Pat Vertinsky – Reconsidering The Demise of the Female Tradition in Physical Education
Since at least the 1980s, much research, policy and practice in the field of physical education for girls has been trapped in a repeated lament that we have yet to find the solution to ‘the problem’ of girls’ lack of participation in physical education and consequent negative effects on their health and wellbeing. The narrative builds upon dominant progress and loss stories, which have cemented a stock account of the history of the female tradition in physical education in a fixed temporal entrapment. It describes how women in England led the field in establishing and maintaining the profession from the late 1800s only to lose their power and authority in the decades following WW2 to a burgeoning male physical education profession. This mid-20th century move from female to male dominance in physical education has been described as one of the most striking phenomena of recent educational history.
Select Articles Available at UBC Library
Vertinsky, P. A. (1990). The eternally wounded woman: Women, doctors, and exercise in the late nineteenth century. New York; Manchester, UK; New York, NY, USA: Manchester University Press.
Hargreaves, J., Vertinsky, P. A., & MyiLibrary. (2006). Physical culture, power, and the body. Abingdon, Oxon, England; New York: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203014653. [Link]
McKay, S., & Vertinsky, P. (2004). Memory, monument, modernity: Disciplining bodies in the gymnasium. Routledge.[Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
BC History Digitization Program – 2014 Projects
In September 2006, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre at the University of British Columbia Library announced the BC History Digitization Program. The focus of the program is to promote increased access to British Columbia’s historical resources, including providing matching funds to undertake digitization projects that will result in free online access to our unique provincial historical material. Below is a list of successful applicants for 2014.
Project Title: Digitization of Barkerville’s Chinese Language Collections
Organization: Barkerville Heritage Trust
Amount: $12,000
Description: The project will digitize and make available 11,291 pages of hand-written Chinese language documents at Barkerville.
Project Title: ButterFat Magazine Digitization Project
Organization: BC Dairy Historical Society
Amount: $8,135
Description: The ButterFat Magazine Digitization Project will scan 70 bound volumes (~25,000 pages) of ButterFat magazine into searchable digital files.
Project Title: BC’s Natural History: Imaging the Spencer Entomological Collection
Organization: Beaty Biodiversity Museum – Spencer Entomological Collection
Amount: $15,000
Description: The Spencer Entomological Collection will image 1,200 B.C. insect specimens from three views using their Leica LAS montage system.
Project Title: Digitization of British Columbia Sessional Papers 1887-1911
Organization: BC Government Publications Digitization Group
Amount: $4,068
Description: The project will digitize 25 bound volumes of BC Sesssional Papers from Legislative Library’s collection and make them keyword searchable.
Project Title: Capturing our History
Organization: Esquimalt Municipal Archives
Amount: $9,000
Description: The project will digitize and make available historical images of Esquimalt covering the past 150 years.
Project Title: Fred Schiffer: Lives in Photos
Organization: Jewish Museum and Archives
Amount: $2,620.18
Description: The project will digitize approximately 1000 photographs from well-known portrait photographer, Fred Schiffer.
Project Title: Fashion Accessories Digitization
Organization: Museum of Vancouver
Amount: $15,000
Description: This project proposes the digital photography of 2,424 fashion accessories, including women’s and men’s hats, shoes and jewellery, amassed during the nearly 20 years of tenure of former Vancouver Museum curator and costume historian, Ivan Sayers.
Project Title: Japanese Canadian Stories
Organization: Nikkei National Museum
Amount: $9,392
Description: This project will digitize archival and artifact collections of four families reflecting the diverse experience of Japanese Canadians in British Columbia since 1900.
Project Title: Cassiar Asbestos Mining Corporation & Townsite fonds Newspaper Digitization & Access
Organization: Northern BC Archives
Amount: $2,740
Description: The project will see the digitization of the Cassiar Townsite Newspaper from 1958-1976.
Project Title: Prince George Newspaper Digitization Project
Organization: Prince George Public Library
Amount: $15,000
Description: This year the Prince George Newspaper Digitization Project will digitize issues of the Prince George Citizen from 1989-1991.
Project Title: Abbotsford Living History Project
Organization: Reach Gallery and Museum
Amount: $6,000
Description: The project will provide for the digitization of 5,000 photos from the Abbotsford News collection.
Project Title: Businessmen and Educators
Organization: Salt Spring Island Archives
Amount: $3,700
Description: The project will digitize materials from the Cropper and Drake family fonds.
Project Title: Pacific Socialist Education Association Pacific Tribune Collection
Organization: Simon Fraser University Library
Amount: $14,911.23
Description: This project will digitize 4,500 images from the Pacific Socialist Education Association collection taken for the labour publication Pacific Tribune from 1972 to 1992.
Project Title: Digitization of the Squamish Board of Trade Correspondence
Organization: Squamish Public Library
Amount: $7,500
Description: The project will digitize approximately 650 pieces of correspondence of the Squamish Board of Trade from 1926 to 1964.
Project Title: Thompson-Nicola Historical Newspapers Digitization Project
Organization: Thompson-Nicola Regional District Libraries
Amount: $7,500
Description: The project will begin to digitize community newspapers from the Thompson-Nicola region as early as 1895.
Project Title: Discovered: Images of the Kootenay Outlet at the turn of the 20th Century
Organization: Touchstones Nelson
Amount: $1,330
Description: The project will feature 152 digitized glass-plate negatives depicting the Kootenay Lake Outlet area at the turn of the 20th Century.
Project Title: Student Newspaper 50th Anniversary Digitization Project – Phase II
Organization: Trinity Western University Archives
Amount: $2,954.70
Description: Phase II will see completion of the digitization of the TWU student newspapers to 2012.
Project Title: Uno Langmann Family Collection of BC Photographs Project
Organization: University of British Columbia Library
Amount: $14,956
Description: The project plans to digitize 15,300 photographs and postcards from the Uno Langmann Family Collection covering B.C. from the 1850s to the 1950s.
Project Title: Digital Conversion of Selected BC Conference TV Broadcasting Videotapes
Organization: United Church – Bob Stewart Archives
Amount: $3,210
Description: The project will digitize 45 broadcast tapes of the Conference’s former television program Pressure Point (1975-2001).
Project Title: bcgenesis: The Colonial Despatches 1863
Organization: University of Victoria Libraries
Amount: $10,000
Description: The project will continue by digitizing Vancouver Island and BC despatches for 1863, linking them page for page to transcriptions of each despatch.
Project Title: Pacific National Exhibition fonds
Organization: City of Vancouver Archives
Amount: $7,655.76
Description: This project will digitize 7128 photographic prints from the Pacific National Exhibition fonds. Images depict the broad variety of activities that have taken place at the Exhibition between 1920 and 1980.
Project Title: The Province Newspaper Negatives Phase II
Organization: Vancouver Public Library
Amount: $14,567
Description: The project will digitize and make available images capturing important events in Vancouver and British Columbia from the 1950s to the early 1960s.
For more information please contact:
Mimi Lam
Coordinator
BC History Digitization Program
bc.historydigitization@ubc.ca
Bronwen Sprout
Head
Digital Programs and Services
Roy Kiyooka: a commemorative exhibit
Resistant to mainstream ideas of national identity, artistic success, and artistic conventions, Roy K. Kiyooka’s flexible, unconventional use of language in his poetry voices his Japanese-Canadian ‘inglish’ and questions his Canadian identity in light of the internment faced by Japanese-Canadian citizens during World War II. Kiyooka’s poetry has been anthologized in Canadian poetry collections and in the posthumously published Pacific Windows, edited by Roy Miki. In 1987, his Pear Tree Pomes was short listed for the Governor General’s Literary Award. However, despite his national recognition, Kiyooka remains relatively unknown outside academic and literary communities. In recognition of the twentieth anniversary of his passing, the students of ASTU 400M are showcasing original print chapbooks of Kiyooka’s work and archival material to commemorate his enduring influence and unforgettable contribution to Vancouver’s (and Canada’s) artistic scene.
Hosted at Rare Books & Special Collections on floor 1 of Irving K. Barber Learning Commons, the exhibition runs March 17-31, 2014 and is accessible 10am-4pm Monday through Friday and 12pm-5pm Saturdays.
Recommended Resources for more information:
Vancouver Art Gallery., & Kiyooka, R. (1975). Roy K. Kiyooka: 25 years : an exhibition organized and circulated by the Vancouver Art Gallery. Vancouver, B.C.: Vancouver Art Gallery.
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre | N6549.K457 A85 2002
O’Brian, J., Sawada, N., Watson, S., & Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design. (2002). All amazed: For Roy Kiyooka. Vancouver, BC: Arsenal Pulp Press.
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre | N6549.K457 A85 2002