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  • Contributors • Collaborateurs

Tim Cook is the First World War historian at the Canadian War Museum, the author of eight books, and a member of the Order of Canada.

Allan Downey is Dakelh, a member of the Nak’azdli First Nation, and an assistant professor in the Department of History and Classical Studies at McGill University.

Jenny Ellison is currently curator of sport and leisure at the Canadian Museum of History. Completed while she was affiliated with Mount Allison University and Trent University, her work on Terry Fox reflects her interest in the history of the body and representations of physical fitness. Her research has been published in the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, Canadian Woman Studies, and the Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. She is the co-editor of Obesity in Canada: Critical Perspectives, forthcoming from University of Toronto Press in 2016.

Alan Gordon is professor of history at the University of Guelph. He has published extensively on public memory, commemoration, and the writing of history.

Nicholas Hrynyk is a doctoral candidate at Carleton University. His doctoral research explores the ways in which Canada’s largest lesbian and gay newspaper, the Body Politic, mediated understandings of gay male masculinities during the course of its publication from 1971 to 1987.

Andrew Iarocci teaches history at the University of Western Ontario and is an adjunct professor at the Royal Military College of Canada. He has written widely on Canada in the First World War, and is currently undertaking a study of British and Canadian transportation and logistics on the Western Front.

Paul Kellogg is an associate professor at Athabasca University, teaching in the graduate program of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. His publications include Escape from the Staple Trap (University of Toronto Press, 2015), and articles in various scholarly journals, including New Political Science, International Journal of Žižek Studies, and Research in Political Economy.

Gerald Lynch is professor of English at the University of Ottawa. He has authored seven books of criticism and fiction, and numerous essays, short stories, and reviews, and has edited some dozen volumes. His most recent book is the novel Missing Children (Signature Editions, 2015).

Matthew Lesch is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto.

Douglas Macdonald, PhD, is a senior lecturer in the School of Environment at the University of Toronto. [End Page 282]

Dan Malleck is an associate professor of medical history in the Department of Health Sciences at Brock University. His latest book, When Good Drugs Go Bad: Opium, Medicine, and the Origins of Canada’s Drug Laws, was published by the University of British Columbia Press in the summer of 2015. Try to Control Yourself: The Regulation of Public Drinking in Post-prohibition Ontario, 1927-1944 (UBC Press, 2012) won the Canadian Historical Association’s Clio Prize for best book on Ontario history for 2012. He is the editor-in-chief of The Social History of Alcohol and Drugs: An Interdisciplinary Journal, published by the Alcohol and Drugs History Society.

J. Andrew Ross is an archivist at Library and Archives Canada in Gatineau, Québec. His most recent book is Joining the Clubs: The Business of the National Hockey League to 1945 (Syracuse University Press, 2015). [End Page 283]

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