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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)
Matilda Edgar and Sarah Anne Curzon founded the Canadian Women's Historical Society in 1895. [12] She replaced Curzon as president of the Society in 1897, when Curzon retired. [13] In 1904 she published a biography of Sir Isaac Brock, another "whig" celebration of Canadian achievement. [3]
Margaret Olwen MacMillan, (born 23 December 1943) is a Canadian historian and professor at the University of Oxford.She is former provost of Trinity College, Toronto, and professor of history at the University of Toronto and previously at Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University).
Naomi Elizabeth Saundaus Griffiths (born 1934) is a Canadian historian. The historian John Grenier writes that she is "the premier scholar of the Acadians" and that her "magnum opus", From Migrant to Acadian, "on the growth of Acadian society and identity is the natural starting place for any study that touches on Acadian history."
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Canadian historians. ... Pages in category "Canadian women historians" The following 124 pages are in this category ...
Veronica Jane Strong-Boag CM FRSC (born 1947 in Prestwick, Scotland) is a Canadian historian specializing in the history of women and children in Canada.She is a Professor Emerita at the University of British Columbia, where she was Professor of Women's History and the founding Director of the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies.
Mitchinson trained at York University and quickly became a major figure in the field of Canadian women's history. With Ramsay Cook, she co-edited her first book "The Proper Sphere: Woman's Place in Canadian Society", a collection of writing on the then new field of Canadian women's history. In 1988, she co-authored "Canadian Women: A History ...
The History of women in Canada is the study of the historical experiences of women living in Canada and the laws and legislation affecting Canadian women. In colonial period of Canadian history, Indigenous women's roles were often challenged by Christian missionaries, and their marriages to European fur traders often brought their communities into greater contact with the outside world.