University of Calgary

Publications - 2018


 

Africa: War and Conflict in the Twentieth Century

Stapleton, Timothy
 

Afterword: The Possibilities of Reconstruction’s Global History

Towers, Frank in Prior, David Reconstruction in a Globalizing World
 

Angry Inuk. Directed by Alethea Arnaquq-Baril

Routledge, Karen
 

“Bound to Be a Troublesome Time”: Canadian Perceptions of Pregnancy, Parturition, and Pain, c. 1867–1930

Wood, Whitney in Ciara Meehan and Evans, Jennifer Perceptions of Pregnancy from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Century
Image of Do You See Ice? Inuit and Americans at Home and Away

Do You See Ice? Inuit and Americans at Home and Away

Routledge, Karen
 

Émigré Psychiatrists, Psychologists, and Cognitive Scientists in North America since the Second World War

Stahnisch, Frank W.

The processes of long-term migration of physicians and scholars affect both the academic migrants and their receiving environments in often-dramatic ways. On the one side, their encounter confronts two different knowledge traditions and personal values. On the other side, migrating scientists and academics are also confronted with foreign institutional, political, economic, and cultural frameworks when trying to establish their own ways of professional knowledge and cultural adjustments. The 20th century has been called the century of war and forced-migration: it witnessed two devastating World Wars, which led to an exodus of physicians, scientists, and academics. Nazism and Fascism in the 1930s and 1940s, forced thousands of scientists and physicians away from their home institutions based in Central and Eastern Europe. “Did you ever go half way …” was a central question that all of them had to align with their personal consciousness, their family bonding, and the relationship to their academic peers. No one could leave without finding their individual answers to this existential question that lay at the bottom of their professional and scientific lives. Following this general theme, the current special issue particularly reflects on the personal stories and institutional narratives of German-speaking scientists and physicians to North America since the 1930s, as a relevant case study from 20th century history of medicine and science. By drawing on diaries, questionnaires, institutional histories (including those of the Max Planck Society among others), novels, and personal estates, this special issue as a whole wants to emphasize the impact of forced-migration from a North-American perspective by describing the general research topic; showing how the personal lives of many of these individuals were intertwined with their careers and choices of scientific topics, projects, and personal destinies. Moreover, this special issue seeks to explore whether new historiographical approaches can provide a deeper understanding of the impact of European émigré psychiatrists, psychologists, and cognitive scientists on emerging fields of medicine and science, including community and geriatric medicine, developmental neuroscience, and psychiatric traumatology to which the individuals in the respective cohort have strongly contributed in their new host countries.

 

"'God has opened the eyes of the People': Religious Rhetoric and the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837"

Forbes, James
 

Mexican Foreign Relations, 1910-1946

Kiddle, Amelia
Image of Soviet Destroyers of World War II

Soviet Destroyers of World War II

Hill, Alexander A. and Rodríguez, Felipe (Illustrator)

The Soviet Navy that faced the German onslaught in 1941 boasted a mixture of modern warships, often built with foreign technical assistance, and antiquated warships from the Tsarist era that were modernised for the conflict. Some Soviet naval vessels saw limited involvement in the war against Finland in 1939-1940, but the main action occurred after the German invasion, when these destroyers escorted convoys, fought battles against other destroyers and the deadly threat posed by attacking aircraft, and provided fire support for Soviet troops. From the Gnevny class of the pre-war period to the specialist destroyer leaders of the Leningrad class and the unique Tashkent, Soviet Destroyers of World War II is a detailed guide to the often forgotten destroyers of the Soviet Navy.

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