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         Canadian Culture:     more books (100)
  1. Mondo Canuck: A Canadian pop culture odyssey by Geoff Pevere, 1996
  2. This Wild Spirit: Women in the Rocky Mountains of Canada (Mountain Cairns: A series on the history and culture of the Canadian Rockies)
  3. The Canoe in Canadian Cultures
  4. Canadian Culture: An Introductory Reader
  5. O CANADA. An American's Notes on Canadian Culture. by Edmund. WILSON, 1965
  6. Understanding Military Culture: A Canadian Perspective by Allan D. English, 2004-05
  7. Slippery Pastimes: Reading the Popular in Canadian Culture (Cultural Studies)
  8. English Canadian Theatre (Perspectives on Canadian Culture) by Conolly L. W. Benson, 1990-01
  9. Canadian Culture at the Crossroads: Film, Television, and the Media in the 1960s by The Wendy Michener Symposium, 1990-06-01
  10. To see ourselves/to save ourselves: Ecology and culture in Canada (Canadian issues = Themes canadiens) by Association for Canadian Studies, 1991
  11. Canadian Cultural Poesis: Essays on Canadian Culture (Cultural Studies)
  12. Toward an understanding of behaviourally bisexual men: the influence of context and culture.: An article from: The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality by Joseph P. Stokes, Robin L. Miller, et all 1998-06-22
  13. Refractions of Germany in Canadian Literature and Culture.(Book Review): An article from: Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal by Myka Burke, 2005-03-22
  14. The Imaginary Indian: The Image of the Indian in Canadian Culture by Daniel Francis, 1992-09

181. Welcome To African Canadian Online
The Centre for the Study of Black Cultures in Canada provides information on African canadian artists, politicians, and athletes. Includes links to other canadian resources.
http://www.yorku.ca/aconline/
Upcoming Events and News Check out current events and site updates, including:
Click through for a mulitmedia archive Welcome to African Canadian Online!
The Centre for the Study of Black Cultures in Canada welcomes you to African Canadian Online. Our site provides information on African Canadian artists and their work, links to other Canadian resources on the web, and updates about the activities of the Centre. This website began in 1996 as a course project by students at York University's Atkinson College, and was expanded by another class in the summer of 1998. We invite contributions and updates. Visit our African Canadian On-line sites: Film theatre music literature ... culture , and links to other great sites including the Robarts centre and Canada noir. We'd love to know what you think of our site! Visit our contact section in order to find out how to get in touch with us, and to see a list of our

182. Culture Sectors - Guide To Culture Statistics | 87-008-GIE
Statistics Canada Statistique Canada. Skip main navigation menu Skip secondary navigation culture industries. Book publishers and exclusive agents
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/87-008-GIE/sectors.htm
Culture sectors
Culture industries
Book publishers and exclusive agents Film, video and audio-visual distribution Film, video and audio-visual post-production Film, video and audio-visual production ... Television viewing
Arts and heritage
Heritage institutions Performing arts
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Search ... Contact Us Date Modified: 2005-09-19 Important Notices

183. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, Canadian Cultural Poesis
Wilfrid Laurier University Press, canadian Cultural Poesis, Gary Sherbert, editor, Annie Gérin, editor, and Sheila Petty, editor, 088920-486-1,
http://www.wlupress.wlu.ca/~wwwpress/Catalog/sherbert.shtml
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Canadian Cultural Poesis
Essays on Canadian Culture
Garry Sherbert editor editor , and Sheila Petty, editor
Paper, 528 pp.
ISBN: 0-88920-486-1
Publication Date: Forthcoming November 2005
Subjects: Cultural studies
Series: Cultural Studies
Paper
Canadian Cultural Poesis offers original essays on culture as social identity, exploring issues such as gender, technology, cultural ethnicity, and regionalism. From a broad range of disciplines, contributors engage in four general areas: the media, individual and national identity, language, and cultural dissent. Ideal for courses in cultural and Canadian studies, this text will also appeal to anyone with an interest in Canadian culture. About the Author Garry Sherbert is an assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of Regina. is a curator and assistant professor of art history and art theory in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Ottawa. Sheila Petty is dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts and professor of media studies at the University of Regina.

184. T O P I A - Canadian Journal Of Cultural Studies
topia, canadian journal of cultural studies, cultural studies, york university, wilfrid laurier press, academic writing, academic publication.
http://www.yorku.ca/topia/about.html
About Topia
  • TOPIA emphasizes Canadian concerns and remains committed to encouraging multiple Canadian and transnational perspectives, traditions, and debates. TOPIA is a refereed journal. TOPIA is particularly conscious of the need for historical research and writing. Cultural studies offers a range of intellectual and theoretical resources that can enrich and inform historical writing, and benefits in turn from the insights offered by informed re-readings of history. TOPIA also explores the question of disciplinarity as a methodological and sociological issue, providing a place for scholars to reflect on the implications of crossing disciplines while taking into account the specific locations of their own intellectual work.

  • Areas of research relevant to TOPIA are: the historical, institutional, and aesthetic formation of Canadian culture; analysis of visual art, film, television, music, literature and popular culture in Canada; the sociology of museums, galleries and the art market; the evolution of environmental geopolitics, city planning, architecture, landscape and new approaches to nature; cultural studies of science and technology; social, cultural and spatial configurations of new technologies; Canada's cultural industries; nationalism, multiculturalism, and the contemporary nation-state in the era of global integration. What unites these very diverse areas of investigation is the central role played by culture in contemporary social transformation.

185. CBC/Radio-Canada - Public Television In Canada: An Essential Cultural Force
The canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC/RadioCanada), Canada s National Public Broadcaster.
http://cbc.radio-canada.ca/speeches/19990421.shtml
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CBC/Radio-Canada is currently experiencing a labour disruption. Visit the official CBC/Radio-Canada negotiations site.
Speeches and Interviews
April 21, 1999
Public Television in Canada: An Essential Cultural Force
Metropolitan Montreal Chamber of Commerce - Guylaine Saucier (Check against delivery) Ladies and Gentlemen, I am honoured to be invited to speak to the members of the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal. I wish to thank the Board of Trade for giving me this opportunity at a time when the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is reviewing its mission and strategy for serving Canadians. In a few weeks, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation will appear before the CRTC to seek renewal of the licences for its English and French radio and television networks, Newsworld, RDI and most of its regional television stations. In an unprecedented move, all these licences will be reviewed at the same time. This provides a very unique opportunity to reexamine the very justification for the CBC, its role and the strategy to be implemented to carry out its mission. As part of this exercise, the Board of Directors and management of the CBC have therefore conducted joint deliberations on the focus the Corporation should adopt.

186. The Epoch Times | Where’s Our Culture Headed? Not Overseas, That’s For Sure
Canada’s export of cultural goods—such as art and music—has been steadily declining for the last four years. In 2004 it reached its lowest point since 1997,
http://english.epochtimes.com/news/5-5-31/29122.html
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Where’s Our Culture Headed? Not Overseas, That’s for Sure
Exports of Canadian Music and Art Hit a 7-year Low
By Joan Delaney The Epoch Times May 31, 2005
withdrew
, citing "what could be significant errors."]
VICTORIA—Take a walk around any of Canada’s metropolitan cities and you’ll come across stores selling African drums and crafts, or maybe Tibetan jewellery and Buddha statues, or Chinese tea sets and traditional music. But you ever travelled overseas and seen a store specializing in Canadian cultural goods? Probably not. And if a recent Statistics Canada report is any indication, you probably won’t be seeing one any time soon. Canada’s export of cultural goods—such as art and music—has been steadily declining for the last four years. In 2004 it reached its lowest point since 1997, according to the Statscan report. The trade deficit in culture goods is due to a decline in exports—particularly to the US—and is most pronounced in the sector of written and published works such as books, periodicals, newspapers, and other printed materials.

187. Home: Culturescope.ca (4.02.2 (4.0-SP1.hotfix2))
Read on, and check back often for new material, as the canadian Cultural Remember, the canadian Cultural Observatory welcomes suggestions for added
http://www.culturescope.ca/ev_en.php
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Culturescope.ca is an interactive hub for cultural policy professionals in Canada.
ID: 1 NEWS: New Brunswick Announces Details for Heritage Week 2006
EVENTS: Canadian Feminist Alliance for International Action National Symposium, Regina - Sept. 19-21
RECENTLY PUBLISHED: Satellite Radio Decision: A Selection of Background Information
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Culture and Tourism In Focus
Photo: Canadian Tourism Commission, Louise Leblanc While tourism has traditionally been viewed with a strictly economic lens, tourism policies today take a wider view, including social, cultural and ecological dimensions. For example, the Department of Canadian Heritage prefers to view tourism as a consumption activity as opposed to an industry. But what is cultural tourism? Are culture and tourism compatible? Is it worthwhile to develop strategies focused on building a productive alliance between these sectors? Finally, how is it possible to create links between culture, tourism and sustainability? These are the three questions that we hope to answer. Read on, and check back often for new material, as the Canadian Cultural Observatory brings Culture and Tourism

188. Brock University Undergraduate Calendar - 2004-2005 Courses
CANA 3Q98 Myth, Memory and Meaning in canadian Cultural History (also offered as CANA 3V903V94 canadian Cultural Studies I Selected topics in canadian
http://www.brocku.ca/webcal/2004/undergrad/courses/CANA.html
COURSES Aboriginal Studies (ABST) Accounting (ACTG) Adult Education (ADED) Administration (ADMI) ... Biotechnology (BTEC) Canadian Studies (CANA) Chemistry (CHEM) Community Health Sciences (CHSC) Child and Youth Studies (CHYS) Classics (CLAS) ... Writing (WRIT) Canadian Studies Courses CANA 1F91 Introduction to Canadian Studies The development of Canadian culture from the beginning of colonization to the present. An interdisciplinary examination of cultural expressions drawn from Canadian art, literature and music, as well as selected issues in Canadian social and cultural history. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. #CANA 2P86 Women in the Economy (also offered as ECON 2P86 LABR 2P86 SOCI 2P86 and WISE 2P86 ) Women in the Canadian labour market. Topics include the allocation of time between the household and the labour market, gender segregation in the work place, how earnings are determined, causes of occupational and earning difference by gender, role of investment in education and discrimination, recent developments in the labour market and their impact on women and men, selected policy issues. Lectures, 3 hours per week. Restriction: students must have a minimum of 4.0 overall credits. CANA 2P91 Culture and Power in Canada I: Cultural Communities Interdisciplinary examination of Canadian culture and society employing a variety of methods and perspectives. Approaches drawn from cultural studies, social theory and critical analysis applied to examples of Canadian literature, art, cinema and popular culture. Topics may include dynamics of race, class and gender, linguistic diversity, multiculturalism, ethnic relations and cultural appropriation. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. Note:

189. Index

http://www.canada-culture.org/

190. Converge
In this paper, the evolution of canadian cultural policy is outlined and Internal controversy accompanied the birth of modern canadian cultural policy.
http://www.culturaleconomics.atfreeweb.com/converge.htm
Compiler Press
Cultural Economics
Collected Works of Harry Hillman Chartrand
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Launched Back to Index Back to Index Back to Index Back to Index ... Back to Index Canada and the European Community Convergence Harry Hillman Chartrand Arts Bulletin , Vol. 15, No. 2, Spring 1991 Canadian Conference of the Arts Contents Page 1 Introduction Evolution of Canadian Cultural Policy The European Community Page 2 Evolution of European Community Cultural Policy 1. Creation of a European Cultural Area 2. Promotion of the Audio-Visual Industry 3. Improved Access to Cultural Resources 4. Training for the Cultural Sector 5. Dialogue with the Rest of the World

191. Bienvenue à Culturescope.ca, Un Centre Interactif Pour Les
Welcome to Culturescope.ca, an interactive hub for cultural policy and development professionals in Canada including decision makers, researchers,
http://culturescope.ca/
Bienvenue à Culturescope.ca, un centre interactif pour les professionnels des politiques et du développement culturels au Canada - y compris les décideurs, chercheurs, planificateurs et gestionnaires.
Connectez avec des collègues, partagez des idées et soyez informés au sujet des enjeux, de la recherche et des politiques qui influencent la vitalité culturelle du Canada.
Welcome to Culturescope.ca, an interactive hub for cultural policy and development professionals in Canada - including decision makers, researchers, planners and managers.
Connect with colleagues, share ideas, and stay informed of the issues, research, and policies that affect Canada’s cultural vitality.

192. Canada-Ontario Infrastructure Program - Investment In Cultural Infrastructure Be
The CanadaOntario Infrastructure Program is a six-year federal-provincial-municipal partnership to improve municipal infrastructure in Ontario.
http://www.ic.gc.ca/coip-pico/coip-pico.nsf/0/370a92474bc27e5b85256be30052a39e?O

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