Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes
History and “field schools” are not often associated with each other. Nor is it common for students to report that their history course changed their lives, or for faculty to report that a particular class is a linchpin in sustaining their research momentum. But since 1998, an unusual history field...
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Canadian Historical Association / Société historique du Canada
2020
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fteruditdepot:oai:dspace.erudit.org:004688dd 2023-05-15T16:16:18+02:00 Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes Lives Are Changed When .Historians Go into the Field Lutz, John Carlson, KeithThor 2020-01-14 https://depot.erudit.org/id/004688dd en eng Canadian Historical Association / Société historique du Canada Vol 39 numéro 3; https://depot.erudit.org/id/004688dd Article 2020 fteruditdepot 2021-01-11T09:03:15Z History and “field schools” are not often associated with each other. Nor is it common for students to report that their history course changed their lives, or for faculty to report that a particular class is a linchpin in sustaining their research momentum. But since 1998, an unusual history field school has taken place every second spring with the Stó:lõ that is “transforming” the lives of students, enriching the scholarship of faculty, and generating meaningful historical research and analysis for First Nations people. The Stó:lõ [pronounced Stah-low] are the aboriginal people of the lower Fraser Riverwatershed (fromVancouver,B.C. eastward to the Fraser Canyon beyond Yale). The Ethnohistory Field School offers ten graduate students a cultural immersion and introduction to archival research methods common in history along with interviewing and participant observation methods common in ethnography. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Érudit - Dépôt de documents |
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Érudit - Dépôt de documents |
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English |
description |
History and “field schools” are not often associated with each other. Nor is it common for students to report that their history course changed their lives, or for faculty to report that a particular class is a linchpin in sustaining their research momentum. But since 1998, an unusual history field school has taken place every second spring with the Stó:lõ that is “transforming” the lives of students, enriching the scholarship of faculty, and generating meaningful historical research and analysis for First Nations people. The Stó:lõ [pronounced Stah-low] are the aboriginal people of the lower Fraser Riverwatershed (fromVancouver,B.C. eastward to the Fraser Canyon beyond Yale). The Ethnohistory Field School offers ten graduate students a cultural immersion and introduction to archival research methods common in history along with interviewing and participant observation methods common in ethnography. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Lutz, John Carlson, KeithThor |
spellingShingle |
Lutz, John Carlson, KeithThor Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
author_facet |
Lutz, John Carlson, KeithThor |
author_sort |
Lutz, John |
title |
Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
title_short |
Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
title_full |
Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
title_fullStr |
Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Historians in the News / Les historiens font les manchettes |
title_sort |
historians in the news / les historiens font les manchettes |
publisher |
Canadian Historical Association / Société historique du Canada |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://depot.erudit.org/id/004688dd |
genre |
First Nations |
genre_facet |
First Nations |
op_relation |
Vol 39 numéro 3; https://depot.erudit.org/id/004688dd |
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1766002152208072704 |