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2017 Recipient of the Governor General’s History Award for Scholarly Research Announced
The Canadian Historical Association (CHA) has announced their 2017 prize winners including the recipient of the Governor General’s History Award for Scholarly Research: The Macdonald Prize.
This year the honour will be presented to Sarah Carter for her work Imperial Plots: Women, Land, and the Spadework of British Colonialism on the Canadian Prairies, published by University of Manitoba Press in 2016. Dr. Carter is a professor and Henry Marshall Tory Chair in the Department of History and Classics and the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta.
Carter’s work explores the lives of female landowners on the prairies. The book “depicts the female farmers and ranchers of the prairies, from the Indigenous women agriculturalists of the Plains to the array of women who resolved to work on the land in the first decades of the twentieth century.”
The award is presented annually by the Canadian Historical Association for the best academic Canadian history book. Carter will receive her award at a special ceremony at Rideau Hall in the fall. The award, sponsored by Manulife Financial, is presented each year as part of the Governor General’s History Awards. This year’s announcement ceremony took place at the Church of the Holy Trinity in Toronto as part of Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Five other academics were shortlisted for the Macdonald Prize:
- Ian McKay and Jamie Swift, The Vimy Trap, or, How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Great War, Between the Lines, 2016;
- Sean Mills, A Place in the Sun: Haiti, Haitians, and the Remaking of Québec, McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2016;
- Adele Perry, Colonial Relations: The Douglas-Connolly Family and the Nineteenth-Century Imperial World, Cambridge University Press, 2015; and
- Ronald Rudin, Kouchibouguac: Removal, Resistance, and Remembrance at a Canadian National Park, University of Toronto Press, 2016.
The CHA announced the winner of its other major annual prize. Reproduction and Its Discontents in Mexico: Childbirth and Contraception from 1750 to 1905 by Nora E. Jaffary won the Ferguson Prize for outstanding scholarly work in a field of history outside of Canadian history. The book was published by the University of North Carolina Press in 2016.
Numerous other awards were also handed out at the CHA ceremony, including:
Histoire sociale / Social History Best Article Prize
Winner: Jeffrey McNairn, “‘The common sympathies of our nature’: Moral Sentiments, Emotional Economies, and Imprisonment for Debt in Upper Canada,” (Vol. XLIX, no 98).
Canadian Historical Review Best Article Prize
Winners: Erika Dyck and Maureen Lux, “Population Control in the “Global North”?: Canada’s Response to Indigenous Reproductive Rights and Neo-Eugenics.” Issue 97, 4 (December 2016): 481–512.
Canadian Committee on Labor History
Best Article Prize
Winners: Joan Sangster & Julia Smith, “Beards and Bloomers: Flight Attendants, Grievances and Embodied Labour in the Canadian Airline Industry, 1960s–1980s,” Gender, Work & Organization, Vol. 23, no 2, pp. 183–199.
Undergraduate Student Dissertation Prize
Winner: Camille Blanchard-Bégin, « La participation ouvrière dans l’Institut canadien de Montréal en 1852 ». Thèse de premier cycle, Université d’Ottawa, 2016
Graduate Student Dissertation Prize
Winner: Lachlan MacKinnon, “Deindustrialization on the Periphery: An Oral History of Sydney Steel, 1945–2001.” PhD Dissertation, Concordia University, 2016
Canadian Committee on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism Article Prize
Winner: Laura Ishiguro, ““Growing Up and Grown Up ... in Our Future City”: Discourses of Childhood and Settler Futurity in Colonial British Columbia”, B.C. Studies, Summer 2016
Canadian Oral History Association Prize
Winner: Ronald Rudin, Kouchibouguac: Removal, Resistance, and Remembrance at a Canadian National Park and its accompanying website Returning the Voices to Kouchibouguac National Park.
Canadian Committee on Women’s History — Hilda Neatby Prize
Winner of the French Language Article
Mélanie Morin-Pelletier, « "The Anxious Ones at Home": Deux familles canadiennes plongées dans le tourment de la Grande Guerre, » Histoire sociale/Social History XLVII, 94 (Juin/June 2014) : 353–368.
Winner of the English Language Article
Carmela Patrias, “More Menial than Housemaids? Racialized and Gendered Labour in the Fruit and Vegetable Industry of Canada’s Niagara Region, 1880–1945,” Labour/Le Travail 78 (Fall 2016): 69–104.
Public History Prize
Winner: Graphic History Collective with Paul Buhle, Drawn to Change: Graphic Histories of Working-Class Struggle. Between the Lines, 2016
Political History Group
Best Article in French Prize
Winner: Éric Fillion, « Jazz libre : "musique-action" ou la recherche d’une praxis révolutionnaire au Québec (1967-1975) ». Labour / Le Travail 77 (2016), p. 93–120.
Book Prize
Winner: Paul Litt, Trudeaumania. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2016.
Aboriginal History Group
Book Prize
Winner: Maureen K. Lux, Separate Beds: A History of Indian Hospitals in Canada, 1920s–1980s. Toronto: UTP, 2016.
CHA PRIZES / PRIX DE LA SHC
Prix Jean-Marie-Fecteau Prize
For best article published in a peer-reviewed journal by a PhD or Masters-level student in English or in French.
Winner / La lauréate : Krista Barclay, “From Rupert’s Land to Canada West: Hudson’s Bay Company Families and Representations of Indigeneity in Small-Town Ontario, 1840–1980”, Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société historique du Canada 26, 1 (2015): 67–97.
JCHA, issues #1 and #2 Best Article Prize
Winner / Le lauréat : Matthew Hayday, “Brought to you by the letters C, R, T and C: Sesame Street and Canadian Nationalism.”
John Bullen Prize
Honours the outstanding Ph.D. thesis on a historical topic submitted in a Canadian university by a Canadian citizen or permanent resident.
Winner: Brittany Luby, “Drowned: Anishinabek Economies and Resistance to Hydroelectric Development in the Winnipeg River Drainage Basin, 1873–1975,” History Department, York University.
Clio Prizes
For meritorious publications or for exceptional contributions by individuals or organizations to regional history:
Atlantic Region
Winner: Ronald Rudin, Kouchibouguac: Removal, Resistance, and Remembrance at a Canadian National Park. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016.
Québec
Winner: Sean Mills, A Place in the Sun: Haiti, Haitians, and the Remaking of Québec. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2016.
Ontario
Winners: Nancy Bouchier and Ken Cruikshank, The People and the Bay: A Social and Environmental History of Hamilton Harbour. UBC Press, 2016.
The Prairies
Winner: Sarah Carter, Imperial Plots: Women, Land, and the Spadework of British Colonialism on the Canadian Prairies. University of Manitoba Press, 2016.
Lifetime Achievement Award
Winner: Jennifer S.H. Brown
British Columbia
Winner: Aaron Chapman, The Last Gang in Town: The Epic Story of the Vancouver Police vs. the Clark Park Gang. Arsenal Pulp Press, 2016.
Lifetime Achievement Award
Winner: Dan Savard
For more details on the prizes, please visit the CHA website.
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