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7 Results for “"Athabasca University Press"”



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Leaving Iran

Leaving Iran

Between Migration and Exile
by Goldin Farideh
edition:eBook
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tagged : personal memoirs, jewish studies

In 1976, at the age of twenty-three, Farideh Goldin left Iran in search of her imagined America. She sought an escape from the suffocation she felt under the cultural rules of her country and the future her family had envisioned for her. While she settled uneasily into American life, the political unrest in Iran intensified and in February of 1979, …

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Reel Time

Reel Time

Movie Exhibitors and Movie Audiences in Prairie Canada, 1896 to 1986
by Robert M. Seiler & Tamara P. Seiler
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : social history, history & criticism

In this authoritative work, Seiler and Seiler argues that the establishment and development of moviegoing and movie exhibition in Prairie Canada is best understood in the context of changing late-nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century social, economic, and technological developments. From the first entrepreneurs who attempted to lure custom …

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Flexible Pedagogy, Flexible Practice

Flexible Pedagogy, Flexible Practice

Notes from the Trenches of Distance Education
edited by Elizabeth Burge; Chère Campbell Gibson & Terry Gibson
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : distance education & learning, computers & technology

Flexibility has become a watchword in modern education, but its implementation is by no means a straightforward matter. Flexible Pedagogy, Flexible Practice sheds light on the often taken-for-granted assumptions that inform daily practice and examines the institutional dynamics that help and hinder efforts toward flexibility. The collection in inte …

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Goodlands

Goodlands

A Meditation and History on the Great Plains
by Frances W. Kaye
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : north america, native american

Amer-European settlement of the Great Plains transformed bountiful Native soil into pasture and cropland, distorting the prairie ecosystem as it was understood and used by the peoples who originally populated the land. Settlers justified this transformation with the unexamined premise of deficiency, according to which the Great Plains region was in …

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Lost Tracks

Lost Tracks

Buffalo National Park, 1909–1939
by Jennifer Brower
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : wilderness

While contemporaries and historians alike hailed the establishment of Buffalo National Park in Wainwright, Alberta as a wildlife saving effort, the political climate of the early twentieth century worked against its efforts to stem the decline of the plains buffalo in North America. However, the branch charged with operating the park, the Canadian …

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One Step Over the Line

One Step Over the Line

Toward a History of Women in the North American Wests
edited by Elizabeth Jameson & Sheila McManus
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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age: 14
Grade: 9
tagged : north america, social history, demography, women's studies

This unfamiliar territory is the borderlands of women’s histories traversing the American and Canadian Wests. Specialists in women’s history, settler societies, colonialism, storytelling, education, and native and borderlands studies introduced by Elizabeth Jameson and Sheila McManus pool their distinct contributions toward forging the very fir …

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Imagining Head Smashed In

Imagining Head Smashed In

Aboriginal Buffalo Hunting on the Northern Plains
by Jack W. Brink
edition:eBook
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age: 15 to 18
Grade: 10 to 12
tagged : archaeology, north america, native american, hunting

At the place known as Head-Smashed-In in southwestern Alberta, Aboriginal people practiced a form of group hunting for nearly 6,000 years before European contact. The large communal bison traps of the Plains were the single greatest food-getting method ever developed in human history. Hunters, working with their knowledge of the land and of buffalo …

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