Looking Back and Leaping Forward: Perseverence in Times of Crisis
2021 Tri-University History Conference
At this moment, our future seems filled with uncertainty.
At this moment, our future seems filled with uncertainty.
At this moment, our future seems filled with uncertainty.
The Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies hosts the 31st Canadian Military History Colloquium which will be held virtually from 9 am to 5 pm ET on 14-15 May, 2021.
This year’s conference is free, but registration through the website is still required.
The Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies hosts the 31st Canadian Military History Colloquium which will be held virtually from 9 am to 5 pm ET on 14-15 May, 2021.
This year’s conference is free, but registration through the website is still required.
Follow the conference website for updated information!
Dr. Omeasoo Wāhpāsiw of Carleton University will deliver the keynote address. Performer is Kevin McKay from Cross Lake First Nation.
2020-21 C.P. Stacy Award Winner, Toronto Metropolitan University
Canadian War Museum
Wilfrid Laurier University
Conflict, Cooperation, and Commemoration: Examining Interactions in the Past foregrounds the interactions between historical figures and events and the memorialization of those actions and reactions. As historians, engaging in conflict and cooperation is a pillar of historical research and the processes that create the subject matter for our research.
Keynote speaker is Dr. Mikki Brock of Washington and Lee University who specializes in demonology, witchcraft, and religious beliefs and identities in Early Modern Scotland. The title of her talk is, “‘That horrid and devilish sin’: Witchcraft and memory in Covenanted Scotland."
Conflict, Cooperation, and Commemoration: Examining Interactions in the Past foregrounds the interactions between historical figures and events and the memorialization of those actions and reactions. As historians, engaging in conflict and cooperation is a pillar of historical research and the processes that create the subject matter for our research.
Keynote speaker is Dr. Mikki Brock of Washington and Lee University who specializes in demonology, witchcraft, and religious beliefs and identities in Early Modern Scotland. The title of her talk is, “‘That horrid and devilish sin’: Witchcraft and memory in Covenanted Scotland."