Publication Credits
“The 1907 Bell Telephone Strike: Organizing Women Workers,” Labour/Le Travailleur 3 (1978): 109–30. Reprinted by permission of Labour/Le Travail.
“The Communist Party and the Woman Question, 1922–1929,” Labour/Le Travail 15 (1985): 25–56. Reprinted by permission of Labour/Le Travail.
“The Softball Solution: Female Workers, Male Managers, and the Operation of Paternalism at Westclox, 1923–1960,” Labour/Le Travail 32 (1993): 167–99. Reprinted by permission of Labour/Le Travail.
“‘Pardon Tales’ from Magistrate’s Court: Women, Crime, and the Courts in Peterborough County, 1920–1950,” Canadian Historical Review 74 (June 1993): 160–97. Copyright © University of Toronto Press. Reprinted by permission of the University of Toronto Press Incorporated (www.utpjournals.com).
“Telling Our Stories: Feminist Debates and the Use of Oral History,” Women’s History Review 3, no. 1 (1994): 5–27. Reprinted by permission of the Women’s History Review.
“Criminalizing the Colonized: Ontario Native Women Confront the Criminal Justice System, 1920–1960,” Canadian Historical Review 80, no. 1 (March 1999): 32–60. Copyright © University of Toronto Press. Reprinted by permission of the University of Toronto Press Incorporated (www.utpjournals.com).
“Girls in Conflict with the Law: Exploring the Construction of Female ‘Delinquency’ in Ontario, 1940–1960,” Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 12, no. 1 (2000): 1–35. Copyright © University of Toronto Press. Reprinted by permission of the University of Toronto Press Incorporated (www.utpjournals.com).
“Constructing the ‘Eskimo’ Wife: White Women’s Travel Writing, Colonialism, and the Canadian North, 1940–1960” is reprinted with the permission of the Publisher from Creating Postwar Canada: Community, Diversity, and Dissent, 1945–75, edited by Magda Fahrni and Robert Rutherdale, 23–44. Copyright © University of British Columbia Press, 2007. All rights reserved by the Publisher.
“Making a Fur Coat: Women, the Labouring Body, and Working-Class History,” International Review of Social History 52 (2007): 241–70. Reprinted by permission of the International Review of Social History.
“Words of Experience/Experiencing Words: Reading Working Women’s Letters to Canada’s Royal Commission on the Status of Women” is a longer version of an essay that appeared in the Canadian Historical Review 92, no. 1 (March 2011): 135–61, under the title “Invoking Experience as Evidence” (copyright © University of Toronto Press). The author is grateful to the University of Toronto Press Incorporated (www.utpjournals.com) for permission to reprint significant portions of that essay.