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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Introduction
  4. Part 1. Formations
    1. 1. Empire, Colonial Enterprise, and Speculation: Cape Breton’s Coal Boom of the 1860s
    2. 2. “The Grand Old Game”: The Complex History of Cricket in Cape Breton, 1863 to 1914
    3. 3. Bridging Religion and Black Nationalism: The Founding of St. Philips African Orthodox Church and the Universal Negro Improvement Association Hall in Whitney Pier, 1900–1930
    4. 4. An Invisible Minority: Acadians in Industrial Cape Breton
    5. 5. The Disposition of the Ladies: Mi’kmaw Women and the Removal of Kun’tewiktuk / King’s Road Reserve, Sydney, Nova Scotia
  5. Part 2. Legacies
    1. 6. C. B. Wade, Research Director and Labour Historian, 1944–50
    2. 7. “Everybody Was Crying”: Ella Barron, Dutch War Bride in Amsterdam and Ingonish, Cape Breton, 1923–2023
    3. 8. Twenty-First-Century Uses for Twentieth-Century Nova Scotia Gaelic Song Collections: From Language Preservation to Revitalization and the Articulation of Cultural Values
    4. 9. Industrial Crisis and the Cape Breton Coal Miners at the End of the Long Twentieth Century, 1981–86
    5. 10. The Great Spawn: Aquaculture and Development on the Bras d’Or Lake
    6. 11. From Artifact to Living Cultures: Cape Breton’s Tourism History and the Emergence of the Celtic Colours International Festival
  6. Afterword: Cape Breton as Microcosm of Capitalist Modernity
  7. List of Contributors

Working Canadians: Books from the CCLH

Series editors: Alvin Finkel and Greg Kealey

Labour activism has a long and powerful history in Canada. Since 1976, the Canadian Committee on Labour History has published Labour/Le Travail, Canada’s pre-eminent scholarly journal of labour studies. Working Canadians: Books from the CCLH, published in conjunction with AU Press, likewise focuses on the lives and struggles of Canada’s working people, past and present, and on the unions and other organizations that workers founded to represent their interests. The books in the series span a wide range of genres—from oral histories, autobiographies, and memoir to works that document local and provincial labour movements to secondary analyses founded on careful research but written in a down-to-earth style. Underlying the series is the recognition that anyone who labours on behalf of another is a working person, and that, as working people, we continually participate in creating our own history. That history, which stands as a tribute to our collective strength, should not be solely an object of academic scrutiny. Rather, it is living part of our identity as working people and should be readily accessible to all.

Series Titles

Champagne and Meatballs: Adventures of a Canadian Communist

Bert Whyte, edited and with an introduction by Larry Hannant

Union Power: Solidarity and Struggle in Niagara

Carmela Patrias and Larry Savage

Working People in Alberta: A History

Alvin Finkel, with contributions by Jason Foster, Winston Gereluk, Jennifer Kelly and Dan Cui, James Muir, Joan Schiebelbein, Jim Selby, and Eric Strikwerda

Provincial Solidarities: A History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour

David Frank

Solidarités provinciales: Histoire de la Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Nouveau-Brunswick

David Frank, traduit par Réjean Ouellette

The Wages of Relief: Cities and the Unemployed in Prairie Canada, 1929–39

Eric Strikwerda

Defying Expectations: The Case of UFCW Local 401

Jason Foster

Dissenting Traditions: Essays on Bryan D. Palmer, Marxism, and History

Edited by Sean Carleton, Ted McCoy, and Julia Smith

Cape Breton in the Long Twentieth Century: Formations and Legacies of Industrial Capitalism

Edited by Lachlan MacKinnon and Andrew Parnaby

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