ACSUS 2017 Biennial Conference Tuscany Casino And Resort

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ACSUS 2017 Biennial ConferenceTuscany Casino and ResortWednesday, October 18Registration, 5:00-8:00 PMPlenary Session I: 5:00-6:15 PMCirque de Soleil’s Las Vegas Productions, IPrésentateur/Presenter: L. Patrick Leroux, Concordia UniversityIntroduit par/Introduced by: Jane Koustas, Brock UniversityOpening Reception, 6:15-8:00 PMThursday, October 19Session 1, 9:00-10:15 AM1-A(History)Public Health and Environment in Twentieth-Century Canadian and American HistoryChair: Andrea Olive, University of Toronto, MississaugaBrian J. Payne, Bridgewater State UniversityNature’s Bread: The Public Health Crisis and Flour Enrichment in Canada, 1940-1949Mark J. McLaughlin, University of Maine, OronoCalculating the Human Price: Connecting Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring to ResourceScience in 1950s New BrunswickNeil S. Forkey, St. Lawrence UniversityNot in Our Back Yards! Canadian and American Communities Combat WasteIncineration: The St. Lawrence Borderland, c. 1980s-1990s1-B(International Relations)Roundtable on Steve Saideman’s Book, Adapting in the Dust

Chair: David Haglund, Queen’s UniversityJean-Christophe Boucher, MacEwan UniversityJoseph Jockel, St. Lawrence UniversityChristopher Kirkey, State University of New York at PlattsburghRespondent: Steve Saideman, Norman Patterson School of International Affairs1-C(Media, Music, Performance, and Popular Culture)Troubling National Narratives through Canadian Theatre and PerformanceChair: David Fancy, Brock UniversityWes Pearce, Media, University of ReginaSharon Pollock: Telling the Stories We Didn’t Want to Hear and Showing us the CanadaWe Didn’t Want to See!Michele Lacombe, Trent UniversityContesting celebrating: artistic and theatrical performance of nationhood by Indigenousactors and scholarsMichelle MacArthur, University of WindsorCanada’s Past, Present, and Future: Erin Shields’ The Millennial Malcontent1-D(The North and Arctic Indigenous Peoples; Borders and Domestic Security)Northern Borderland: Regional, National and Indigenous PerspectivesChair/Discussant: Heather Nicol, Trent UniversityHeather Nicol, Trent UniversityNorthern Borders and Regional Impacts: The Alaska-Yukon BorderlandsKaren Everett, Trent UniversityNorthern Governance and Border ManagementBarry Zellen, State University of New York at BuffaloCrossborder Indigenous Collaboration and the Western Arctic and Subarctic BorderlandsWhitney Lackenbauer, St. Jerome’s UniversityIndigenous Peoples and the Defence of Remote Borderlands and Frontierlands in

Canada, Alaska, and Australia1-E(Littérature et art—français)Perspectives historiques et contemporaines/Historical and Contemporary PerspectivesChristina Keppie, Western Washington UniversityAcadia: From Past, to Present, to FutureFrançois-Emmanuël Boucher, Collège militaire royal du CanadaTopologie de l’essai d’extrême-droite au Québec après 1945: Le cas d’Adrien ArcandMarilyn Randall, University of Western Ontario, Les Rébellions de 1837-38 dans lesfictions québécoises1-F(Immigration and Citizenship)The Politics of Canada-U.S. Immigration, IChairs: Mireille Paquet, Concordia UniversityJennifer Elrick, McGill UniversityTamara Woroby, Johns Hopkins UniversityAsylum Seekers in Canada and the United States: Does Country of Origin Matter?Jennifer Elrick, McGill UniversityEnabling Canada to “Give a Striking Example to the World”: The Role of High-LevelBureaucrats in Making Canada Multicultural1-G(Literature and Arts—English)Themes of Identity in Canadian LiteratureJudith McCombs, Independent ScholarForests, Natives, Settlers in Annie Proulx's BarkskinsSharon Morgan Beckford-Foster, Rochester Institute of TechnologyThe Black Tile in the Mosaic': A Reading of Blackness and Canada in Selected Stories byAustin C. ClarkeBreak, 10:15-10:45 AM

Session 2, 10:45 AM-12:00 PM2-A(History)Lest We Forget VimyChair: Eric Weeks, Bridgewater State UniversityTim Cook, Canadian War MuseumBirth of a Notion: The History of the Vimy Idea over 100 YearsMaggie O’Riordan Ross, Western UniversityVimy Ridge: The American Origins of a Canadian MythSarah Cook, Library and Archives Canada“The Parting Salute’ – Creating an Audio-Visual Memorial of the Vimy Monument’sUnveiling”2-B(First Nations)Agreements Brokered and BrokenDan Shaule, Olthuis Kleer Townshend LLP, TorontoThe Agreement and the 1923 Williams TreatiesJanet Csontos – Ontario Public School SystemReclaiming Treaty Partner Identity2-C(North American Studies)Regulatory Challenges for Canada within North AmericaChair: Laura Macdonald, Carleton UniversityPatrick Schaefer, University of Texas-El PasoMayra Maldonado, University of Texas-El PasoRegulatory Framework and Market Conditions in the Paso del Norte Energy SectorGeoffrey Hale, University of LethbridgeRegulatory Cooperation in North AmericaJohn Stewart, Canadian Nuclear AssociationOur Continental Economy: Half Built Before the Storm

2-D(The North and Arctic Indigenous Peoples)Remapping the North (I): Multilevel Governance, Indigenous Empowerment, and theChanging Arctic LandscapeChair/Discussant: Erik Finke, Independent scholarNadine C. Fabbi, University of WashingtonRemapping Canada: Land Claims to Inuit Nunangat and the Influence on Arctic PolicyVal Muzik, McMaster UniversityFear and Descartes in the Arctic: Security, ontological paradox, and the discursiveconstruction of the Canadian climatological problematiqueGabrielle A. Slowey, York UniversityLeah Sarson, Dartmouth CollegeGoverning the Canadian Arctic: Multilevel Governance or “One Government”?Amy Delo, University of WashingtonNative Nationalism, Indigenous Internationalism, and Aboriginal Self-Determination inNorthern Québec2-E(Études québécoises/Quebec Studies)Queer BodiesCharles Batson, Union CollegeBagne: A Queer Re-creationLoic Bourdeau, Univeristy of Louisiana at LafayetteWhat’s in a Name? Violence and Sexuality in Orage sur mon corps (Béland) and LesJérémiades (Boulerice)Jonathan Lazure-Beecher, Queen's UniversityNature’s Empire: From Decolonization to Environmentalism in 1960s-1970s Quebec2-F(Littérature et art—français)Migrant writing and Quebec-Francophone Influences/L’écriture migrante et lesinfluences Québec-FrancophonieHeather A. West, Samford UniversityStolen Youth in Lovelie d’Haiti by Sylvain Meunier

Julie-Françoise Tolliver, University of HoustonChemin faisant or the Fabrication of Intersections: Aimé Césaire, Jean-Daniel Lafond,and Interracial Francophone SolidaritiesKathryn Slott, University of Maine, OronoFrom Immigrant to Québécois: Allophone, Anglophone, Francophone. The Progressionof Identity through Language in the Theater of Marco Micone2-G(Immigration and Citizenship)The Politics of Canada-U.S. Immigration, IIChair: Jennifer Elrick, McGill UniversityDiscussant: Irene Bloemraad (UC Berkeley)Mireille Paquet (Concordia)The Politics of Canada-U.S. ImmigrationPhil Triadofilopoulos, University of TorontoWhat Happened? How the Changes of the 1960s Influence Contemporary ImmigrationPolicy Debates in Canada and the United StatesACSUS Luncheon, 12:00-1:30 PMSponsored by the Government of QuebecKeynote speaker – Ms. Elizabeth MacKayDéléguée du Québec à Los Angeles chez Ministère des Relationsinternationales et de la Francophonie du QuébecEnders Luncheon (Symposium participants only) – 12:00-1:30PMHow our media covers ‘the other’ (tentative title)Lee-Anne Goodman, former Washington Correspondent, The Canadian PressUS correspondent for Canada (TBA)Session 3, 1:30-2:45 PM

3-A(History)Canadian Culture in the “American Century,” IChair and Discussant: Jeffrey Brison, Queen’s UniversityLynda Jessup, Queen’s UniversityCultural Diplomacy and the Curatorial State: Canadian Art Exhibitions in the UnitedStates in the 1940sBen Schnitzer, Queen’s UniversityThe Netflix Tax: Canadian Cultural Policy at the CrossroadsElizabeth Diggon, Queen’s UniversityExhibiting Diplomacy at Canadian Cultural Centres3-B(First Nations; Gender Studies)Indigenous Peoples and Social ChallengesPam Palmater, Ryerson UniversityCanada’s Other Lethal Pipeline: From Foster Care to Murdered, Missing, and ExploitedIndigenous Women and GirlsCyndy Baskin, Ryerson UniversityFrom Oppression to Resistance: 150 Years of Social Work with Indigenous PeoplesMelanie Chaplier, University of WaterlooThe Cree Family Hunting Territories as Places of Entangled Territorialities in the Face ofContemporary Resource Development3-C(International Relations)Roundtable: The Evolution of NORAD: 60 Years and Counting?Andres Charron, University of ManitobaJames Fergusson, University of ManitobaJoseph Jockel, St. Lawrence UniversityChristopher Sands, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies3-D(The North and Arctic Indigenous Peoples)Remapping the North (II): Indigenous Empowerment, Co-Management, and NaturalResource Development in the North

Chair/Discussant: Mark K. Watson, Concordia UniversityEric Finke, Independent ScholarTraditional Knowledge and Western Science: Power and Injustice in Northern ResourceManagementVictoria Alejandra Bikowski, York UniversityFacilitating Extraction via Consultation: The Case of the Alberta Oil Sands, NewBrunswick’s Shale Gas Deposits, and Shale Gas in the Northwest TerritoriesBrandon Ray, University of WashingtonArctic Indigenous Voices on Oil Development in Clyde River, Nunavut3-E(Philosophy)Canada from a Philosophical PerspectiveJanet Wesselius, University of Alberta, AugustanaThe Mixture That is CanadaJames T. McHugh, University of Akron/University of VermontThe Idea of Collective Rights and Canadian National IdentityElizabeth Trott, Ryerson UniversityPhilosophy in Canada, or Canadian Philosophy?3-F(Littérature et art—français)Revoir les myths, revoir les classiques/Re-Reading Myths and Classic TextsPatrick Coleman, University of California at Los AngelesOdd Couples: French-English Frenemies in Beautiful Losers and La NuitIsabelle Fournier, Trent UniversityNature et culture dans le mythe du bon sauvage: Yves Thériault, Jean-Pierre April etAurélie ReschVirginia A Harger-Grinling, Memorial UniversityMargaret Anne Conners, Memorial UniversityIsolationism - to Progress or Regress: Three Quebec Novels from the Fifties to thisCentury and their Societies

3-G(Film Studies; Littérature et art français)Contemporary Québecois CinemaMatthew Smith, State University of New York at PlattsburghAbandoned by His Children: A New Trend in Quebec CinemaKarine Bertrand, Queen’s UniversityDe Martha of the North (Marquise Lepage, 2008) à Iqualuit (Benoît Pilon, 2016): Lesreprésentations de l’Arctique dans le cinéma québécois transnationalKevin Elstob, California State University at SacramentoListening to Women in La Passion d’Augustine (2016) by Léa Pool3-HThomas O. Enders Symposium on the State of the Canada-US RelationshipOrganized by David Biette, Council of State Governments, on behalf ofThe Thomas O. and Gaetana Enders Endowment Fund1867- 2017: What has defined the bilateral relationship?Moderator: Carol Higham, UNC CharlotteIrene Bloemraad, UC BerkeleyDave Massell, UVM (invited)Break, 2:45-3:00 PMSession 4, 3:00-4:15 PM4-A(History)Canadian Culture in the “American Century,” IIChair and Discussant: Jeffrey Brison, Queen’s UniversityBronwyn Jaques, Queen’s UniversityCBC’s The Forest Rangers: Shaping Constructions of Canadian Wilderness and Identity atHome and Abroad, 1963-65Lauren Jaques, Queen’s UniversityHudson’s Bay Barbie: Brand Nationalism, Canadian National Identity, and Present-DayImperialism in Consumer GoodsEmma Wyse, Queen’s University

“The Perth County Conspiracy Does Not Exist’: An Examination of the Fleeting andForgotten Hippie Counter-Culture in Stratford, Ontario”4-B(Politics and Policy)Comparative PerspectivesChair/Discussant: Charles Doran, Johns Hopkins SAISNick Baxter-Moore, Brock UniversityMunroe Eagles, State University of New York at Buffalo (et al.)Explaining Canada-US Differences in Attitudes Toward the Role of Government: A Testof S.M. Lipset’s “Continental Divide”Dylan S. McLean, University of West GeorgiaA Distinction without a Difference? Canadian versus American Media Coverage of GunControl and Mass ShootingsMichael MacLeod, St. Mary’s UniversityCorporate Social Responsibility in North America: Assessing Canadian versus AmericanExpectations of Business Behaviour4-C(Études québécoises/Quebec Studies)Linguistic Identity/L’Identité linquistiqueGenevieve Olivieira, State University of New York at BuffaloLa légende urbaine et le conte contemporainDaniel Troup, Queen's UniversityJacob Robbins-Kanter, Queen's UniversityThe Contours of Solidarity: Language, Geography, and Student PoliticsYulia Bosworth, Binghamton UniversityThe Bad French of Justin Trudeau: The Role of Linguistic Judgment in Defining Identityand Belonging4-D(The North and Arctic Indigenous Peoples; Film)Arctic Imaginaries and Indigenous Representation – In Film, Language, and MediaChair/Discussant: Kenn Harper, Independent ScholarRita Ross, University of California, Berkeley

Northern Imaginaries and Literary TourismKenn Harper, Independent Scholar“The Way of the Eskimo”: The Silent Films of Nancy ColumbiaKenn Harper, Independent ScholarInuktitut Syllabic Orthography – Its Development and SpreadBarry Zellen, State University of New York at BuffaloThe Evolution and Empowerment of Canadian Indigenous and Northern Media4-E(Littérature et art—français)Le Récit et la forme/Narrative and FormSteven Urquhart, University of LethbridgeSplendeurs et misères de l’homme occidental (2015) de Pierre Gobeil : la vérité interdite”Antoinette Williams-Tutt, City University of New YorkWriting Women, Writing French: Être femme francophone en Amérique du NordYvon Le Bras, Brigham Young UniversityDe la lettre à la fiction narrative: la genèse de Cet été qui chantait de Gabrielle Roy4-F(Geography, Energy, and the Environment)Transboundary Environmental GovernanceStephen Bird, Clarkson UniversityMartin Heintzelman, Clarkson UniversityCanada-U.S. Transboundary Energy GovernanceAndrea Olive, University of Toronto, MississaugaLessons Learned and New Applications for Canada-US Environmental GovernanceLuc Julliet, University of OttawaEnvironmental Assessment and the Production of Social Licence for ResourceDevelopment4-G(History)Aspects of Digital History

Kristina Llewellyn, Renison College, University of WaterlooDigital Oral History for Reconciliation: The Nova Scotia Home for Colored ChildrenHistory Education Initiative (DOHR)Alexandre Turgeon, Bridgewater State University“It’s only a tweet!” Canadian Historians and Social Media4-HThomas O. Enders Symposium on the State of the Canada-US RelationshipOrganized by David Biette, Council of State Governments, on behalf ofThe Thomas O. and Gaetana Enders Endowment FundWhere We Are in 2017 and Where Are We Going in Bilateral Relations? (title not final)Moderator: TBDJim Dickmeyer, almost-former-State Department and Wilson CenterSarah Goldfeder, Earnscliffe Strategy, OttawaPierre Martin, Université de MontréalPlenary Sessions II, 4:15-5:30 PMII-A The Story of Us. What story? What us?Présentateur/Presenter: Jocelyn Létourneau, Université de LavalCommentateur/Commentator: Sam Fisher, University of AlabamaII-B Hockey: Canada's Game in Sin CityPanelists: Brian Kennedy, Pasadena City CollegeAndrew Holman, Bridgewater State UniversityPlenary Session III, 5:30-6:45 PMMembers of the Circus and its Others research group will discuss 1-2 circus productionsviewed in Las Vegas through the lens of difference and “otherness” and engage in aQ&A with the Las Vegas-based circus company Cirque Mechanics.Chair and organizer: Karen Fricker, Brock UniversityParticipants: Charles Batson, Union College (NY)L. Patrick Leroux, French and English, Concordia UniversityDavid Fancy, Dramatic Arts, Brock UniversityMichael Eigtved, Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen

Hayley Malouin, independent scholarFriday, October 20Session 5, 9:00-10:15 AM5-A(History)Symbols of 19th-century Nationalism: French-Canadians, Americans, and the Maple LeafChair: Rebecca Mancuso, Bowling Green State UniversityMark Richard, State University of New York at PlattsburghLouis Riel and French Canadians in the United StatesThomas Murphy, SJ, Seattle UniversityThoreau, the Québécois and the Famine Irish: Encounters with the Others inMassachusetts and Lower Canada, 1845-1850Ross Fox, Royal Ontario MuseumThe Maple Leaf: A Symbol of Peace Born of Strife5-B(Gender Studies)Resource Development and Gender: Impacts on and Responses by WomenChair: Kalowatie Deonandan, University of SaskatchewanKalowatie Deonandan, University of SaskatchewanLeadership in Social Movements against Large Scale MiningRebecca Tatham, University of SaskatchewanGender and Leadership in Anti-Mining Struggles against Large Scale MiningJacqueline Schoenfeld, University of SaskatchewanGendering Analyses of Social License to Operate in Saskatchewan’s Nuclear Sector5-C(Media, Music, Performance and Popular Culture)Popular Music and Canadian IdentitiesAntoinette Williams-Tutt, The City University of New York Graduate CenterTranslating Alterity and Solidarity in French-Algonquin Rap

Nick Baxter-Moore, Communication, Popular Culture & Film, Brock UniversityNorthern Lights – Southern Cross: The Band and Canadian Identity5-D(Études québécoises/Quebec Studies)Cultural Challenges/Défis culturelsMichelle Thompson, Carleton UniversityA Different Kind of Quiet Revolution: Franco-Ontarians and the Use of InformationTechnologies as Strategies of ResistanceAlexandre Turgeon, University of Ottawa“When Will We Get Her ‘Désormais’ (‘From Now On’)?” A Few Thoughts about theRhetorical and Strategic Functions of Paul Sauvé’s “From Now On ” in Québec and inCanada, from the 1960s to the Present DayMartin Poëti, Université de MontréalQuébec’s Church and State Relations: Past, Present, and Future Prospects5-E(Littérature et art—français)The Development of Agency and Spirituality in Québec’s Fictive Women/Le pouvoir etla spiritualité chez les femmes fictives québécoisesLena Taub-Robles, California State Univeristy, BakersfieldMemory, Trauma, and the Supernatural: Confronting the Past through the Female Bodyin Marie-Célie Agnant’s Un Alligator nommé RosaCynthia A. Jones, State University of New York at FredoniaI Love the Devil: Forbidden Love in les contes québécoisAubrey D. Jones, Weber State UniversityForbidden Love and the Supernatural Woman in the work of Anne Hébert5-F(Film Studies)Canadian Cinema in an International ContextJessica Whitehead, York UniversityFostering Film in Canada: The production of Canada’s First Hollywood Epic Captains ofthe CloudsAndrea Braithwaite, University of Ontario Institute of Technology

Bon Cop, Bad Cop, Buddy Cop: The Genre Film as Cultural CommentaryPeter Lester, Brock UniversityShared Accommodation: Room, International Co-productions and Canadian NationalCinema5-G(History; The North and Arctic Indigenous Peoples)On the Edges—Frontiers and BorderlandsChair/Discussant: Pierre Atlas, Marian UniversityChristopher Petrakos, University of Toronto, MississaugaThe Church Mission Society and the Development of the Canadian North: Early AnglicanExperiences in the Canadian YukonPatrick Callaway, University of MaineAgriculture, Dependency, and the Enduring Tie: The International Wheat Economy in theNortheastern Borderlands, 1784-18145-H(International Relations)Great Power Dynamics and the Implications for Canada: Trade, Security, and InvestmentModerator: Early Fry, Brigham Young UniversityPanelists: Charles Doran, Johns Hopkins SAISDavid Haglund, Queen’s UniversityPatrick James, University of Southern CaliforniaBreak, 10:15-10:45 AMSession 6, 10:45 AM-12:00 PM6-A(History)Making ‘Good’ Canadians: Institutionalizing CanadaChair and Discussant: Bronwyn Jaques, Queen’s UniversityAndrew Sopko, Queen’s University“A Horse So Dead It Crawled with Maggots ”: Canada’s Failed Civil Defence Programand the Formation of Civic Citizenship in Ottawa, 1948-1962

Katie-Marie McNeill, Queen’s UniversityFox in the Henhouse: The Penitentiary Service’s Establishment of Vocational Trainin

Cultural Diplomacy and the Curatorial State: Canadian Art Exhibitions in the United States in the 1940s Ben Schnitzer, Queens University The Netflix Tax: Canadian Cultural Policy at the Crossroads Elizabeth Diggon, Queen [s University Exhibiting Diplomacy at Canadian Cultural Centres 3-B (First Nations; Gender Studies)

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