British Association for Canadian Studies Newsletter
BACS E-News July 2010 
In This Issue
Books for review
The North Atlantic Triangle - History Conference
Peace and (In)Security, BACS 2011
CanText
New website: CSN-REC
ICCS Awards
About BACS

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The British Association for Canadian Studies acts as a forum for Canadianists in the UK and holds an annual conference at Easter each year. BACS publishes a Newsletter twice yearly and the British Journal of Canadian Studies is produced by Liverpool University Press.
 
Books for Review!
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The April list of books available for review in the BJCS is now available on the BACS website
BACS on Facebook

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BACS is now on Facebook. Join our group by clicking on the image and searching for British Association for Canadian Studies. Post news, comments and links to events.

Follow us on Twitter

You can also follow us @Canada_BACS on Twitter


Quick Links
BACS E-News

The deadline for copy for the next BACS E-News is
28 August 2010

BACS
Room SB212
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
020 7862 8687
 
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THE NORTH ATLANTIC TRIANGLE - A CANADIAN MYTH?

BACS HISTORY CONFERENCE, 16 JULY 2010
SENATE ROOM, SENATE HOUSE, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

Registration and coffee, 10.00am-10.45am
Welcome, 10.45am

Session 1 - 11.00am-12.30pm
John Bartlet Brebner and the "North Atlantic Triangle"
Tony McCulloch, Canterbury Christ Church University
"Equilateral, Isosceles  or Obtuse? Getting the Measure of the North Atlantic Triangle"
David Haglund, Queen's University, Kingston
 "What took you so long? The Impact of US-based Ethnic Diasporas on the Formation of the North Atlantic Triangle"
David Woolner, Roosevelt Institute, Hyde Park, and Marist College
"Cordell Hull, Britain and the Canadians, 1933-44"

Lunch - 12.30pm-1.30pm

Session 2 - 1.30pm-3.00pm
The North Atlantic Triangle and World War Two
Galen Perras, University of Ottawa
"Losing Their Breakfasts? American, British and Canadian Opposition to the Ogdensburg Agreement of 1940"
Alan Dobson, University of Dundee
"Flying Between John Bull and Uncle Sam: Canadian Civil Aviation Diplomacy in World War Two"
Hector Mackenzie, DFAIT, Ottawa, and Carleton University
"North Atlantic World: Canada and the Global Economic Order, 1941-47"

Coffee, 3.00pm-3.30pm

Session 3 - 3.30pm-5.00pm
The North Atlantic Triangle in the Post-War World
Lara Silver, University of British Columbia
"Canada a Junior Member of the Anglo-American Alliance: The 'Anglo-Saxon Triangle' downplayed by the Department of External Affairs, 1946-57"
Michael Carroll, Grant MacEwan University
"Linch-pin at Last? Canada and the North Atlantic Triangle in 1956"
JJ Jockel, St Lawrence University
"The Canada-US Defence Relationship and the North Atlantic Triangle"

CONFERENCE ARRANGEMENTS

This event is the annual conference of the BACS History Group and is run in conjunction with the London Canadian Studies Association (LoCSA). It normally takes place at Canada House but it has been moved to Senate House this year with the support of the Institute for the Study of the Americas because Canada House is undergoing a major refurbishment.

There is no registration fee and refreshments and a light lunch are available free of charge.
If you would like to attend please email Tony McCulloch  to register.

The conference will be held in the very distinguished Senate Room, on the first floor of Senate House, which houses the Institute for the Study of the Americas, the BACS Office and the University of London Library. Senate House lies between Malet Street and Russell Square and is adjacent to the rear entrance of the British Museum (in Montague Place).

The conference hotel is The Imperial Hotel at Russell Square, which is a short walk from Senate House.
 
Peacable Kingdom by Edward Hicks
PEACE AND (IN)SECURITY:  
CANADA'S PROMISE, CANADA'S PROBLEM?

BACS 36th Annual Conference

The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

4-6 April 2011

CALL FOR PAPERS

The British Association for Canadian Studies (BACS) is pleased to announce that their 36th annual conference will take place on 4-6 April 2011 at the University of Birmingham.  Founded in 1900, the 'Redbrick' university is located within the United Kingdom's second largest and most diverse city. Reflecting one of the explicit priorities of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (Government of Canada), the conference aims to interrogate the historical legacies, contemporary realities and cultural myths of the 'peaceable kingdom'. What constitutes peace in the context of economic instability and political insecurity? Which discourses, images and texts circulate in a time of environmental crisis and social anxiety?  How do the actions, events and conflicts of the Canadian past inflect the policies, politics and imaginings of future security?  

The British Association for Canadian Studies invites paper proposals related to notions of peace and (in)security pertaining across, within and beyond the field of Canadian Studies. Proposals for 20-minute papers, to be presented in either English or French, are invited from any single disciplinary or multidisciplinary perspective. Multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary and comparative panel proposals, including those from postgraduate students, are welcome.

Paper proposals will be especially appreciated in the following areas:
  • identities and insecurities
  • surveillance and security: histories, institutions, discourses, practices
  • cultures of dissent: texts, policies, movements, communities
  • internal or external threats, conflicts, and instabilities
  • histories, visions and narratives of peace
  • geographies, representations and economies of (in)security
Enquiries and proposals to:
Jodie Robson, BACS Administrator
Email: canstuds@gmail.com

Proposals (panel and individual) and deadline:
Email abstract(s) of 200-300 words and brief CV (please do not exceed one side of A4) which must include your title, institutional affiliation, email and mailing address by 20 November 2010. Submissions will be acknowledged by email. Postgraduate students are especially welcome to submit a proposal and there will be a concessionary conference fee for students. BACS regrets that it is unable to assist participants with travel and accommodation costs.
 
CanLit
A message from the BACS Literature Group


The BACS Literature Group has decided to move the CanText newsletter to electronic format. This should reduce costs, save on paper, and enable the newsletter to more quickly disseminate the latest news from Canadian literary studies. It also means that CanText will be accessible though the BACS website, hopefully increasing its potential readership.

If you wish to continue receiving CanText in its new electronic format, please make sure that the editor Linda Knowles has your preferred email address (contact Linda).

If you wish to continue to receive CanText in hard copy, please also let Linda know - a small print run will still be available.
 
CSN logo
Canadian Studies Network-Réseau d'études canadiennes 

TAKE A LOOK AT THEIR NEW WEBSITE!

A Steering Committee made up of scholars from across Canada has been in the process of creating a new non-profit Canadian Studies organization to facilitate connections and strengthen partnerships between Canadian faculty, students, and independent researchers involved in the study of Canada at the post-secondary level.

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ICCS Awards

Guidelines for ICCS awards on the ICCS website:

Pierre Savard Awards
Publishing Fund
Graduate Student Scholarships
Canadian Studies Postdoctoral Fellowships
Best Doctoral Thesis in Canadian Studies

Very important: Please note that there are separate deadlines for submission of your application to BACS. These early deadlines are to allow for a primary adjudication process and applications received after the BACS' deadlines cannot be considered. The final deadlines for all applications to be received by BACS is 14 September 2010 with submission to ICCS by 24 November 2010.