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list price: $95.00
edition:Hardcover
also available: eBook Paperback
category: History
published: Nov 1997
ISBN:9780774806404
publisher: UBC Press

Creating Historical Memory

English-Canadian Women and the Work of History

edited by Beverly Boutilier & Alison Prentice

tagged: post-confederation (1867-)
Description

Canadian women have worked, individually and collectively, at home and abroad, as creators of historical memory. This engaging collection of essays seeks to create an awareness of the contributions made by women to history and the historical profession from 1870 to 1970 in English Canada. Creating Historical Memory explores the wide range of careers that women have forged for themselves as writers and preservers of history within, outside, and on the margins of the academy. The authors suggest some of the institutional and intellectual locations from which English Canadian women have worked as historians and attempt to problematize in different ways and to varying degrees, the relationship between women and historical practice.

About the Authors

Beverly Boutilier


Alison Prentice

Contributor Notes

Beverly Boutilier is currently an advisor to the Women’s Studies Program of CUSO in Indonesia. Alison Prentice is one of Canada’s most distinguished historians of women. She is one of the authors of the pathbreaking Canadian Women: A History and has worked on numerous books on the history of women in Canada. She currently resides in Victoria, B.C.

Editorial Reviews

... one of the best-edited collections of historical writing that I have read for some time....It is chapters such as these that not only make this book but provide very useful additons to course reading lists as examples of well researched and written biographical case studies and institutional histories ... Overall, ... this is a collection of women's history that should be on the shelves of a university library.

— History of Education Review

... together [the essays] provide a coherent sense of the challenges facing women who dared to approach the throne of historical inquiry ... the contributors to this volume have done more than add women to the historiographical canon; they helped to redefine the canon itself. They have also produced a very readable volume, a testimony to the historiographical shift toward a narrative style that makes this book accessible to more than just a few 'scientific' historians.

— Canadian Book Review Annual

The editors convincingly show that for many of these women, history was a tool to demonstrate political or moral lessons ... The book illuminates professions and universities, and elegantly delivers the editors' promise to analyze historical consciousness.

— Canadian Historical Review
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