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Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History Book

Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History
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Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History is a collection of classic and contemporary articles examining the lives of Canadians through the lens of three central spaces: the home, the workplace, and the various settings for recreation, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History
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Digital Copy
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  • Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History
  • Written by author James Opp
  • Published by Oxford University Press, USA, 10/1/2010
  • Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History is a collection of classic and contemporary articles examining the lives of Canadians through the lens of three central spaces: the home, the workplace, and the various settings for recreation
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Authors

* Indicates new chapters
Part I
1. Women's Agency in Upper Canada: Prescott's Board of Police Record, 1830-1850 *, Katherine McKenna
2. Nurture and Education: The Christian Home *, Marguerite Van Die
3. Living on Display: Colonial Visions of Aboriginal Domestic Spaces, Paige Raibmon
4. Re-Imagining the Moral Order of Urban Space: Religion and Photography in Winnipeg, 1900-1914, James Opp
5. 'There Were Always Men in Our House': Gender and the Childhood Memories of Working-Class Ukrainians in Depression-Era Canada *, Stacey Zembryzcki
6. Jell-O Salads, One-stop Shopping, and Maria the Homemaker: Tthe Gender Politics of Food *, Franca Iacovetta and Valerie Korinek
7. Finding a Place for Father: Selling the Barbecue in Post-war Canada, Chris Dummitt
8. Framing Regent Park: the National Film Board of Canada and the Construction of Outcast Spaces in the Inner City, 1953 and 1994 *, Sean Purdy
9. Visualizing Home
Part II
10. Reciprocal Work Bees and the Meaning of Neighbourhood, Catharine Anne Wilson
11. The Crispins *, Anthony Lee
12. 'The best men that ever worked the lumber': Aboriginal Longshoremen on Burrard Inlet, BC, 1863-1939 *, Andrew Parnaby
13. Boys in the Mining Community, Robert McIntosh
14. 'Miss Remington' Goes to Work: Gender, Space, and Ttechnology at the Dawn of the Information Age *, Kate Boyer
15. A Platform for Gender Tensions: Women Working and Riding on Canadian Urban Public Transit in the 1940s, Donald F. Davis and Barbara Lorenzkowski
16. Privilege and Oppression: The Configuration of Race, Gender, and Class in Southern Ontario Auto Plants, 1939-1949, Pamela Sugiman
17. Placing the Displaced Worker: Narrating Place in Deindustrializing Sturgeon Falls, Ontario, Steven High
18. Visualizing Work
Part III
19. Our Winter Sports': The Montreal Winter Carnivals *, Gillian Poulter
20. Borderlines, Baselines, and Big Game: Conceptualizing the Northeast as a Sporting Region *, Colin Howell
21. Totem Poles, Teepees, and Token Traditions: 'Playing Indian' at Ontario Summer Camps, 1920-1955 *, Sharon Wall
22. At Play: Fads, Fashion, and Fun *, Cynthia Comacchio
23. A Man's City: Montreal, Gambling, and Male Space in the 1940s, Suzanne Morton
24. Drinking Together: The Role of Gender in Changing Manitoba's Liquor Laws in the 1950s *, Dale Barbour
25. Manipulating Innocence: Corruptibility, Youth, and the Case against Obscenity, Mary Louise Adams
26. Spectacular Striptease: Performing the Sexual and Racial Other in Vancouver, BC, 1945-1975 *, Becki Ross and Kim Greenwell
27. 'Our New Palace of Donut Pleasure': The Donut Shop and Consumer Culture, 1961-1976 *, Steve Penfold
28. Visualizing Play


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Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History is a collection of classic and contemporary articles examining the lives of Canadians through the lens of three central spaces: the home, the workplace, and the various settings for recreation, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History

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Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History is a collection of classic and contemporary articles examining the lives of Canadians through the lens of three central spaces: the home, the workplace, and the various settings for recreation, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History

Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History

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Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History is a collection of classic and contemporary articles examining the lives of Canadians through the lens of three central spaces: the home, the workplace, and the various settings for recreation, Home, Work, and Play: Situating Canadian Social History

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