Today in Hockey History

January 5, 2011 § Leave a comment

Happy New Year!  It’s been awhile since I’ve posted, I got caught up in the craziness that is the end of the semester and then took a nice relaxing Holiday sabbatical. Anyway, yesterday, whilst sitting in a MacDonald’s parking lot in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, I did a radio interview with CJSW in Calgary, their excellent “Today in Canadian History” series. I was honoured with their first podcast last 1 July talking about the meanings of Canadian Confederation.  Today marks 111 years since the Montréal Canadiens played their first home hockey game, so here I am talking about the importance of the Habs.

Why We Should be Teaching Students Grammar and Writing Skills

November 15, 2010 § 1 Comment

I got this email this morning for a study about what I’m not entirely sure because it’s not explained.  What disturbs me even more is if this is legitimate, it comes from a respected research university and had to be sent out with the approval of the professor.  Egads.

The laboratory on Sxxxxxxxxxxxxxx at the University of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx directed by xxxxxx is now running a study on the perceptions and social representation. This projet is designed to help understand how people build their perceptions on society and the individuels that composes it.

To permit ourselves to complet this projet, we are looking for participants to respond to the questionnaire. Would it be possible for me to come and present this study in you’re class? The participation would only last a maximum of 30 minutes and would permit you’re students to have an academic experience.

Thank’s for the attention you  to this message!

 

Shameless Self Promotion, for a good cause

October 14, 2010 § Leave a comment

I was on GlobalNews at 6 last night here in Montréal in a story about the Griffintown Horse Palace and our plans to save the Palace from re-development in Griffintown.  Also, The Gazette has a similar story this morning has a story.

Old Hawley Town Commons

October 13, 2010 § 11 Comments

Driving through the hills of Western Massachusetts this past long weekend, we came across the old Town Commons of Hawley.  Hawley today is a town that is home to fewer than 400 people and has no real centre to it.  Aside from a Highways Department, there’s not much evidence of an infrastructure in Hawley, though there is also a Town Hall.  There is no post office or schools in Hawley, nor is there, to my knowledge a church.  There is one corner store, though, but no gas stations.  For services, the people of Hawley tend to travel to neighbouring towns, in particular, Charlemont.

Hawley Town hall

But Hawley has a history.  Pioneers from nearby Hatfield made their way up the mountains and into Hawley.  It was incorporated as a town in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1792.  From then until the mid-19th century, Hawley was a centre of the forestry industry, as well as several smaller businesses, like the usual: blacksmiths, taverns, etc.  There was once an old town commons on what is today called East Hawley Road.

Today, the old Town Commons is the parking lot for a series of trails that explores the bog and lakes around the area.  There is also an information kiosk about the old town commons, including a plan of what used to be there.

Now, it’s not like North America is a place without history, though sometimes it’s as though Europeans seem to think it is.  The aboriginals have been here for thousands of years, and there are remnants and ruins of their cultures littered across the continent.  The Spanish have been in Mexico since the early 16th century.  The French have been in Canada since the early 17th century, around the same time the Dutch and the English landed in what is now the United States.  And those European colonies conquered, colonised, and displaced the aboriginal populations as they expanded across the continent.  So none of this is news, but my point is that there is evidence of earlier settlements and cultures across the continent.

Out west, there are ghost towns.  These places were once booming frontier towns whose time has come and gone.  The most recent spate of ghost towns date from the 80s and 90s, as frontier industry dried up and hit hard times.  Sometimes, the ghost towns aren’t on the frontiers.  As a teenager, I lived in Port Moody, BC, which itself had annexed and old Imperial Oil Company town, cleverly called Ioco (get it, Imperial Oil Co.?).  By the time I lived there in the early 90s, the town had long since been abandoned, the oil refinery on its last legs (it’s since been closed).

Lawn Bowling in Ioco, c. 1920

In the eastern part of the continent, ghost towns are rarer, but if you find yourself in the countryside, there are abandoned farmhouses and homesteads.  In the swamps of Eastern Ontario between Kingston and Ottawa, near the Rideau Canal, one sees countless abandoned homesteads from the windows of the train.  This was marginal land, settled in the 19th century and then abandoned and farm kids moved into the industrial towns and cities that dot the landscape of eastern Ontario.  In Western Massachusetts, the area around Hawley is littered with decaying stone fences that once marked of homesteads from each other.  Now they appear as seemingly random markers in the woods.

But to see visual evidence of a settlement that no longer exists is something else.  I found it slightly strange to be standing on a site that 150 years ago was home to taverns, churches, shops, and the like.  More people lived in Hawley in those days, of course, and travel to the neighbouring towns wasn’t as easy as it is today.  The roads of Western Mass are narrow and windy as they go up and down the hills, around corners, avoiding private property, mountains, hills, lakes, creeks, and rivers.

Drawing of Old Town Commons, Hawley, MA

But once there were people in Hawley, and there was a common.  And that’s where they conducted their business, got married, had their children baptised, got drunk, fought, and came together as a community.  It was rather eery to stand in that same place on a sunny Sunday 150 years later, contemplating whether or not the bog would be a good place to walk the dog, and pondering the Volkswagen, Subaru, and Volvo station wagons that brought the yuppies from Boston, New York, Northampton (and, of course, Montréal) to the trails that lead out from the Old Town Common of Hawley.  The land today is owned by the 5 Colleges of the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts.  And they’re the ones who’ve put the effort into at least re-creating the plan of the Old Commons and they take care of the bog and the trails.

Nerd Humour

September 17, 2010 § Leave a comment

I have finally decided to read the foundational text of my discipline/profession, Herodotus’ The Histories. So far, halfway through Book 3, it is a lively and informative read.  I’m reading the Penguin Classics version, translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt half a century ago in 1954.  This edition, published in 2003, was updated and revised by John Marincola of New York University.  Anyway.  At the start of Book 3, there is an account of the weather in Egypt:

In the reign of his [King Amasis of Egypt] successor Psammenitus, an unparalleled event occurred — rain fell at Thebes, a thing which the men of that city say had never happened before, or has ever happened since till my day.  Normally, in upper Egypt no rain falls at all; but on this occasion it did — a light shower.

This causes Marincola to drily observe in the notes: “It does in fact rain in Upper Egypt, but not much.”

Hilarious.

Something is Rotten in the Country of Canada

September 6, 2010 § Leave a comment

Seriously, there is something deeply and fundamentally flawed in this country.  According to The Globe & Mail, Ontario is making a push to become the centre of the digital entertainment industry in Canada.  That’s all fine and good until one realises that the industry is presently centred in Vancouver and Montréal.  So, basically, Toronto, backed by the provincial government, is now going to take on the other two major cities in the country, backed by their own provincial governments, in order to see who wins.  This is just wrong.

Certainly, the provinces have had flashpoints, economically speaking, including Québec’s infamous deal with Newfoundland for Churchill Falls.  But that deal was made because Newfoundland lacked the ability to harness the power of Churchill Falls.  Vancouver and Montréal, on the other hand, are already the centre of this industry.  What Toronto and Ontario are doing here is nothing short of cannibalisation.

Something is wrong, very wrong, in this country.

Griffintown Horse Palace Foundation Soirée

September 4, 2010 § Leave a comment

I am pleased to announce that the Griffintown Horse Palace Foundation will be hosting a shared benefit soirée on Thursday, 14 October from 6-9pm with the Darling Foundry.  The event will be held at the Darling, which is located at 745, rue Ottawa, in Griffntown.  The poster is below.

Tickets cost 125$, per person and are tax deductible.  They can be procured either by contacting me, or on the Horse Palace Foundation’s website.

Racists v. Obama

August 25, 2010 § 2 Comments

One thing that is driving me nuts these days is the extreme right wing in the United States.  In particular, the morons who consistently assert that 1) Barack Obama was not born in the United States and 2) Barack Obama is a Muslim.  This on-going idiocy exists for one simple reason: racism.  The only reason why people question whether Obama was born in the United States is because he’s got an ‘unusual’ name, that includes the name “Hussein” as his middle name.  If his name was Joe Smith, this debate wouldn’t exist.  And this leads to why these eejits are accusing him of being a Muslim: he’s black and his middle name is Hussein.  The fact that these morons continue this assault on Obama leaves me feeling, one the one hand, depressed at the state of humanity today.  On the other hand, though, it occasionally occurs to me that if this is the best these feeble-minded folk can come up with, maybe Obama’s not doing such a bad job after all? 

Seriously, what I do wonder is why no one on Obama’s side (i.e.: the Democrats) actually fights back and calls these idiots what they are: racist, moronic idiots.

Because they need to, they should.  Because the idiocy of these racists leads to events like this, where a cabbie in NYC was asked if he was a Muslim before he was stabbed.  There are consequences of the hatemongering begun by these morons, by playing on and exploiting the fears of people.  As far as I’m concerned, the racists who attack Obama in this way are responsible for idiots like this guy who stabbed the cabbie in New York because he is a Muslim.

Vive le Canada!

June 30, 2010 § 1 Comment

Tomorrow, Canada Day, I will be on CJSW radio in Calgary, as part of their new series, “Today in Canadian History“, where I will be talking about the process of Canadian independence between 1848 and 1982.   Details below:

Today in Canadian History launches on Canada Day of 2010. Each episode of the series contains an interview with a Canadian professor, journalist, author, or “everyday” historian and focuses on a unique event or moment that took place on that day in Canadian history. To date, the series has received contributions from over sixty individuals from across Canada.

As a podcast and radio series, Today in Canadian History presents Canada’s past in a unique and accessible manner. The series is designed to be a first step to learning more about our past. We would like to remind Canadians not just about what makes our country great, but what makes it complicated, beautiful, diverse, and ours.

How Can I Listen?

Starting on Canada Day, CJSW will be making the audio available on a variety of platforms. You can listen to the episodes:

  1. Every weekday morning on CJSW 90.9 FM in Calgary and cjsw.com!
  2. On this webpage (audio will be posted every weekday)
  3. On our Facebook page (search, “Today in Canadian History”)
  4. As a podcast (series will be posted in iTunes on Canada Day)

The series is produced by Joe Burima and Marc Affeld. Local jazz musicians Simon Fisk, Steve Fletcher, and Jon May provided original music for the series. Original artwork was provided by Reid Blakley.
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For more information, or to get involved in the series, contact Joe Burima at (403) 220 8033, or todayincanadianhistory@cjsw.com

French Culture in Downtown Montréal

June 22, 2010 § Leave a comment

One of the most persistent complaints of the linguistic nationalists of Québec is about the fate of the French language in downtown Montréal.  They claim it’s an English centre again, that they can’t get served in their own language anymore.   It’s true to a degree, you hear more English in downtown Montréal than anywhere else in the city, but it’s not just because of the old Anglo business class.  It’s also because downtown Montréal is where the tourists go, along with the old city.  And the tourists, largely Americans, like to be served in their own language.  But you want service in French, it’s there. 

But there is a creeping Anglicisation going on here, culturally-speaking anyway.  The downtown movie theatres don’t show French-language films, and if they do, they’re subtitled in English.  There are no French-language bookstores downtown.  There is an Indigo, a Chapters, a few Coles, and Paragraphe, which, despite its name, is an English-language store.  There was a Renaud-Bray near Concordia University, but it closed a few years back and is now a chicken restaurant.  The big Archambault in the old Eatons store is now a clothing store.  The French-language music section of HMV downtown is wanting.  And French-language DVDs there? Forget about it.

Yesterday, I was on a mission.  I wanted to find a québécois film, le 15 fevrier 1839, about the plight of a few Patriote rebels and their execution in prison by the British on 15 February 1839.  Anyway, this was a big film when it came out a few years back, caused a lot of controversy.  One idiot writing in The Hour even claimed the Patriotes were génocidaires.  So, I thought it would be easy to find.  HMV doesn’t carry French-language films, though it does have a big section of French-language TV DVDs.  The movie store in the Carrefour Industrielle-Alliance, its “Section française” is about 3% of the store.  Indigo, forget about it.  So I walked to the Renaud-Bray in Place-des-Arts.  Nope, its film section is all English-language movies.  So, for sure, the big Archambault at the corner of Sainte-Catherine and Berri would have it, correct?  Nope.  Its film section is also about 95% English-language films.  Their québécois section is tiny, and shoved into the back corner of the store.

I don’t get this.  Québécois cinema is the only one in Canada that is actually watched.  People go to québécois films here, they make money, and so on.  But don’t try t0 find québécois films on DVD in downtown Montréal, my friends.  Because they’re not there.  In the end, I had to go up the rue Saint-Denis to Boîte Noîre to find my film.  The Plateau, that is.

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