فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nAcknowledgments\nIntroduction\nPART ONE Race, Crime, and Justice\nIntroduction\nA New Biography of the African Diaspora: The Life and Death of Marie-Joseph Angélique, Black Portuguese Slave Women in New France, 1725–1\nUnpacking the Discursive Irish Woman Immigrant in Eighteenthand Nineteenth-Century Newfoundland\nThe Tale of Lin Tee: Madness, Family Violence, and Lindsay’s Anti-Chinese Riot of 1919\nPART TWO The Making of White Settler Societies\nTurning Strangers into Sisters? Missionaries and Colonization in Upper Canada\nWhose Sisters and What Eyes? White Women, Race, and Immigration to British Columbia, 1849–1871\nExclusion through Inclusion: Female Asian Migration in the Making of Canada as a White Settler Nation\nPART THREE Letters and Tales of Settlement and Longing\nIntroduction\nLetters “Home” from Canada: British Female Emigrants and the Imperial Family of Women\nThe Interplay of Ethnicity and Gender: Swedish Women in Southeastern Saskatchewan\nFrom Montreal and Venice with Love: Migrant Letters and Romantic Intimacy in Italian Migration to Postwar Canada\nPART FOUR Labouring Domestics and Canadian Constraints\nIn Search of Comfort and Independence: Irish Immigrant Domestic Servants Encounter the Courts, Jails, and Asylums in Nineteenth-Century Ontario\nTaming and Training Greek “Peasant Girls” and the Gendered Politics of Whiteness in Postwar Canada: Canadian Bureaucrats and Immigrant Domestics, 1950s–1960s\nI Care for You, Who Cares for Me? Transitional Services of Filipino Live-in Caregivers in Canada\nPART FIVE Constructing Symbols and Bodies\nFashioning Conflicts: Gender, Power, and Icelandic Immigrant Hair and Clothing in North America, 1874–1933\nA Larger Frame: “Redressing” the Image of Doukhobor Canadian Women in the Twentieth Century\nPropaganda and Identity Construction: Media Representation in Canada of Finnish and Finnish Canadian Women during the Winter War of 1939–1940\nPART SIX Activists and Political Subjects\nIntroduction\nCanadian Citizens or Dangerous Foreign Women? Canada’s Radical Consumer Movement, 1947–1950\nHaitian Feminist Diasporic Lakou: Haitian Women’s Community Organizing in Montreal, 1960–1980\n“An Unlikely Collection of Union Militants”: Portuguese Immigrant Cleaning Women Become Political Subjects in Postwar Toronto\nPART SEVEN Food, Family, and Culture\nThe Semiotics of Zwieback: Feast and Famine in the Narratives of Mennonite Refugee Women\nJell-O Salads, One-Stop Shopping, and Maria the Homemaker: The Gender Politics of Food\nConsuming Food and Constructing Identities among Arabic and South Asian Immigrant Women\nPART EIGHT History, Identity, and Belonging PART EIGHT History, Identity, and Belonging\n“Slotting” Chinese Families and Refugees, 1947–1967\nExperience and Identity: Black Immigrant Nurses to Canada, 1950–1980\nThe Mother of God Wears a Maple Leaf: History, Gender, and Ethnic Identity in Sacred Space\nPART NINE Trauma, Violence, and Memory\nSurviving Their Survival: Women, Memory, and the Holocaust\n“Days You Remember”: Japanese Canadian Women and the Violence of Internment\nFeminist Oral History and Assessing the Duelling Narratives of Iraqi Women in Diaspora\nContributors\nCredits