Blog — ...the rule,” Warned Benjamin, through 1940s storms. I want the news to tell us Pauline won, That she got a Nobel or the Order Of Canada, or has been canonized....
— ...Press is committed to the open dissemination of scholarship to readers around the world. As such, most AU Press publications are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC...
Blog — ...her family’s escape from Nazi Germany, through Russia, to Japan. The following excerpt is from early in the book when the Rothschilds are still living in Berlin. It is 1932...
Book — To Know Our Many Selves profiles the history of Canadian Studies, which began as early as the 1840s with the Study of Canada. Professor Dirk Hoerder discusses this comprehensive examination...
Blog — ...fun publishing news in these virtual pages. Today, we are sharing our favourite posts from the past twelve months below and giving you a sneak peek at some upcoming posts....
Blog — ...it out,’ or to almost ‘endure’ something. The translation gets lost in English, but stories help with the translation. When a blizzard or thunderstorm is approaching, a herd of iinniwa...
Blog — ...significant entry point (Absolon and Willet 2005); it has also been recognized as “important in terms of being able to make research an embodied journey” (Batacharya 2010, 162). Indigenous research...
Contributor — ...from Odisha, India. She previously worked as an editor at Cambridge University Press India, and now edits the online journal, Indian Literature Today, which publishes Indian literature in English translation....
Book — ...rights and agency in each circumstance. By dismantling the Western world’s romantic notion of childhood innocence, the authors critically explore understandings of young people as agents in their own worlds....
Book — ...theme: the importance of an agent’s environment. Even simple agents, such as LEGO robots, are capable of exhibiting complex behaviour when they can sense and affect the world around them....