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  • Contributors

Louise Bienvenue est professeure adjointe au département d'histoire et de sciences politiques de l'Université de Sherbrooke. Elle est l'auteure de Quand la jeunesse entre en scène (Montréal, Boréal, 2003) qui a remporté le prix Michel-Brunet et le prix Raymond-Klibansky. En plus de ses recherches sur la jeunesse, elle s'intéresse à l'histoire du genre.

Craig Heron teaches history and labour studies at York University, and was for many years a contributor to the programs of the Workers' Arts and Heritage Centre. He is the author of numerous articles and books on Canadian working-class and social history, including Booze: A Distilled History (2003) and (with Steve Penfold) The Workers' Festival: A History of Labour Day in Canada (2005). He is completing a manuscript on working-class life in Hamilton in the early twentieth century.

Christine Hudon est professeure agrégée au département d'histoire et de sciences politiques de l'Université de Sherbrooke. Ses travaux portent sur l'histoire du genre et l'histoire religieuse au Québec.

Barbara J. Messamore recently completed her PhD at the University of Edinburgh. She teaches history at University College of the Fraser Valley. A monograph entitled Canada's Governors General, 1847-1878: Biography and Constitutional Evolution is forthcoming from University of Toronto Press. She has published articles on aspects of the viceregal role and has edited a collection of essays, Canadian Migration Patterns from Britain and North America (Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2004).

Sharon Wall is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia. This article is a part of her dissertation, 'Negotiating Modernity: Nature and Nurture at Ontario Children's Camps, 1920-1955.' In her current postdoctoral research, 'Girls in Trouble,' she is exploring the experience and medical treatment of teen pregnancy in postwar English Canada. [End Page 593]

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