Reading notes

Order DescriptionSubmit reading notes for four of the following articles: Allan Greer, “National, Transnational, and Hypernational Historiographies: New France Meets Early American History,” Canadian Historical Review 91, no. 4 (December 2010): 695–724. doi: 10.3138/chr.91.4.695. Alan Gordon, “The Many Meanings of Jacques Cartier,” chap. 6 in The Hero and the Historians: Historiography and the Uses of Jacques Cartier (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010) (TRU library e-book, search: The Hero and the Historians ) A.B. McKillop, “Who Killed Canadian History? A View from the Trenches,” Canadian Historical Review, 99, no.2 (June 1999): 269-300. Charles C. Mann, “1491,” The Atlantic (March 2002), https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2002/03/1491/302445/. Susan Neylan, “Unsettling British Columbia: Canadian Aboriginal Historiography, 1992–2012,” History Compass 11, no. 10 (October 2013): 845–858, doi: 10.1111/hic3/12085. Harald E. L. Prins, “Children of Gluskap: Wabanaki Indians on the Eve of the European Invasion,” chap. 4 in American Beginnings: Exploration, Culture, and Cartography in the Land of Norumbega, eds. Emerson W. Baker, Edwin A. Churchill, Richard D’Abate, Kristine L. Jones, Victor A. Conrad, and Harald E. L. Prins. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1994), 95–117.