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Spring, 2006
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Labour/Le Travail

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Contributors / Collaborateurs


Donica Belisle is a PhD candidate in Canadian Studies at Trent University. Her dissertation, "The Rise of Mass Retail: Canada's Largest Department Stores, 1890 to 1940," examines Canadians' changing relationships with consumer capitalism. She has published articles on consumerism in The Canadian Historical Review and this journal.

 
David Camfield is Assistant Professor in the Labour and Workplace Studies Program at the University of Manitoba.

 
Michael Dupuis is a retired History teacher. He has written for Manitoba History and his collection of interview tapes and letters related to the Winnipeg Strike is held at Library and Archives Canada in Ottawa.

 
Kristin Hulme is a PhD candidate in the Political Studies Department at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.

 
Alex Lichtenstein is an Associate Professor of History at Rice University, in Hous-ton, Texas. He is the author of Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South (Verso).

 
Lawrence D. Stokes is Adjunct Professor (retired) of modern German and Euro-pean history at Dalhousie University. He is preparing a volume of essays on German Canadian relations during the interwar period, including one about writer A.E. Johann.

 
Melissa Turkstra has recently completed her PhD in History at York University. Her dissertation looks at Christianity and the working class in early 20th-century English Canada.

 
John Willis has been a historian with the Canadian Postal Museum-Canadian Museum of Civilization for about 15 years. With Chantal Amyot, he is co-author of a study on the rural postal service in Canada (Country Post), and has published articles and papers on the history of the post. With a team, he prepared a virtual exhibition entitled Before E-commerce. A History of Canadian Mail-Order Catalogues.

 


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