giggle and forgive. Alison Wearing, author of Honeymoon in Purdah: An Iranian Journey

Recently Published

Ecologies of Affect

Placing Nostalgia, Desire, and Hope Tonya K. Davidson, Ondine Park, and Rob Shields, editors
May 2011 Paper $42.95 360 pages b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-258-7 Environmental Humanities series

Imagining Resistance
Visual Culture and Activism in Canada J. Keri Cronin and Kirsty Robertson, editors
May 2011 Paper $39.95 294 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-257-0 Cultural Studies series

The authors take up affect, emotion, and emplacement and consider them in relation to one another and how they work to produce and are produced by certain temporal and spatial dimensions. The aim of the book is to inspire readers to consider space and place beyond their material properties and attend to the imaginary places and ideals that underpin and produce material places and social spaces.

A sparkling collection of original essays on the political function of contemporary art, film, and performance in Canada. A rich resource for anyone interested in the political possibilities and limits of artistic practice today. Imre Szeman, Canada Research Chair in Cultural Studies, University of Alberta

Gender, Health, and Popular Culture


Historical Perspectives Cheryl Krasnick Warsh, editor
June 2011 Paper $34.95 324 pages b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-217-4

Feeling Canadian
Television, Nationalism, and Affect Marusya Bociurkiw
April 2011 Paper $32.95 192 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-268-6 Film and Media Studies series

Gender, Health, and Popular Culture explores gendered concepts of health and visual representations of the ideal female and male bodies in various media. Topics include childbirth advice, menstruation films, Canadian abortion tourism, the Pap smear, the Body Worlds exhibition, and fat liberation. Masculinity is explored among drunkards in antebellum Philadelphia and family memoirs during the 1980s AIDS epidemic.

Feeling Canadian is an original and incisive analysis of the pivotal role of television in creating the affective fabric of a nation. It provides a compelling model for accounts of different national contexts of affects, popular culture, and feelings. Feeling Canadian reminds us of the necessity to look at the differences and similarities of nationhood in the twenty-first century. Elspeth Probyn, University of Sydney, author of Blush: Faces of Shame (2005)

Fall/Winter 2011

27

Recently Published

Travel and Religion in Antiquity


Philip A. Harland, editor
March 2011 Hardcover $85.00 306 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-222-8 Studies in Christianity and Judaism series

A Common Written Greek Source for Mark and Thomas


John Horman
March 2011 Hardcover $85.00 258 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-224-2 Studies in Christianity and Judaism series

The scholarship in these essays is excellent. This volume is likely the first to highlight the intersection of religion and travel. The volume will make a very important contribution both to the discussion of ancient travel and, even more perhaps, to the field of religion in antiquity. Adele Reinhartz

This is a very learned, thoughtful, meticulous work of scholarship that adds a novel alternative to the various theories on the sources and composition histories of the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Thomas, the latter especially. The N hypothesis will be provocative in the best sense. Willi Braun

IDRC
40 Years of Ideas, Innovation, and Impact Bruce Muirhead and Ronald N. Harpelle
2010 Paper $39.95 402 pages b/w illustrations 6x9 978-1-55458-301-0

Long-Term Solutions for a Short-Term World

Canada and Research Development Ronald N. Harpelle and Bruce Muirhead, editors
June 2011 Paper $39.95 240 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-223-5

Muirhead and Harpelle have produced an engaging, richly detailed, and timely book. Their accessible history demonstrates how a Canadian Crown corporation has become a global leader in advancing research for development that reflects the priorities and concerns of developing countries. I strongly urge you to read it. Adam Sneyd, Department of Political Science, University of Guelph

This collection focuses on participatory research and demonstrates new and innovative ways of implementing interdisciplinary and alternative approaches to development issues. Essays are presented as case studies, and in each the contributor explains the specific development problem, the paths followed to solve the problem, lessons learned as a result of the research, and the development challenges on the horizon in his field of research.

28

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Recently Published

Skeletons in the Closet


A Sociological Analysis of Family Conflicts Aysan Sever and Jan E. Trost, editors
January 2011 Paper $34.95 222 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-265-5

One Hundred Years of Social Work


A History of the Profession in English Canada, 19002000 Therese Jennissen and Colleen Lundy
February 2011 Paper $38.95 378 pages 6x9 978-1-55458-186-3

Family conflict has traditionally been studied by researchers who are at a safe intellectual distance from the families under their study. In Skeletons in the Closet, and in line with feminist research methodologies, the hierarchical distance between researcher and the researched is broken down. All authors of these essays relating unresolved or unresolvable family conflicts are academics and closely related to the families they write about.

The authors provide a nuanced narrative, informed by a combination of feminist theory, critical theory, and political economy. It will serve as the standard book in the social work field to trace and analyze the history of social workers in the twentieth century. The book should serve equally for anyone studying the evolution of social policy in Canada. Alvin Finkel

Aboriginal Peoples in Canadian Cities


Transformations and Continuities Heather A. Howard and Craig Proulx, editors
April 2011 Paper $38.95 264 pages 5 colour and 1 b/w photos 6x9 978-1-55458-260-0 Indigenous Studies series

Child Welfare
Connecting Research, Policy, and Practice, 2nd ed. Kathleen Kufeldt and Brad McKenzie, editors
April 2011 Paper $54.95 694 pages 1 photo, 35 tables 31 figures 6x9 978-1-55458-330-0

The contributors provide innovative perspectives on cultural transformation and continuity and demonstrate how comparative examinations of the diversity within and across urban Aboriginal experiences contribute to broader understandings of the relationship between Aboriginal peoples and the Canadian state and to theoretical debates about power dynamics in the production of community and in processes of identity formation.

This second edition of Child Welfare highlights major developments in child welfare and shows how these inform directions taken in research, policy, and practice. Included are new sections on Indigenous issues and best practices and several chapters that review efforts to increase supports for families in need. Contributions from new and international authors illustrate the endemic nature of child welfare challenges and how we can learn from them.
Fall/Winter 2011 29

Collected Works of Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale on Wars and the War Office


Lynn McDonald, editor
Available Volumes Volume 1: Florence Nightingale: An Introduction to Her Life and Family 2010 Paper $95.00 920 pages 6 x 9 978-1-55458-231-0 Volume 2: Florence Nightingales Spiritual Journey: Biblical Annotations, Sermons and Journal Notes 2002 Cloth $150.00 597 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-366-2 Volume 3: Florence Nightingales Theology: Essays, Letters and Journal Notes 2002 Cloth $150.00 688 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-371-6 Volume 4: Florence Nightingale on Mysticism and Eastern Religions Grard Valle, editor 2003 Cloth $150.00 568 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-413-3 Volume 5: Florence Nightingale on Society and Politics, Philosophy, Science, Education and Literature 2003 Cloth $150.00 888 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-429-4 Volume 6: Florence Nightingale on Public Health Care 2004 Cloth $150.00 715 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-446-1 Volume 7: Florence Nightingales European Travels 2004 Cloth $150.00 816 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-451-5 Volume 8: Florence Nightingale on Women, Medicine, Midwifery and Prostitution 2005 Cloth $150.00 1,112 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-466-9 Volume 9: Florence Nightingale on Health in India Grard Valle, editor 2006 Cloth $150.00 800 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-468-3 Volume 10: Florence Nightingale on Social Change in India Grard Valle, editor 2007 Cloth $150.00 976 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-495-9 Volume 11: Florence Nightingales Suggestions for Thought 2008 Cloth $150.00 816 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-465-2 Volume 12: Florence Nightingale: The Nightingale School 2009 Cloth $150.00 944 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-467-6 Volume 13: Florence Nightingale: Extending Nursing 2009 Cloth $150.00 950 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-520-8 Volume 14: Florence Nightingale: The Crimean War December 2010 Cloth $150.00 1096 pages 6 x 9 978-0-88920-469-0 Future Volumes Volume 16: Florence Nightingale and Hospital Reform

Volume 15 of the Collected Works of Florence Nightingale, Wars and the War Office, picks up on the previous volumes recounting of Nightingales famous work during the Crimean War and the comprehensive analysis she did on its high death rates. This volume moves on to the implementation of the recommendations that emerged from that research and to her work to reduce deaths in the next wars, beginning with the American Civil War. Nightingales writings describe the creation of the Army Medical School, the vast improvements made in the statistical tracking of disease, and new measures for soldiers welfare. Her role in the formulation of the first Geneva Convention in 1864 is related, along with her concern that voluntary relief efforts through the Red Cross not make war cheap. Nightingale was decorated by both sides for her work in the Franco-Prussian War. While much of her work concerned the mundane sending out of supplies, we see also in her writing her emerging interest in militarism as the cause of war. Her opposition to the Afghan War (of her time) and her work to provide nursing for the Egyptian campaigns, the Zulu War, and the start of the Boer War are also included.
Lynn McDonald, director of the Collected Works of Florence Nightingale, is university professor emerita at the University of Guelph. She is a former member of parliament and a former president of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women. She has an honorary doctorate from York University. An active environmentalist, she is currently working on issues related to climate change. Her short paperback Florence Nightingale at First Hand gives highlights from Nightingales life and work. 30 www.wlupress.wlu.ca

November 2011 Cloth $150.00 1056 pages Illus. 6x9 978-0-88920-470-5 Collected Works of Florence Nightingale, Volume 15

Journals

Anthropologica
ISSN 0003-5459 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.anthropologica.ca/ CASCA membership information: www.cas-sca.ca Anthropologica is the official publication of the Canadian Anthropology Society / Socit canadienne danthropologie. It publishes peer-reviewed articles in both French and English and is devoted to social and cultural issues, whether they are prehistoric, historic, contemporary, biological, linguistic, applied, or theoretical.

Canadian Military History


ISSN 1195-8472 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml http://www.wlu.ca/lcmsds/cmh/cmhindex.html Canadian Military History is published by the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University and features articles and book reviews by leading scholars which appeal to both an academic and popular audience. Co-published with the Canadian War Museum since 1992, Canadian Military History is a core resource for students, practitioners, and the informed general reader.

Topia Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies


ISSN 1206-0143 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.yorku.ca/topia Topia provides a place for scholars working in the vital field of cultural studies in English and French to publish work with a primarily Canadian orientation and to explore cultural themes and issues across disciplines. The articles locate the diverse contexts and effects of representational practices within complex governmental, geographic, institutional, technological, economic, spatial, and discursive mediations arising from Canadas marginal or colonial status.

Canadian Bulletin of Medical History / Bulletin canadien dhistoire de la medicine


ISSN 0823-2105 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.cbmh.ca CSHM membership information: www.cshm-schm.ca The Canadian Bulletin of Medical History / Bulletin canadien dhistoire de la mdecine is the official organ of the Canadian Society for the History of Medicine / Socit canadienne dhistoire de la mdecine and is the primary outlet in Canada for refereed scholarship in the history of medicine. It presents articles, notes, review articles, and book reviews in French and in English. Although the particular focus is on Canadian medical history, no aspect of the general field is excluded.

Canadian Social Work Review / Revue canadienne de service social


ISSN 0820-909X www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.caswe-acfts.ca/en The Canadian Social Work Review is a bilingual journal published under the auspices of the Canadian Association for Social Work Education / Association canadienne pour la formation en travail social. Its purpose is to advance social work scholarship, practice, and education in Canada by publishing original research and critical analysis that enriches or challenges existing knowledge. The Canadian Social Work Review reflects Canadas cultural and regional diversity.

Please visit our website at www.wlupress.wlu.ca for journal subscription rates, back issue prices, and membership information.

Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health / Revue Canadienne de Sant Mentale Communautaire
(Available online only) ISSN 0713-3936 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.cjcmh.com The Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health is published twice a year in electronic format only by the Canadian Periodical for Community Studies Inc., and is a bilingual, interdisciplinary publication devoted to the sharing of information and scholarship about phenomena pertinent to the mental well-being of Canadians and their communities.

Florilegium
ISSN 0709-5201 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml CSM membership information: www.csm.wlu.ca Florilegium, an annual publication devoted to studies of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, is the official journal of the Canadian Society of Medievalists / Socit canadienne des mdivistes.

Indigenous Law Journal


ISSN 1703-4566 www.wlupress.wlu.ca/press/Journals/index.shtml www.indigenouslawjournal.com The Indigenous Law Journal is the first and only Canadian legal journal to exclusively publish articles on Indigenous legal issues. The journal is dedicated to developing dialogue and scholarship in the field of Indigenous legal issues both in Canada and internationally.

Fall/Winter 2011

31

Index

Authors Barker 26 Bartlett 6 Baum Singer 23 Bechthold 17 Beckwith 2 Beynon 12 Bociurkiw 9, 27 Boydell 24 Brand 5, 6 Brandt 6, 8, 18 Bredin 9 Brossard 6 Brydon 23 Budde 6 Cabri 6 Calder 6 Cherney 2 Clarke 6 Cook 6 Cooley 6 Copp 17 Cronin 27 Crozier 6 Davida 22 Davidson 27 DeLong 23 Derry 4 Dewdney 6 Domanski 6 Druick 9 Dudek 6 Dvork 23 Egan 20 Elliott 23 Ferguson 24 Fiorentino 6 Forsyth 6 Freeman 22 Fullerton 1 Gerson 18 Gingell 11 Godard 18 Grant 1 Griffiths 25 Harland 28 Harpelle 28 Hele 25 Henderson 9 Horman 28 Howard 29 Huebert 25 Hueglin 26 Humphries 16 Hunter 6 Jennissen 13, 29 Jirgens 6 John 4 Kamboureli 10 Karpinski 3 Kerber 18 Kim 23 Knabe 21 Kotsopoulos 9 Kufeldt 13, 29 Lackenbauer 25 Lane 6 Levine 24 Liebscher 4 Lilburn 6 Lundy 13, 29
32

Lynes 6 MacDonald 6, 8 Mackintosh 1 Maker 16 Mandel 6 Markotic 6 Matheson 9 McCaffery 6 McCall 23 McDonald 30 McKay 6 McKenzie 13, 29 McVey 24 Miki 10 Moss 7 Mueller 21 Muirhead 28 Nelson 19 Nicks 1 Paper 14 Park 27 Pearson 21 Piran 24 Proulx 29 Purdy 6 Quandt 21 Ramsay 24 Ripmeester 1 Robertson 27 Rochlitz 26 Roy 11 Rymhs 18 Sallis 23 Sanders 5, 6 Schulze 4 Schweitzer 25 Scott 7 Sever 29 Sharp 20 Shearer 6 Shields 27 Siebel-Achenbach 4 Skidmore 4, 21 Strong-Boag 19 Sugars 18 Szabo 19 Trost 29 Trothen 15 Turcotte 18 Veblen 12 Wah 6 Warsh 27 Webb 6 Wershler 6 Westhues 13 Wharf 13 Williamson 20 Wrzbach 22 Wyile 26 Zacharias 10 Zimmermann 19

Titles Aboriginal Peoples in Canadian Cities 29 Accident of Fate 26 All These Roads 6 Anne of Tim Hortons 26 Arms of the Infinite 26 Before the First Word 6 Beyond Bylines 22 Blues and Bliss 6 Borrowed Tongues 3 Burdens of Proof 20 By Word of Mouth 6 Canada and the Changing Arctic 25 Canadian Battlefields 1915-18 17 Canadian Battlefields in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany 17 Canadian Battlefields in Northern France 17 Canadian Social Policy, 5th edition 13 Canadian Television 9 Canadian Women in Print, 17501918 18 Centre and Periphery, Roots and Exile 23 Child Welfare 13, 29 Children of the Outer Dark 6 Chronicles 5 Cinema and Social Change in Germany and Austria 21 Collected Works of Florence Nightingale 30 Common Written Greek Source for Mark and Thomas 28 Covering Niagara 1 Crisp Day Closing on My Hand 6 Critical Perspectives in Canadian Music Education 12 Crosstalk 23 Cultural Grammars of Nation, Diaspora, and Indigeneity in Canada 23 Daughter s Way 8 Desire Never Leaves 6 Earthly Pages 6 Ecologies of Affect 27 False Laws of Narrative 6 Feeling Canadian 9, 27 Field Marks 6 Fields in Motion 22 Fierce Departures 5, 6 Florence Nightingale on Wars and the War Office 30 Fostering Nation? 19 From Room to Room 6 From the Iron House 18 Gender, Health, and Popular Culture 27 German Diasporic Experiences 4 Germanys Western Front, 1914, Part 1 16 Germanys Western Front, 1915 16 Green Sofa 22 Hearing Voices 24 IDRC 28 Imagining Resistance 27 In Search of Alberto Guerrero 2 Is Canada Postcolonial? 7 Just a Larger Family 20 Leaving the Shade of the Middle Ground 7 Liberty is Dead 4 Linking Sexuality and Gender 15 Listening Up, Writing Down, and Looking Beyond 11 Long-Term Solutions for a Short-Term World 28 Making It Like a Man 24

Mobility of Light 6 More Easily Kept Illusions 6 Nature of Empires and the Empires of Nature 25 One Hundred Years of Social Work 13, 29 Preventing Eating-Related and Weight-Related Disorders 24 Programming Reality 9 Reverse Shots 21 Robert Bresson 21 Scandalous Bodies 10 Shattering the Illusion 15 Shifting the Ground 10 Skeletons in the Closet 29 Speaking of Power 6, 8 Theology of the Chinese Jews, 1000-1850 14 Through a Glass Darkly 19 Trans.Can.Lit 10 Travel and Religion in Antiquity 28 Unheard Of 2 United Church of Canada 25 Unsettled Remains 18 Verse and Worse 6 We All Giggled 26 Weinzweig 2 Wider Boundaries of Daring 18 World of Niagara Wine 1 Writing in Dust 18

www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Ordering Information
Wilfrid Laurier University Press encourages individuals to order or purchase our books from their local or chosen bookseller. Canadian and US Orders Wilfrid Laurier University Press books are distributed in Canada and the USA by University of Toronto Press Distribution Canadian Mailing Address: University of Toronto Press 5201 Dufferin Street Toronto, ON M3H 5T8 Canada USA Mailing Address: University of Toronto Press 2250 Military Road Tonawanda, NY 14150 USA Phone Canada/US 1.800.565.9523 Fax Canada and US 1.800.221.9985 Email utpbooks@utpress.utoronto.ca EDI Through Pubnet SAN 115 11347 Orders from United Kingdom, Ireland, Continental Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Middle East, Southeast Asia, Japan, South Africa, Israel, Sub-Saharan Africa, and India Wilfrid Laurier University Press c/o Gazelle Book Services Ltd. White Cross Mills, High Town Lancaster, LA1 4XS, United Kingdom Phone 00 44 .0.1524 68765 Fax 00 44 .0.1524 63232 Email sales@gazellebooks.co.uk Orders from Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Tonga, Solomon Islands, and Cook Islands Woodslane Pty. Ltd. 7/5 Vuko Place Warriewood, NSW 2102 Australia Phone 61.2.9970.5111 Fax 61.2.9970.5002 Email info@woodslane.com.au Web www.woodslane.com.au

Sales Representatives
Canada Hargreaves, Fuller & Paton Western and Central Canada BC, AB, SK, MB, NT, YK Sandra Hargreaves / Colin Fuller/Steve Paton 3122 Blenheim Street Vancouver, BC V6K 4J7 Phone 604.222.2955 Fax 604.222.2965 Email harful@telus.net Ontario including Toronto and Ottawa Terry Fernihough 463E Moodie Drive Nepean, ON K2H 8T7 Phone 613.721.9236 Email fernihough@storm.ca Quebec Karen Stacey c/o Entreposage U-Haul St. Jacques, Locale 1313 7350 Blvd. St. Anne de Bellevue Montreal, QC H4B 1T4 Phone 514.704.3626 Fax 800.596.3626 Email stacey.karen@gmail.com Eastern Canada Leona and Jerry Trainer 16 Bethley Drive Scarborough, ON M1E 3M7 Phone 416.287.3146 Fax 416.287.0081 Email mpr@idirect.com USA Hill/Martin Associates Western USA AZ, CA, CO, ID, MT, NV, NM, OR, UT, WA, WY Duke Hill 756 Collier Drive San Leandro, CA 94577 Phone 510.483.2939 Fax 510.315.3243 Email dukeh@aol.com Northern CA, OR Patricia Malango 2612 Bayfront Court Richmond, CA 94804 Phone 510.965.9309

Northeast USA NJ, NY, PA, DE, MD, DC, CT, RI, MA, VT, NH, ME Ben Schrager 735 Pelham Parkway North, Apt. 1K Bronx, NY 10467 Phone/Fax 718.654.1968 Email Bmschrager@aol.com Blue4books Inc. Midwestern US IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, MI, MN, MO, NE, ND, OH, SD, WI Southwestern/Southeastern USA AL, VA, SC, GA, FL, MS, TN, TX, NC, OK, LA, AR Ian Booth 8333 Jersey Avenue North Brooklyn Park, MN 55445 Phone 763.744.6921 Fax 312.624.7927 Email ian@blue4books.com Tom Hamburg 433 South Elm Street Waconia, MN 55387 Phone 952.210.6529 Fax 312.624.7927 Email tom@blue4books.com Nicholas Booth #101 1060 Pinegrove Drive Holland, MI 49423 Phone 312.933.4374 Fax 312.624.7927 Email nicholas@blue4books.com Scott Bartlett 88 Hillside Meadows St. Charles, MO 63303 Phone 636.926.8175 Fax 312.624.7927 Email scott@blue4books.com Rest of the World Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Tonga, Solomon Islands, and Cook Islands Woodslane Pty. Ltd. 7/5 Vuko Place Warriewood, NSW 2102 Australia Phone 61.2.9970.5111 Fax 61.2.9970.5002 Email info@woodslane.com.au Web www.woodslane.com.au Philippines and Bangkok, Thailand Edwin Makabenta 109 Talayan Street Quezon City Philippines 1104 Phone/Fax 632.711.4558 Direct Line 632.740.0346 Email edmak@pldtdsl.net

United Kingdom, Ireland, Continental Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Middle East, Southeast Asia, Japan, South Africa, Israel, Sub-Saharan Africa, and India Wilfrid Laurier University Press c/o Gazelle Book Services Limited White Cross Mills, High Town Lancaster LA1 4XS United Kingdom Phone 00 44 .0.1524 68765 Fax 00 44 .0.1524 63232 Email sales@gazellebooks.co.uk

Contact Information
Wilfrid Laurier University Press 75 University Avenue West Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5 Canada Email press@wlu.ca Web www.wlupress.wlu.ca Fax 1.519.725.1399 Phone Directory Toll-free in North America 1.866.836.5551 Phone 519.884.0710 x 6124 Journals and General Inquiries x 6124 Marketing and rights x 6605 Publicity x 2665 Examination copies Examination copies available upon request. Indicate name of course, anticipated enrolment, start date, and current text used. Mail to Clare Hitchens, Publicist, at above address or email examcopy@press.wlu.ca or call ext 2665. Manuscript proposals WLU Press welcomes manuscripts from Canadian scholars. In areas of history, music, political science, political philosophy, social work, and sociology, send inquiries to Ryan Chynces, Acquisitions Editor, at above address or email rchynces@ wlu.ca or call ext 2034. In areas of cultural studies, environmental studies including environmental humanities, film and media studies, Indigenous studies, life writing, literature, and religious studies, send inquiries to Lisa Quinn, Acquisitions Editor, at above address or email quinn@press.wlu or call ext. 2843. Member Association of Canadian University Presses/Association des Presses Universitaires Canadiennes Member The Association of American University Presses

Wilfrid Laurier University Press 75 University Avenue West Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5 Canada 519.725.1399 Fax 866.836.5551 Toll-free in North America press@wlu.ca www.wlupress.wlu.ca

Member The Association of American University Presses

Member Association of Canadian University Presses / Association des Presses Universitaires Canadiennes

Catalogue design: Blakeley Words+Pictures 416.762.7361 www.blakeleyblakeley.com

Você também pode gostar