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Keybot 5 Results  canadianmysteries.ca
  Les Grands Mystères de ...  
Carolyne Blanchard a obtenu une maîtrise en histoire en 2003 à l’Université de Sherbrooke. Son mémoire portait sur la criminalité féminine dans les Cantons-de-l’Est au tournant du XXe siècle. Elle est coauteure du site
Carolyne Blanchard earned a Master’s in History in 2003 at the Université de Sherbrooke. Her thesis was on women criminality in the Eastern Townships at the turn of the 20th century. She co-authored
  Les Grands Mystères de ...  
Peter Gossage est professeur au Département d’histoire de l’Université Concordia à Montréal. Spécialiste de l’histoire du Québec aux XIXe et XXe siècles, ses intérêts de recherche portent sur la famille, le genre et la démographie historique.
Peter Gossage is a member of the Department of History at Concordia University in Montreal. A scholar of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Quebec, his research interests are in family life, gender, and historical demography. Peter came to the Canadian Mysteries project as an authority on the Aurore Gagnon case and a long-time friend of the University of Victoria history department; he was a co-investigator in the Canadian Families Project (1996-2001) and a Visiting Scholar in the department (1999-2000).
  Les Grands Mystères de ...  
Françoise McNeil détient un baccalauréat en études anglaises (traduction et rédaction professionnelle), une maîtrise en littérature canadienne comparée (traduction littéraire) et elle est inscrite à la maîtrise en histoire à l’Université de Sherbrooke. Son mémoire examine l’évolution de la représentation sociale de la vieille fille au Québec aux XIXe et XXe siècles.
Françoise McNeil holds a BA in English Studies (Translation/Professional Writing), an MA in Comparative Canadian Literature (Literary Translation) and is currently enrolled in a Master’s in History at Université de Sherbrooke. Her thesis examines the evolution of the social representation of spinsters in Québec in the 19th and 20th centuries.
  Les Grands Mystères de ...  
Caroline-Isabelle Caron est anthropologue historique à Queen’s. Elle se spécialise dans l’étude de la culture populaire des Francophones nord-américains aux XIXe et XXe sècles. Ses projets de recherche ont jusqu’à maintenant porté sur les représentations du passé (sous la forme de généalogies, de légendes et de commémorations) et sur les représentations du futur (sous la forme de science-fiction et de fan fiction (fiction rédigée par les amateurs du genre).
Caroline-Isabelle Caron is a Historical Anthropoligist at Queen’s University who specializes in the study of the popular culture of North American Francophones in the 19th and 20th centuries. Her research projects so far have focused on representations of the past (in the form of genealogies, legends and commemorations) and on representations of the future (in the form of science fiction and fan fiction). She has tried to get a better sense, a closer glimpse, at Acadians' and Quebeckers' collective encyclopedias, in Umberto Eco's sense of the word, i.e. the sum of the experiences and representations possessed by a person, and more generally, by any collectivity, which enables them to understand their world, and act and react to various experiences. She is currently working on a book studying Acadian commemorations in 19th and 20th century Nova Scotia. A project in construction will explore how science fiction in Québec since the 1970s has mirrored collective hopes and social fears about culture and governance. Another future project will focus on the evolution of fannic creative production among women since the 19th century.
  Les Grands Mystères de ...  
Caroline-Isabelle Caron est anthropologue historique à Queen’s. Elle se spécialise dans l’étude de la culture populaire des Francophones nord-américains aux XIXe et XXe sècles. Ses projets de recherche ont jusqu’à maintenant porté sur les représentations du passé (sous la forme de généalogies, de légendes et de commémorations) et sur les représentations du futur (sous la forme de science-fiction et de fan fiction (fiction rédigée par les amateurs du genre).
Caroline-Isabelle Caron is a Historical Anthropoligist at Queen’s University who specializes in the study of the popular culture of North American Francophones in the 19th and 20th centuries. Her research projects so far have focused on representations of the past (in the form of genealogies, legends and commemorations) and on representations of the future (in the form of science fiction and fan fiction). She has tried to get a better sense, a closer glimpse, at Acadians' and Quebeckers' collective encyclopedias, in Umberto Eco's sense of the word, i.e. the sum of the experiences and representations possessed by a person, and more generally, by any collectivity, which enables them to understand their world, and act and react to various experiences. She is currently working on a book studying Acadian commemorations in 19th and 20th century Nova Scotia. A project in construction will explore how science fiction in Québec since the 1970s has mirrored collective hopes and social fears about culture and governance. Another future project will focus on the evolution of fannic creative production among women since the 19th century.