History (HSTR) Courses>Race, Racism and Ethnicity in Canada to 1900

HSTR329A - Race, Racism and Ethnicity in Canada to 1900

Description

Explores the development of racial discourses from the colonial settings of New France and the British Empire in Northern North America to the end of the first period of mass-immigration at the turn of the twentieth century. Covers a wide range of topics from Native-newcomer relations, slavery, anti-Irish sentiment and the dispersal of the Métis, to the reception and treatment of non-British immigrants from Europe and Asia.

Units

1.5

Hours: lecture-lab-tutorial

3-0-0

Formerly

HIST 358D

Note(s)

  • Credit will be granted for only one of HSTR 329A, HIST 358 (if taken in the same topic), HIST 358D, HIST 359 (if taken in the same topic).

Course offered by

Department of History

Course schedules

Summer timetable available: February 15. Fall and Spring timetables available: May 15.

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