Nova Scotia and the Great War Revisited: Cultural Communities, Memory and the First World War

Martin Hubley Announcement
Location
Nova Scotia, Canada
Subject Fields
Black History / Studies, Canadian History / Studies, Cultural History / Studies, Indigenous Studies, Military History

It has been 100 years since the “war to end all wars”, from 1914 to 1918. Come hear academic, museum, community and youth speakers share ideas and discuss new research on the little-known contributions of cultural communities in Nova Scotia to the conflict. Explore different community views on the importance of commemoration and memory of the experience of the First World War. See how local Nova Scotian contributions fit in the larger Atlantic Canadian, national and international contexts.

Presentations Include

• No. 2 Construction Battalion in July 1916: Importance for African Nova Scotians
• Experiences of the Mi’kmaq, Acadian and Gaelic Nova Scotian communities
• Child soldiers
• The Jewish Legion at Fort Edward in Windsor

Youth Panels
Vimy Foundation participants and Avon View High School

Why is the memory of the Great War still important to students and youth today?

Keynote Speakers
Jonathan Vance
, University of Western Ontario
The First World War, Memory and Popular Culture in Canada

Sean Cadigan, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Myth, Memory and the First World War in Atlantic Canadian communities

Friday, June 10th 2016, 12pm to 7:30pm and Saturday, June 11th 2016, 9am to 7pm

Hants County War Memorial Community Centre, 78 Thomas St., Windsor, NS

Full program: http://www.smu.ca/webfiles/Symposiumschedule.pdf 

Free Admission, All welcome.

Register in advance:  Online: http://www.smu.ca/NSFirstWorldWar    Phone: 902-420-5668  email: gorsebrook@smu.ca

Contact Information

Organized by the Nova Scotia Museum, Saint Mary's University Gorsebrook Research Institute, Centre d'études acadiennes, Université de Moncton, Army Museum Halifax Citadel, and Parks Canada. 

Contact Email
gorsebrook@smu.ca