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S1E04 Nova Scotia Colonial History with Dr. Danny Samson

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Manage episode 294609176 series 2937768
Content provided by Faculty of Humanities, Brock University, Faculty of Humanities, and Brock University. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Faculty of Humanities, Brock University, Faculty of Humanities, and Brock University or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

How can we get to know people from the past? Primary sources, like government records, letters and diaries, give historians valuable insight into human experiences of the past and making connections with modern crises.

Episode four of Foreword features a conversation with Danny Samson, an Associate Professor of History, about his work on Acadian and Nova Scotian colonial history and shares how historians use primary sources to build a more thorough understanding of past events.

Danny discusses his most recent work with his fourth year students on the Acadian expulsion from modern-day Prince Edward Island, which has been receiving international scholarly attention. He shares how his students completed their online project an interactive website Ile St-Jean: The Expulsion of 1758, which details the forcible deportation of thousands of Acadians from modern-day Prince Edward Island using primary forces, despite having their semester disrupted by the pandemic.

We also learn about Danny's ongoing project studying the diary of James Barry, a nineteenth-century miller in rural Nova Scotia. Analysis of Barry’s diary shows his connection with intellectual ideas and debates and politics in pre-Confederation Nova Scotia, as well as giving insight into the role of the miller in a small rural community.

Find a full transcript at https://brocku.ca/humanities/foreword

Links

Ile St-Jean: The Expulsion of 1758 (2020)

History course gains international scholarly attention for groundbreaking work (Brock News, 20 May 2020)

Daniel Samson faculty profile

@ruralcolonialns Daniel Samson on Twitter; see also #JamesBarryDiary

Department of History

Credits

We love to hear from our listeners! Join us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram @brockhumanities.

Please subscribe and rate us on your favourite podcasting app so you don’t miss an episode.

Learn more about the Faculty of Humanities, including our events, programs of study, and departments, online.

Foreword is hosted and produced by Alison Innes for the Faculty of Humanities at Brock University.

Sound design and editing by Serena Atallah. Theme music is by Khalid Imam.

Special thanks to Brock University’s MakerSpace and Brock University Marketing and Communications for studio and web support.

This podcast is financially supported by the Faculty of Humanities at Brock University.

  continue reading

50 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 294609176 series 2937768
Content provided by Faculty of Humanities, Brock University, Faculty of Humanities, and Brock University. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Faculty of Humanities, Brock University, Faculty of Humanities, and Brock University or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

How can we get to know people from the past? Primary sources, like government records, letters and diaries, give historians valuable insight into human experiences of the past and making connections with modern crises.

Episode four of Foreword features a conversation with Danny Samson, an Associate Professor of History, about his work on Acadian and Nova Scotian colonial history and shares how historians use primary sources to build a more thorough understanding of past events.

Danny discusses his most recent work with his fourth year students on the Acadian expulsion from modern-day Prince Edward Island, which has been receiving international scholarly attention. He shares how his students completed their online project an interactive website Ile St-Jean: The Expulsion of 1758, which details the forcible deportation of thousands of Acadians from modern-day Prince Edward Island using primary forces, despite having their semester disrupted by the pandemic.

We also learn about Danny's ongoing project studying the diary of James Barry, a nineteenth-century miller in rural Nova Scotia. Analysis of Barry’s diary shows his connection with intellectual ideas and debates and politics in pre-Confederation Nova Scotia, as well as giving insight into the role of the miller in a small rural community.

Find a full transcript at https://brocku.ca/humanities/foreword

Links

Ile St-Jean: The Expulsion of 1758 (2020)

History course gains international scholarly attention for groundbreaking work (Brock News, 20 May 2020)

Daniel Samson faculty profile

@ruralcolonialns Daniel Samson on Twitter; see also #JamesBarryDiary

Department of History

Credits

We love to hear from our listeners! Join us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram @brockhumanities.

Please subscribe and rate us on your favourite podcasting app so you don’t miss an episode.

Learn more about the Faculty of Humanities, including our events, programs of study, and departments, online.

Foreword is hosted and produced by Alison Innes for the Faculty of Humanities at Brock University.

Sound design and editing by Serena Atallah. Theme music is by Khalid Imam.

Special thanks to Brock University’s MakerSpace and Brock University Marketing and Communications for studio and web support.

This podcast is financially supported by the Faculty of Humanities at Brock University.

  continue reading

50 episodes

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