<p>"Under the stewardship of Johnson and Aladejebi, <i>Unsettling the Great White North </i>provides an important and necessary scholarly intervention that recognizes Black agency in Canadian history and will certainly serve as a guiding anthology for both classrooms and the public in how we think about Canada."</p> - Cameron Tardif (<em>American Review of Canadian Studies</em>)

An exhaustive volume of leading scholarship in the field of Black Canadian history, Unsettling the Great White North highlights the diverse experiences of persons of African descent within the chronicles of Canada’s past. The book considers histories and theoretical framings within the disciplines of history, sociology, law, and cultural and gender studies to chart the mechanisms of exclusion and marginalization in "multicultural" Canada and to situate Black Canadians as speakers and agents of their own lives. Working to interrupt the myth of benign whiteness that has been deeply implanted into the country’s imagination, Unsettling the Great White North uncovers new narratives of Black life in Canada.

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Unsettling the Great White North offers a chronological, regional, and thematic compilation of some of the latest and best scholarship in the field of Black Canadian history.

Preface

Introduction
Michele A. Johnson and Funké Aladejebi

Bookend I: The Future Has a Past: Canadian History and Black Modernity

1. Critical Histories of Blackness in Canada
Barrington Walker

Section One: Enslaving Blackness

2. Planting Slavery in Nova Scotia’s Promised Land, 1759–1775
Karolyn Smardz Frost

3. "Where, Oh Where, is Bet?": Locating Enslaved Black Women on the Ontario Landscape
Natasha Henry

Section Two: Constructing Blackness across Borders and Boundaries

4. A Forgotten Generation: African Canadian History between Fugitive Slaves and World War I
Adam Arenson

5. Petitioning Power: Canadian Racial Consciousness Meets Alabama Injustice, 1958
Wendell Nii Laryea Adjetey

Section Three: Building Black Communities and Shaping Black Resilience

6. The Shiloh Baptist Church: The Pillar of Strength in Edmonton’s African American Community, 1910–1940
David Este and Jenna Bailey

7. Establishing Communities
Amoaba Gooden

8. Montreal’s Black Renaissance
Sean Mills

Section Four: Controlling Black (Working) Bodies

9. "Likely to become a public charge": Examining Black Migration to Eastern Canada, 1900–1930
Claudine Bonner

10. "…not likely to do well or to be an asset to this country": Canadian Restrictions of Black Caribbean Female Domestic Workers, 1910–1955
Michele A. Johnson

Section Five: "Schooling" Black Canadians

11. Stories from the Little Black School House
Sylvia D. Hamilton

12. Black Education: The Complexity of Segregation in Kent County’s Nineteenth-Century Schools
Deirdre McCorkindale

13. "We have to strive for the best": The High Aspirations of Black Caribbean-Canadian Youth of the 1970s and 1980s
Carl E. James

Section Six: Creating New Diasporic Communities: Continental African Experiences 

14. Creating Spaces of Belonging: Building a New African Community in Vancouver
Gillian Creese

15. "The part of you that’s Rwanda": Creating a Rwandan Diaspora Community in the Greater Toronto Area in the Early Twenty-First Century
Anna Ainsworth

Section Seven: Locating Historical Black Presences in Cultural Artefacts

16. Race, Community, and the Picturing of Identities: Photography and the Black Subject in Ontario, 1860 to 1900
Cheryl Thompson and Julie Crooks

17. Hogan’s Alley Remixed: Wayde Compton’s Performance Bond and the New Black Can(aan)Lit
Paul Watkins

18. Jazz, Diaspora, and the History and Writing of Black Anglophone Montreal
Winfried Siemerling

Section Eight: Black Women’s Orality and Knowings

19. "I Don’t Know if I Should Say This": Black Women, Oral History, and Contesting the Great White North
Funké Aladejebi

20. Re-Thinking and Re-Framing RDS: A Black Woman’s Perspective
Esmerelda M.A. Thornhill

Bookend II: The Past Has a Future: Critical Intellectual Histories of Blackness

21. Wrestling with Multicultural Snake Oil: A Newcomer’s Introduction to Black Canada
Daniel McNeil

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781487529178
Publisert
2022-03-07
Utgiver
University of Toronto Press
Vekt
830 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
36 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
632

Biografisk notat

Michele A. Johnson is a professor in the Department of History at York University.

Funké Aladejebi is an assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of Toronto.