Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Canadian Historical Review (CHR) is a scholarly journal in Canada, [1] founded in 1920 and published by the University of Toronto Press. [2] The CHR publishes articles about the ideas, people, and events important to Canadian history, [3] as well as book reviews and detailed bibliographies of recent Canadian historical publications.
Saywell was the editor of two journals: Canadian Historical Review, from 1957 to 1963; and Canadian Annual Review from 1960 to 1979. [4] Among his books were The Office of Lieutenant-Governor: A Study in Canadian Government and Politics, which won the Delancey K. Jay Prize at Harvard University.
Osborne, Ken. "'Our History Syllabus Has Us Gasping': History in Canadian Schools--Past, Present, and Future," The Canadian Historical Review 81 (September 2000): Parr, Joy. "Gender History and Historical Practice," The Canadian Historical Review 76 (September 1995): 354-376; Story, Norah. Oxford Companion to Canadian History and Literature (1974)
Throughout his career Brown was active in promoting Canadian historical scholarship. He became associate editor of the Canadian Historical Review (CHR) in 1928 and was the editor of the CHR from 1930 to 1946, during which time he helped set its orientation towards the study of Canadian history.
The flagship Canadian Historical Review was heavily weighted toward political history, giving priority to macro themes such as elite politicians and statesmen, public institutions, and national issues. By 2000, however, the same journal gave two-thirds of its space to social history.
Canadian Historical Review, the major scholarly journal; Histoire sociale/Social History, focus on Canada [4] Labour/Le Travail; London Journal of Canadian Studies [5] Manitoba History [6] Ontario History [7] Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française focus on Quebec [8] Saskatchewan History; Urban History Review - Revue d'histoire urbaine [9
The book was also the winner of the 2008 Harold Adams Innis Prize for best English book in the Social Sciences from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences. [6] Loo's 2011 article, co-written with Meg Stanley, "An Environmental History of Progress," won the 2011 Canadian Historical Review award for best article. [2]
Tillotson's book, published in 2000, The Public at Play: Gender and the Politics of Recreation in Postwar Ontario is an influential study of post-war Canada, and was described in a review published by the Canadian Historical Review as "...a welcome and worthwhile contribution to our growing appreciation for the complexities and contradictions ...