The Unwritten Rules of History

Author: Andrea Eidinger (Page 14 of 38)

Guest Post: “The Sourdough’s Favorite Beverage”: Place, Identity, and the Klondike Brewery, 1904-1919

Neon sign that says: "Craft Beer for the People."

 

Note from Andrea: I’m just finishing up my marking for my condensed summer course, so we have another special guest post for you today! When I found out that Heather Green was researching beer in the Klondike, I just knew I had to talk her into a blog post. Enjoy!

 

Image of Heather Green.Heather Green recently received her PhD from the University of Alberta studying environmental and indigenous histories of gold mining in the Klondike region of the Yukon from 1890 to 1940. She is an incoming Wilson Postdoctoral Fellow at McMaster University where she will research trophy hunting tourism in the southern Yukon from 1920 to 1950.

 

This blog is the early research for a larger collaborative project with Matt Papai (University of Alberta) on the connections between local identity, environment, and beer production in the Yukon. Both collaborators are craft beer enthusiasts, and the idea for this project arose in 2015 from discussions about the environmental impacts of Northern beer production while researching in the Yukon and Alaska. Our next steps include examining liquor laws, temperance, and prohibition movements in the Yukon, as well as tracing commodity chains of brewing ingredients into the North. We also hope to investigate how successful O’Brien’s ad campaign was in reaching the public.

The craft beer movement has gained momentum over the past few decades with new microbreweries popping up each year all over North America and around the globe. In Canada, the microbrewery movement began in the 1980s, primarily in Halifax, Nova Scotia and Vancouver, British Columbia. Today, you are guaranteed to find at least one craft brewery in most towns and cities in Canada. Around the world one thing seems to ring true no matter where you go – breweries, and the beer they produce, hold a connection with place and local identity.

 

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At the Kitchen Table: The 1940s

Two historians of 20th century domesticity in Canada give you the dish on CBC’s Back in Time for Dinner.

Photo of the Campus family dressed in the style of the 1940s, posing in the kitchen.

Image courtesy of CBC.

Note from Andrea: You knew I couldn’t pass up an opportunity to talk about the new show from CBC, Back in Time for Dinner, where one family will experience what life was like over the course of decades, from the 1940s to the 2000s. As some of you may be aware, my actual research focuses, among other things, on domestic life. And of course, I had to ask Kesia Kvill to be a part of this, since she has extensive experience as a historical interpreter for the period in question (she has actually used a wringer washer, folks!). The show will air for a total of six weeks, starting on June 14th., and airs on Thursday nights at 8 pm EST/11 pm PST. We will be posting our reviews for the previous week’s episode on Thursday at 1 pm EST/10 am PST, so that you have enough time to catch up before the next episode airs. Both of us will provide individual reviews (and sometimes even Lee will comment!), followed by a short (possibly silly) discussion and a short list of recommended readings at the end. So without any further ado, enjoy this special summer-time series, starting with the 1940s.

 

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Guest Post: Yes, Canada Did Burn Down the White House in the War of 1812

 

An image of flames against a black background

 

Note from Andrea: Today we’re excited to bring you a very special guest post by Rachel Bryant. This post was previously published on her blog (https://rachelbryant.ca), and she has graciously given us permission to repost it here! Enjoy!

Image of Rachel Bryant.Rachel Bryant is a is a Settler Canadian researcher who divides her time between the unceded territories of the Mi’kmaq and Wolastoqiyik peoples. She is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of English at Dalhousie University in K’jipuktuk/Halifax and the author of The Homing Place: Indigenous and Settler Literary Legacies of the Atlantic (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2017). She spends most of her time in Menahkwesk/Saint John with her partner and their two babies.

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Reflections on CHA 2018

A word cloud of the 2018 CHA program.

Another CHA Annual Meeting is in the books! This was definitely, if you will excuse the pun, a conference of historic proportions. Before I go any further, I want to recognize all of the amazing work that was done by this year’s Program Chair, Katrina Ackerman, the rest of the Program Committee (James Naylor, Carolyn Strange, Jo-Anne McCutcheon, Keith Carlson, Laura Madokoro, Kurt Koneski, Melissa Shaw, Michel Ducharme, Philip Charrier, Roger Sarty, Stéphane Castonguay, and Susan Roy), and the Local Area Committee (Raymond Blake and Ian Germani). They, but Katrina in particular, did a really fantastic job! Thank you!

As strange as it sounds, this was actually the first time that Stephanie and I got the chance to meet in person (I know!). So to honour this, we thought it would be fun to do this reflection as a conversation between the two of us. Enjoy!

 

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My Top Picks for CHA 2018

Close up show of a watch face, with a black background and gold markings. The letters are in roman numerals, and there is also a dial for astrological signs.

 

You know what the end of May means: it’s once again time for the CHA Annual Meeting! As last year, I have put together a short guide to the CHA, including information on using the app, that will be hosted over on the CHA’s website. I’ll post the link as soon as I have it!

And of course, I’m back again with my top picks! In this post, I’ll go over the panels that I think will be the most popular as well as the ones that I am planning to attend! As I said last year,  think of it as a history version of “Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego,” only it’s just me, not some super exciting spy. Just remember that these are just my recommendations, and I wish there was a way to attend multiple panels at once.

One final note before I get down to business: if you spot me running around, please don’t be afraid to come and say hi!

 

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