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  • Contributors • Collaborateurs

Carly Adams is an associate professor in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at the University of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. Her research explores sport, recreation, and leisure experiences from the intersections of historical and sociological inquiry. Her work has appeared in, among others, Journal of Sport History, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, and Sport History Review.

Matthew Barrett is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History at Queen’s University. He also volunteers as a historian with the Ontario Regiment Museum in Oshawa, Ontario.

Richard M. Berrong is a professor of French Literature and director of the Master of Liberal Studies program at Kent State University. His work now focusses on the relation between Impressionist art and literature in the works of Pierre Loti and some of his contemporaries, such as Rudyard Kipling, Willa Cather, and Joseph Conrad.

Wanda Campbell teaches literature and creative writing at Acadia University in view of the farmland Acadians once rescued from the covetous sea. Her academic and creative work has appeared in journals across the country.

Tonya Davidson teaches sociology at Ryerson University. Her research interests include monumentality, Canadian nationalisms, gender, race, and popular culture. She co-edited Ecologies of Affect: Placing Nostalgia, Desire and Hope (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2011) with Ondine Park and Rob Shields.

Sara Jamieson is an associate professor in the Department of English at Carleton University, where she teaches Canadian literature. Her current research explores representations of aging in the contemporary Canadian literature. Her recent publications in this area are focussed on the work of Alice Munro and Joan Barfoot.

Paul Keen is a professor of English at Carleton University. He is the author of Literature, Commerce, and the Spectacle of Modernity, 1750-1800 (2012) and The Crisis of Literature in the 1790s: Print Culture and the Public Sphere (1999), as well as the editor of several books on eighteenth-century and Romantic print culture.

Emmett Macfarlane is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Waterloo. His book, Governing from the Bench: The Supreme Court of Canada and the Judicial Role, was published by University of British Columbia Press in 2013.

Joseph Mensah is a professor of geography at York University, Toronto. His research focusses on issues of globalization and cultures, transnational migration, and race, gender, and employment. [End Page 223]

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