“the gods bring threads to webs begun”: african-americans
“the gods bring threads to webs begun”: african-americans
“the gods bring threads to webs begun”: african-americans
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
O<br />
H<br />
A<br />
S<br />
E<br />
S<br />
S<br />
I<br />
O<br />
N<br />
ORAL TRADITION AND CANADA’S FIRST NATIONS PEOPLE<br />
Sponsored by the Oral His<strong>to</strong>ry Association<br />
MODERATOR:<br />
JANET TRIMBLE, THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO<br />
PANELISTS:<br />
COMMENT:<br />
BRUCE HODGINS, FROST CENTER FOR CANADIAN HISTORY AND<br />
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES<br />
JAMES MICHAEL, THE TREATY AND ABORIGINAL RIGHTS RESEARCH<br />
CENTRE<br />
CORY CAROLE SILVERSTEIN, MCMASTER UNIVERSITY<br />
JANET TRIMBLE<br />
THE AUDIENCE<br />
MATERNALIST SOCIAL POLICY IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY<br />
UNITED STATES: HISTORICAL TENSIONS AND POLITICAL<br />
CONTRADICTIONS<br />
PRESIDING:<br />
REGINA MORANTZ-SANCHEZ, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN<br />
PAPERS:<br />
Liberalism, Momism, and Maternalist Social Policy in the 1950s<br />
COMMENT:<br />
APRIL 22—1:00 - 3:00 P.M.<br />
KATE CANNON, UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AT BOSTON<br />
Private Concerns, Public Health: Political and Ideological Conflicts<br />
between the American Birth Control League and “Progressive<br />
Maternalists” during the Interwar Years<br />
ROBYN ROSEN, MARIST COLLEGE<br />
MICHELLE MITCHELL, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN<br />
REGINA MORANTZ-SANCHEZ<br />
28