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A chapter of the book "Labour/Le Travail" is presented. It explores the historical works on immigrants in Canada that offer significant contributions to immigrant history in the country. It highlights the emergence of new approaches that promote new ways of writing about immigrants. It highlights the belief of scholars that race-ethnicity is a significant category of analysis as well as issues on the popularity of the class-gender-race/ethnicity analytical framework.
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The article reviews the book, "The Immigrant World of Ybor City: Italians and Their Latin Neighbors in Tampa, 1880-1980," by Gary R. Mormino and George E. Pozzetta.
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This article reviews the book, "Family Life in Central Italy, 1880-1910: Sharecropping, Wage Labor and Coresidence," by David I. Kertzer.
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Reports on the various presentations made by academics and union activists at the day-long conference, including by Madelaine Parent.
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Interrogates the currents of scholarly inquiry into the Italian emigration of the 19th and 20th centuries. Argues for a woman-centred, gendered, and proletarian history of this diaspora, and suggests new areas of investigation.
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Discusses and provides examples of documentation of Italian radicals in Canada at the Casellario Politico Centrale (Rome), the files of which were extensive during the Fascist dictatorship in Italy (1922-43) since the regime wanted to identify and monitor its opponents. Argues that these materials may be used to write the history of the Italian left/anti-Fascism in Canada as well as contributing to studies of Canadian labour/immigration history and the international anti-fascist movement.
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Joan Sangster's "Beyond Dichotomies" (left history, 3.1, Spring/Summer 1995) is a polemic on the relationship between women's history and gender history. As such, it tends to bring out issues and highlight debates but, at the same time, it sometimes inevitably simplifies and potentially misrepresents in order to address important points. As friends and colleagues, we would like to take issue with some of the assertions and suggestions made in Sangster's piece. We think it is important to debate these issues and we hope to make a contribution. Such issues are central in feminist historical debates internationally and, while individuals who write Canadian women's history and gender history have clearly borrowed from the intemational literature, there has been no sustained Canadian "debate," at least not in print. --Introduction
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A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Immigration and Labour: Australia and Canada Compared" published in "Labour/Le Travail."
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