TABLE OF CONTENTS: Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes, "None Is Too Many and Beyond: New Research on Canada and the Jews During the 1930-1940s"
The new issue of Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes is now available online !
Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal devoted to original scholarship that illuminates any and all aspects of the Canadian Jewish experience. Published annually since 1993 by the Association for Canadian Jewish Studies / l’Association d’études juives canadiennes (ACJS/Aéjc), the electronic version of journal is free and accessible here.
Irving Abella and Harold Troper’s book None is Too Many caused a sensation when it was published in 1983 and profoundly shook Canada’s national narrative. This special issue of the journal sheds new light on a complex period of Canadian history and revisits Abella and Troper's claims in light of three decades of new scholarship.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Un "tsunami historiographique" laissé sans suite? / An Unquestionned "Scholarly Tsunami"?
Antoine Burgard, Rebecca Margolis
Articles
Deux poids, deux mesures: les responsabilités respectives du Canada de langue anglaise et de langue française dans la crise des réfugiés allemands
Pierre Anctil
Sionisme de gauche, agriculturalisme et immigration juive au Canada au lendemain de la Grande Guerre
Simon-Pierre Lacasse
Friends with Benefits: Leon Koerner and Frederick Charles Blair, 1939-1959
Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell
Opening Closed Doors: Revisiting the Canadian Immigration Record (1933-1945)
Justin Comartin
The Holocaust, Canadian Jews, and Canada’s “Good War” Against Nazism
Norman Erwin
Sortir de l’ombre: Canadiennes juives engagées dans le mouvement d’orphelins (1947-1949)
Sheena Trimble
Canadianising the Holocaust: Debating Canada’s National Holocaust Monument
Jason Chalmers
The Archives Matter / Les archives importent
Introduction
Janice Rosen
Once Is Not Enough: The Canadian Jewish Archives and other Montreal Collections Reconsidered after None Is Too Many
Janice Rosen
Organizing Relief: A Review of the Records of the United Jewish Relief Agencies of Toronto, 1938-1953
Melissa Caza
Documentation of the Holocaust in the Maritimes
Katherine Biggs-Craft
Book Reviews/Comptes rendus
REVIEW: Pierre Anctil, "À chacun ses juifs : 60 éditoriaux pour comprendre la position du Devoir à l’égard des Juifs. 1910-1947"
Olivier Bérubé-Sasseville
REVIEW: Pierre Anctil et Simon Jacobs, eds., "Les Juifs de Québec: quatre cents ans d’histoire"
Christine Chevalier-Caron
REVIEW: Mark Celinscak, "Distance from the Belsen Heap: Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Nazi Concentration Camp"
Robert H. Abzug
REVIEW: Hasia R. Diner, "Roads Taken: The Great Jewish Migrations to the New World and the Peddlers Who Forged the Way"
Yosef D. Robinson
REVIEW: David Fraser, "“Honorary Protestants”: The Jewish School Question in Montreal, 1867-1997"
Roderick MacLeod
REVIEW: Adara Goldberg, "Holocaust Survivors in Canada: Exclusion, Inclusion and Transformation, 1947-1955"
Harold Troper
REVIEW: Na Li, "Kensington Market: Collective Memory, Public History, and Toronto’s Urban Landscape"
Jack Lipinsky
REVIEW: John Lorinc, Michael McClelland, Ellen Scheinberg and Tatum Taylor, eds., "The Ward: The Life and Loss of Toronto’s First Immigrant Neighbourhood"
Franklin Bialystok
REVIEW: Richard Menkis and Harold Troper, eds., "More Than Just Games: Canada and the 1936 Olympics"
David M. K. Sheinin
REVIEW: Lillooet Nördlinger McDonnell, "Raincoast Jews: Integration in British Columbia"
Cynthia Ramsay
REVIEW: Ira Robinson, Rivka Augenfeld and Karen Biskin, eds., "The Future of the Past: The Jewish Public Library of Montreal, 1914-2014"
Erin Corber
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