News and activities at Norma Marion Alloway Library, Trinity Western University

Category: Literature (Page 5 of 24)

New Titles Tuesday, September 21

New Titles Tuesday is back after a brief hiatus with a selection of items added to the collection in the past week – including some great journals.

 A companion to the Brontës / edited by Diane Long Hoeveler and Deborah Denenholz Morse. A Companion to the Brontës brings the latest literary research and theory to bear on the life, work, and legacy of the Brontë family.

A philosophy of the Christian religion / Nancey Murphy. Written with the needs of students encountering the philosophy of religion for the first time in mind, this book provides a comprehensive introduction to the fundamental questions inherent in Christian faith. Murphy also provides tools for how to answer those questions.

 All our relations: finding the path forward / Tanya Talaga. Talaga explores the alarming rise of youth suicide in Indigenous communities in Canada and beyond. From Northern Ontario to Nunavut, Norway, Brazil, Australia, and the United States, the Indigenous experience in colonized nations is startlingly similar and deeply disturbing. As a result of this colonial legacy, too many communities today lack access to the basic determinants of health, income, employment, education, a safe environment, health services, leading to a mental health and youth suicide crisis on a global scale. But, Talaga reminds us, First Peoples also share a history of resistance, resilience, and civil rights activism, which united Indigenous Nations from across Turtle Island in solidarity.

 American philosophical quarterly.

Annual review of applied linguistics.

Annual review of clinical psychology.

 Bent / Martin Sherman. This play dramatizes the plight of homosexuals in Nazi Germany.

Biblische Zeitschrift.One of the leading international journals in Biblical Studies. Contributions are published in German, English and French. The primary aim of the journal is to further the understanding of the Biblical texts, both of the Old and the New Testament. Articles focus on philological or text-critical issues, raise questions of historical and cultural contextualisation or concentrate on literary, hermeneutical or theological issues – to name only a few of the relevant aspects. Each volume also contains book reviews to help scholars as well as everyone interested in Biblical Studies to keep informed in the ever-developing field of study.

  Black drama in America: an anthology. Edited with a critical introd. by Darwin T. Turner.

Canadian journal of political science |Revue canadienne de science politique.

Childhood education.

Dead Sea discoveries: a journal of current research on the scrolls and related literature. An international journal dedicated to the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and associated literature. The journal is primarily devoted to the discussion of the significance of the finds in the Judean Desert for Biblical Studies, and the study of early Jewish and Christian history. Dead Sea Discoveries has established itself as an invaluable resource for the subject both in the private collections of professors and scholars as well as in the major research libraries of the world.

 Do Jews, Christians, & Muslims worship the same God? / Jacob Neusner, Baruch A. Levine, Bruce D. Chilton, Vincent J. Cornell ; epilogue by Martin E. Marty.  The three faiths must find the will (politically, socially, and personally) to tolerate differences. Perhaps what can help us move forward as pluralistic people is a focus on the goal – peace with justice for all.

 Ethan Frome: a dramatization of Edith Wharton’s novel / by Owen Davis and Donald Davis, suggested by a dramatization by Lowell Barrington. This is a tragic 19th century love story. The story forcefully conveys Wharton’s abhorrence of society’s unbending standards of loyalty

Famous American plays of the 1920s. The Moon of the Caribees, What Price Glory, They Knew What They Wanted, Porgy, Street Scene, Holiday.

 Famous American plays of the 1930sHere are five plays from the critical decade of the thirties-the decade of the Group Theatre and the Federal Theatre-when American drama challenged the depression years with a stirring force of protest and hope

Famous American plays of the 1940s. Selected and introduced by Henry Hewes. These five outstanding and now-classic plays of the 1940s are works profoundly influenced by World War II, a breaking away from tradition onstage, and an increasing concern with prejudice in America. The Skin of Our Teeth, the most important play of the war years, baffled audiences with its unconventional structure. Home of the Brave and All My Sons brought home the problem of the soldier returning to an America still filled with conflict. Lost in the Stars focused directly on South African racism and The Member of the Wedding brought a new intimacy between actor and audience to the stage.

 Fences: a play / by August Wilson ; introduction by Lloyd Richards. During the 1950’s Troy Maxson struggles against racism and tries to preserve his feelings of pride in himself.

For the life of the world: theology that makes a difference / Miroslav Volf and Matthew Croasmun. Shows that a recovery of theology is vital to help us evaluate contested questions of value, articulate compelling visions of the good life, and answer the fundamental question of what makes life worth living.

Guy de Maupassant’s The necklace: a play in one act / adapted by Jay Reid Gould from the short story.

 Heart berries: a memoir / Terese Marie Mailhot.  A powerful, poetic memoir of a woman’s coming of age on an Indian Reservation in the Pacific Northwest. Having survived a profoundly dysfunctional upbringing only to find herself hospitalised and facing a dual diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder and bipolar II disorder, Terese Marie Mailhot is given a notebook and begins to write her way out of trauma.   In Heart Berries, Mailhot discovers her own true voice, seizes control of her story, and, in so doing, re-establishes her connection to her family, to her people, and to her place in the world.

 Highway of Tears: a true story of racism, indifference, and the pursuit of justice for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls / Jessica McDiarmid. An explosive examination of the missing and murdered Indigenous women of Highway 16, and a searing indictment of the society that failed them. McDiarmid meticulously explores the effect these tragedies have had on communities in the region, and how systemic racism and indifference towards Indigenous lives have created a culture of “over-policing and under-protection.” Highway of Tears will offer an intimate, first-hand look at the communities along Highway 16 and the families of the victims, as well as examine the historically fraught social and cultural tensions between settler and Indigenous peoples that underlie life in the region. Finally, it will link these cases with others found across Canada–estimated to number over 1,200–contextualizing them within a broader examination of the undervaluing of Indigenous lives in the country and of our ongoing failure to provide justice for the missing and murdered.

 How the body of Christ talks: recovering the practice of conversation in the church / C. Christopher Smith. Smith, coauthor of the critically acclaimed and influential Slow Church, addresses why conversation has become such a challenge in the 21st century and argues that it is perhaps the most-needed spiritual practice of our individualistic age. Smith shows how church communities can be training hubs where we learn to talk with and listen to one another with kindness and compassion. The book explores how churches can initiate and sustain conversation, offers advice for working through seasons of conflict, suggests spiritual practices and dispositions that can foster conversation, and features stories from several congregations that are learning to practice conversation.

 If Jesus is Lord: loving our enemies in an age of violence / Ronald J. Sider. Sider provides a career capstone biblical-theological case for the view that Jesus calls his disciples to love, and never kill, their enemies.

Little murders: a comedy in two acts / by Jules Feiffer. Depressed New Yorker Alfred Chamberlain is engaged to perky, can-do Patsy Newquist. As their wedding day grows near, Alfred finds himself embroiled in an urban nightmare not the least of which is his fiance’s family, the possiblity of marriage without Faith, muggings and a sniper’s bullet

 Narrative apologetics: sharing the relevance, joy, and wonder of the Christian faith / Alister E. McGrath. In this groundbreaking book, scholar and author Alister McGrath lays a foundation for narrative apologetics. Exploring four major biblical narratives, enduring stories from our culture such as Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia, and personal narratives from people such as St. Augustine and Chuck Colson, McGrath shows how we can both understand and share our faith in terms of story.

 Now, how shall we be?: this cultural moment and our Christian response / Ken Badley, Amanda Ross. This discussion resource surveys major features of the church’s contemporary context, notes common responses to that context, and suggests postures that Christians should adopt if we wish to live well in this context, both as individual Christians and as the Body of Christ. Includes Resources for Leading Discussions.

 Old times / by Harold Pinter. Three characters, a man, his wife, and a female friend whom they have not seen for 20 years. Beneath the surface of taut, witty conversation lurks suggestions of darkness, until the present is overwhelmed with intimations of some frightening past.

Other places: three plays / by Harold Pinter. When this triptich of new plays by Harold Pinter opened in London in October 1982 it was celebrated by critics and audiences alike as an electrifying theatrical event that confirmed once again the author’s undisputed place in the forefront of today’s dramatists.

 Smash: an adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s novel An unsocial socialist / by Jeffrey Hatcher.  The story centers on Sidney Trefusis, a millionaire Socialist who leaves his bride on their wedding day.

Stars in the morning sky: drama / by Alexander Galin ; translation by Elise Thoron. The play is concerned with a small group of prostitutes who have been evicted from Moscow just before the tourists arrive for the 1980 Olympics. They’ve been sent to some dilapidated barracks in a mental asylum. There is strong dramatic interaction among these “Olympic Girls”—in a sad love affair between one of them and an escaped patient, and in the demands of some offstage clients, which have violent repercussions. All the while the runner with the Olympic flame who will pass their barracks is getting closer.

 Strictly dishonorable and other lost American plays / selected and introduced by Richard Nelson. includes: Strictly Dishonorable by Preston Sturges, The Racket by Bartlett Cormack, The Ghost of Yankee Doodle by Sidney Howard and A Slight Case of Murder by Howard Lindsay and Damon Runyon. 

The doctrine of triangles: a history of modern trigonometry / Glen Van Brummelen. TWU AUTHOR An interdisciplinary history of trigonometry from the mid-sixteenth century through to the early twentieth century The Doctrine of Triangles offers an interdisciplinary history of trigonometry that spans four centuries, starting in 1550 and concluding in the 1900s. Van Brummelen tells the story of trigonometry as it evolved from an instrument for understanding the heavens to a practical tool, used in fields such as surveying and navigation.

 The Evangelical dictionary of world religions / H. Wayne House, editor. More than 70 scholars offer a thoroughly researched and comprehensive reference on Christianity, other world religions, and alternative religious views, including nearly 500 entries on movements, theological terms, and major historical figures.

The Georgian playhouse: actors, artists, audiences and architecture, 1730-1830 : [catalogue of an exhibition held at the] Hayward Gallery, 21 August to 12 October 1975

 The Greatest revue sketches / compiled and edited by Donald Oliver. A collection of comedy revue sketches from the Broadway stage features works by writers including George S. Kaufman, W. C. Fields, Moss Hart, Abe Burrows, Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and Mel Brooks

 The marrow of longing / Celeste Nazeli Snowber. Be swept into The Marrow of Longing. An exploration of Armenian heritage uncovers universal themes of longing and belonging.  Snowber’s deeply personal and interpersonal  book of poetry traces the inherited trauma of the Armenian genocide, lessons learned in kitchen conversations, fragmented memories of grandparents, parent’s love letters, prayers in the night, and bodily yearnings. “Fragments can hold a world,” she says. A descendant of genocide survivors, she explores relationships between longing, belonging and id ntity, uncovering universal that guide readers to what has shaped their own lives.

 The modern theatre / Robert W. Corrigan.

The new underground theatre / edited by Robert J. Schroeder.

The pastor in a secular age: ministry to people who no longer need a God / Andrew Root. Through an abundance of examples, this book explores how pastors have both perpetuated and responded to our secular age, and provides a new vision for pastoral ministry today.

 The torch song trilogy: three plays / by Harvey Fierstein ; with an introduction by James Leverett and a note by the author.

The Wizard of Oz: a play in three acts / dramatized by Elizabeth Fuller Chapman from the story by L. Frank Baum.

 They called me number one: secrets and survival at an Indian residential school / Bev Sellars ; [foreword by Hemas Kla-Lee-Lee-Kla (Bill Wilson) ; afterword by Wendy Wickwire]. One woman’s account of triumph over a childhood spent in an Indian residential school.

 Tolkien studies. Tolkien Studies: An Annual Scholarly Review presents the growing body of critical commentary and scholarship on both J.R.R. Tolkien’s voluminous fiction and his academic work in literary and linguistic fields.

Vilhelm Moberg / by Gunnar Eidevall.

 Wenceslas Square / by Larry Shue. An American college professor’s personal confrontation with the Prague Spring of 1968 and its aftermath.

When we dead awaken: [and three other plays] / Newly translated from the Norwegian by Michael Meyer. The last play written by Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen

New titles Tuesday, July 27

Here is a selection of titles added  to our collection in the past week.

 After whiteness: an education in belonging  /Willie James Jennings. After Whiteness is for anyone who has ever questioned why theological education still matters. It is a call for Christian intellectuals to exchange isolation for intimacy and embrace their place in the crowd. It is part memoir, part decolonial analysis, and part poetry–a multimodal discourse that deliberately transgresses boundaries, as Jennings hopes theological education will do, too.

 Biological safety: principles and practices /edited by Dawn P. Wooley, Karen B. Byers, Now in its fifth edition, Biological Safety: Principles and Practices remains the most comprehensive biosafety reference. A team of expert contributors have outlined the technical nuts and bolts of biosafety and biosecurity within these pages. This book presents the guiding principles of laboratory safety, including: the identification, assessment, and control of the broad variety of risks encountered in the lab; the production facility; and, the classroom.

 Converting the imagination: teaching to recover Jesus’ vision for fullness of life /Patrick R. Manning. In Converting the Imagination, Manning offers a probing analysis of this crisis of meaning, marshalling historical and psychological research to shed light on the connections among the disintegration of the Christian worldview, religious disaffiliation, and a growing mental health epidemic. Converting the Imagination is an invitation to transform the way we teach about faith and make sense of the world, an invitation that echoes Jesus’ invitation to a fuller, more meaningful life. It is sure to captivate scholars and practitioners of religious education, ministers seeking to reengage people who have drifted away from the faith or to support young people suffering from existential anxiety, and anyone in search of deeper meaning in their religious traditions or in their own lives.

 Faith-integrated being, knowing, and doing: a study among Christian faculty in Indonesia /Sarinah Lo. In this holistic study of the integration of faith and learning, Lo challenges the Western tendency to privilege knowing over being and doing. In the context of Indonesian higher education, Dr. Lo addresses the cognitive, affective, spiritual, relational, and vocational aspects of human nature. She demonstrates that effective integration of faith and learning must reach beyond the academic disciplines to address the formation of a Christian perspective in all areas of life, thought, and practice. Utilizing in-depth interviews and qualitative analysis,  Lo’s field research explores the specific challenges facing Christian faculty in Indonesia, where the rise of radical Islam and the pressure to conform to state ideology raise unique questions about the nature of faith-learning integration. The first study of its kind, this is an excellent resource for educators wanting to think more broadly about what it means to follow Christ in the classroom, pushing beyond Western models of integration to embrace the more holistic approach of faith-integrated being, knowing, and doing.

 Larone’s medically important fungi: a guide to identification /Thomas J. Walsh, Randall T. Hayden, Davise H. Larone ; illustrated by Davise H. Larone. With Larone’s Medically Important Fungi: A Guide to Identification, both novices and experienced professionals in clinical microbiology laboratories can continue to confidently identify commonly encountered fungi.

Practical guide to diagnostic parasitology /Lynne S. Garcia. This classic clinical laboratory parasitology reference, now in its third edition, has been extensively revised and updated in a new full-color format. Still organized to provide maximum help to the user, particularly from the bench perspective, every section has been expanded with new images and discussion.

 Teaching cross-culturally: an incarnational model for learning and teaching /Judith E. Lingenfelter and Sherwood G. Lingenfelter. This book is designed to complement Lingenfelter’s highly succesful Ministering Cross Culturally. It guides readers with little understanding of cross-cultural challenges in ministry and helps them see how cultural sensitivity and effective teaching are inseparably linked. Chapters include discussions about how to uncover cultural biases, how to address intelligence and learning styles, and teaching for biblical transformation. It is ideal for the western-trained educator who plans to work in a non-western setting.

 Teaching research processes: the faculty role in the development of skilled student researchers /William Badke. TWU AUTHOR the research processes required to problem-solve and enlist their findings into cogent academic writing. They lack skill in formulating problem statements, identifying the most relevant databases, using those databases effectively, and evaluating found information. More profoundly, they do not understand the confusing information landscape in which they are working. Teaching Research Processes aims to help faculty members overcome the deficits which today’s students struggle with, and develop strong research abilities in their students.

 Utmost art: complexity in the verse of George Herbert /by Mary Ellen Rickey. George Herbert has fared much better in recent decades. Rarely is he held now to be important only as an exemplar of the metaphysical manner, or found wanting because he is unlike Donne; and gradually, he is being dissociated from the company of sweetly solemn versifiers. Many critics in the twentieth century have pronounced Herbert’s English poetry conspicuously lacking in classical allusions. He is universally extolled the master of homely metaphor, as the recorder of immediate, everyday experiences in terms of everyday objects the language of real speech. For such a master, the consensus goes, recourse to the equipment of the ancients have been incongruous; the “artificiality” of classicism no place in such art.

In pursuit of healing, justice and reconciliation

We grieve the discovery of the remains of 215 Indigenous children on the property of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School. May we learn from our past errors, and commit to walking with all who pursue healing, justice, and reconciliation. Alloway Library resources are available to you as we mourn together.

“God who cares, stir us to repentance. Convict our hearts. Open our eyes. Give us ears to hear. Éy kws ste’as”  University Siya:m, Patti Victor

The following titles were selected by University Librarian Darcy Gullacher and include items from our Curriculum Resource Centre that can be used to help children understand our history.

“Speaking my truth” : reflections on reconciliation & residential school / selected by Shelagh Rogers, Mike DeGagné, Jonathan Dewar, Glen Lowry. These essays, which shed light on the lived and living experiences and legacies of Residential Schools, are offered in the sincere hope that your reading and discussion of them will become part of a much needed dialogue on reconciliation in Canada.

 A knock on the door : the essential history of residential schools / from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada ; foreword by Phil Fontaine.

Aboriginal children [electronic resource] : human rights as a lens to break the intergenerational legacy of residential schools / submitted to Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada ; submitted by the Representative for Children and Youth British Columbia.  Aboriginal children in British Columbia are significantly over-represented in British Columbia’s child welfare and youth justice systems. The myriad of issues that set the stage are therefore front and centre in this work, and provide the impetus for this submission and inform its content. What happened to Aboriginal peoples happened because they were Aboriginal and because they were children. This submission, therefore, offers a child-centred, human rights perspective on children’s historical experiences in residential schools and relates those experiences to the everyday
world of Aboriginal children today.

 Behind closed doors : stories from the Kamloops Indian Residential School. features written testimonials from thirty-two individuals who attended the Kamloops Indian Residential School. The school was one of many infamous residential schools that operated from 1893 to 1979. The storytellers remember and share with us their stolen time at the school; many stories are told through courageous tears.

 Canada’s residential schools [electronic resource] : the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada For over a century, the central goals of Canada’s Aboriginal policy were to eliminate Aboriginal governments; ignore Aboriginal rights; terminate the Treaties; and, through a process of assimilation, cause Aboriginal peoples to cease to exist as distinct legal, social, cultural, religious, and racial entities in Canada. The establishment and operation of residential schools were a central element of this policy, which can best be described as “cultural genocide.”

 Finding my talk : how fourteen Native women reclaimed their lives after residential school / Agnes Grant. Finding My Talk is proof that identity and culture cannot be destroyed. It is a testament to the indelible human spirit and it is an overwhelming reminder that no matter what the circumstance, there is always hope.

 Gaawin gindaaswin ndaawsii = I am not a number / gaa-zhibiigewaad/written by Jenny Kay Dupuis, minwa/and Kathy Kacer ; gaa-mzinbiiged/illustrated by Gillian Newland ; gaa-aankanoobiigewaad/translated by Muriel Sawyer, minwa/and Geraldine McLeod ; gaa-waadookaaged/with contribution by Tory Fisher. The book includes both English and Anishinaabemowin. I Am Not a Number is the true story of eight-year-old Irene, who is removed from her First Nations family to live in a residential school

 Indian Horse : a novel / Richard Wagamese. Saul Indian Horse, forcibly sent to residential school in northern Ontario in the 1960s, while finding some salvation through his gifts as a hockey player, nevertheless battles racism and the spirit-destroying effects of cultural alienation and displacement.

 kimotinâniwiw itwêwina / omasinahikêw Melanie Florence ; otâpasinahikêw Gabrielle Grimard ; Dolores Sand êkwa Gayle Weenie kî-nêhiyawastâwak = Stolen words / written by Melanie Florence ; illustrated by Gabrielle Grimard ; translated by Dolores Sand and Gayle Weenie. A Cree translation of Stolen Words. The book is in both Cree and English. Stolen Words is a picture book about a little girl who sets out to help her grandfather discover the Cree language that was stolen from him when he was sent away to residential school as a boy

 One Story, One Song   The tales that unfold in these pages are ancient and contemporary, cultural and spiritual, funny and sad. Whether he’s gleaning understanding from a wolf track, celebrating love on a wild roller-coaster ride, meeting residential school survivors or discovering the universe in an eagle feather, Wagamese offers his observations with true generosity of spirit. As always, the land serves as his guide. And as always, he finds that home means not just community but conversation—good, straight-hearted talk about important things. We all need to tell our stories, he says, and every voice matters

Residential schools : the stolen years / edited by Linda Jaine. What has been broken can be healed,
what has been stolen can be reclaimed. The stories in this book are the voices of our community. Each story given, as a gift, is an act of resistance. An act of healing

 Residential schools : the devastating impact on Canada’s indigenous peoples and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s findings and calls for action / Melanie Florence.

 Residential schools and reconciliation : Canada confronts its history / J.R. Miller. Provides a detailed review and analysis of various approaches to reconciliation over the past thirty years. Thanks to Miller’s substantial research and new interviews with individuals like former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations  “Phil” Fontaine and Senator Murray Sinclair, who chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC), readers are guided through a complicated history of acknowledgements and apologies, court cases and dispute resolution, and official government initiatives, including the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (1991–96) and the TRC.

Response, responsibility and renewal [electronic resource] : Canada’s truth and reconciliation journey / edited for the Aboriginal Healing Foundation by Gregory Younging, Jonathan Dewar, Mike DeGagné.

 Speaking our truth : a journey of reconciliation / Monique Gray Smith. This nonfiction book examines how we can foster reconciliation with Indigenous people at individual, family, community and national levels

 Shingwauk’s vision : a history of native residential schools / J.R. Miller.  Miller’s title evokes Augustine Shingwauk’s view of education (one historically shared by many Natives leaders and parents) that it would assist Native people in adjusting to Canadian society without assimilating. Miller ably demonstrates that the system that developed had the reverse effect, ultimately devastating Native communities. He chronicles the establishment and administration of the residential school system and relates Native students’ experiences, ending his account with the reorientation towards Native-run educational institutions begun in the 1960s. Basing his work on missionary and government records as well as oral interviews and questionnaires, he presents the history from the point of view of the three main actors –Aboriginal people, federal officials, and missionaries.

Sugar Falls : a residential school story / David Alexander Robertson, Scott B. Henderson. Sugar Falls is based on the true story of Betty Ross, elder from Cross Lake First Nation

 The circle game : shadows and substance in the Indian residential school experience in Canada / Roland D. Chrisjohn and Sherri L. Young ; with contributions by Michael Maraun.

Truth and indignation : Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on  Indian residential schools / Ronald Niezen. Truth and Indignation offers the first close and critical assessment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission as it is unfolding. Niezen uses interviews with survivors and oblate priests and nuns, as well as testimonies, texts, and visual materials produced by the Commission to raise important questions. Thoughtful, provocative, and uncompromising in the need to tell the “truth” as he sees it, Niezen offers an important contribution to our understanding of TRC processes i

 Turtle Island voices. Grade six / series editors: David Bouchard, Robert Cutting, Robyn Michaud-Turgeon ; literacy consultant: David Booth. The Turtle Island Voices reading series offers aboriginal children the opportunity to see themselves in their learning materials.

 Unsettling the settler within : Indian residential schools, truth telling, and reconciliation in Canada / Paulette Regan. Regan, is a “white settler” who writes specifically to a nonNative audience. Her main agenda is to provoke Canadians, even a few, to such an extent that they undertake the long, destabilizing journey towards critical self-reflexivity, the necessary first step to decolonization and one she describes as “unsettling the settler within.” Only then, she argues, can they participate with Indigenous people in “restorying” their past. This dialogue holds the potential for reconciliation between Indigenous and settler societies; however, it also involves truth telling on both sides

 

New Titles Tuesday, May 25

Here is a selection of new and updated titles in our catalogue featuring more from the National Film Board  as well as a rich collection of print material mostly related Irish theatre recently donated to the library.

 A capital plan /National Film Board of Canada. Ottawa, a capital city that grew without direction, is laid out afresh by an expert town planner. Tourists, diplomats and trade experts, walking in the shadow of the Peace Tower, see the historic Rideau Canal and the swimming and skiing facilities close to Ottawa’s centre. But they see, too, the cluttered buildings, the traffic bottlenecks, and the smoke from the cross-town tracks. To make Ottawa a city fit to be Canada’s capital, Jacques Gréber laid out ‘a capital plan.’ With tracks moved, factories relocated, and neighbourhoods redesigned as separate communities, Ottawa becomes a capital city of true beauty and dignity.

 A century of Irish drama: widening the stage /edited by Stephen Watt, Eileen Morgan, and Shakir Mustafa. This book traces a significant shift in 20th century Irish theatre from the largely national plays produced in Dublin to a more expansive international art form. Confirmed by the recent success outside of Ireland of the “third wave” of Irish playwrights writing in the 1990s, the new Irish drama has encouraged critics to reconsider both the early national theatre and the dramatic tradition it fostered.

 Billy Bishop goes to war: a play /by John Gray, with Eric Peterson.  Billy Bishop Goes to War ranks as one of Canada’s most successful and endearing musical dramas in history. The Governor General’s Award-winning musical documents the glorious World War I exploits of Canadian flying ace Billy Bishop.

By the Bog of Cats /Marina Carr. Set in the mysterious landscape of the bogs of rural Ireland, Carr’s lyrical and timeless play tells the story of Hester Swane, an Irish traveller with a deep and unearthly connection to her land. Tormented by the memory of a mother who deserted her, Hester is once again betrayed, this time by the father of her child, the man she loves. On the brink of despair, she embarks on a terrible journey of vengeance as the secrets of her tangled history are revealed.

 Camera test /directed by Joyce Wong ; produced by Justine Pimlott, Anita Lee ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). Pairing intimate interviews with absurdist re-enactments, Joyce Wong crafts a tartly subversive look at patriarchy and racism in the film industry.

 Canada at war. Part 2, Blitzkrieg /produced by Stanley Clish, Donald Brittain, Peter Jones ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). April – November 1940. With devastating speed Germany takes Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg. Italy declares war. The British withdraw from Dunkirk. Mackenzie King feels the Canadian pulse on conscription. England is strafed by the Luftwaffe, and Britons accept Churchill’s challenge of “blood, sweat and tears.”.

 Canada in World War One /produced by Tim Wilson, Frank Spiller ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada. Canada’s role in the Allied Forces during the conflict is explored in this film, showing the brutal realities of trench warfare experienced by Canadian troops. These years of enemy bombings and shooting, left some 60, 000 soldiers dead.

 Canada vignettes: dance /directed by Lise-Hélène Larin ; produced by David Verrall, Derek Lamb ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). The metamorphosis of a map of Canada into human forms who share the natural resources to the rhythm of a dance.

Canada vignettes: June in Povungnituk : Quebec Arctic /directed by Alanis Obomsawin ; produced by Robert Verrall ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). On a beautiful summer’s day in Nunavik, a family enjoys the pleasures of berry picking and fishing as the sound of two Elders throat-singing fills the environment.

 Canada vignettes: log driver’s waltz /directed by John Weldon ; produced by David Verrall, Derek Lamb ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal. This lighthearted, animated tale is based on the song The Log Driver’s Waltz by Wade Hemsworth. Kate and Anna McGarrigle sing to the music of the Mountain City Four.

 Canada vignettes: logger /directed by Al Sens ; produced by Peter Jones, Robert Verrall ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). An animated history of logging on the British Columbia coast.

Canada vignettes: men of the deeps, Cape Breton /directed by Sandra Dudley ; produced by Dorothy Courtois, Peter Katadotis ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). A vignette of coal mines in New Waterford and Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, featuring traditional Cape Breton folk songs sung by Men of the Deeps, a miners’ choral group.

 Canada vignettes: onions and garlic : a Hebrew fable /directed by Eva Szasz ; produced by Andy Thomson, Robert Verrall, Floyd Elliott ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). An animated film of an old Hebrew fable.

Canadian landscape /National Film Board of Canada. We accompany A.Y. Jackson on painting trips by canoe and on foot to the northern wilderness of Canada in autumn. He discusses his approach to his subject matter, and shows some of his paintings.

 Canadian screen magazine. No. 4 /production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Ottawa). Big Liz Brings Home 12 000 Happy Canadians: Canadian soldiers return home from Europe on the S.S. Queen Elizabeth. Troop Carrier to Airliner: Military aircraft are converted for use as commercial airplanes. B.C. Salmon Run: Commercial salmon fishing and processing in British Columbia is shown. Vets Regain Efficiency with Artificial Limbs: Rehabilitation programs for Canadian veterans allow them to become proficient in the use of artificial limbs. Students Produce Art China in New Industry: In Woodstock, Ontario, high school students participate in local ceramic-ware production.

 Canadians advance near Cambrai. 3 /production agencies: Ministry of Information (London), Canadian War Records Office (London). The devastating effects of shelling. Firemen, soldiers and civilians fight several fires in a village, brick buildings are reduced to rubble, and a water tank in a factory is totally destroyed.

 Caninabis /directed by Kaj Pindal ; produced by Gaston Sarault ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). Caninabis is an animated film about a dog whose brilliant career on the drug squad collapses when he mistakes a truckload of fertilizer for marijuana, causing an uncalled-for “bust.” He is the victim of “burn-out,” brought on by protracted smoking of drugs. The film’s message is clear: smoking marijuana is definitely not good for dogs. Film without words.

 Canon /directed by Norman McLaren, Grant Munro ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). McLaren and Munro use three different animation techniques to provide visual representations of canons in a film designed to teach viewers about this ancient musical form. The soundtrack combines both recorded classical music and sounds produced by a synthesizer.

 Capturing reality: the art of documentary /directed by Pepita Ferrari ; produced by Michelle van Beusekom ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). From cinema-vérité pioneers Albert Maysles, Joan Churchill and Michel Brault to maverick moviemakers like Errol Morris and Nick Broomfield — some of the doc world’s brightest lights reflect upon the unique power of the genre in Capturing Reality. Articulate and entertaining, provocative and thoughtful — the remarkable cast includes such luminaries as Chilean filmmaker Patricio Guzmán, the innovative British director Kim Longinotto and Alanis Obomsawin — the First Lady of First Nations cinema. Studded throughout are intimate interviews with 33 directors and clips from over 50 films — classics such as Grey Gardens and The Thin Blue Line, as well as such arresting recent work as Darwin’s Nightmare and The Day I Will Never Forget, offering insight into various aspects of the complex creative process. Provocative pranksters, courageous activists and consummate storytellers — directors discuss the multiple creative choices involved in making documentary cinema.

Caregivers. Episode four, Pat and Molly /directed by Dan Curtis ; produced by Adam Symansky, Don Haig ; production agency: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal). When she was a student nurse, Pat Tucker received training in bedside care. Today, she puts those skills to good use in caring for her mother who requires round-the-clock attention. Produced with the help of individual caregivers and community agencies across Canada, this is a “how-to” series with soul.

 Far from the land: new Irish plays /foreword by Sebastian Barry ; edited and introduced by John Fairleigh. A startling collection of plays by playwrights working in the north and south of Ireland, all of which have been groundbreaking events in contemporary Irish theatre.

Heroines: three plays /John Murrell, Sharon Pollock, Michel Tremblay ; edited by Joyce Doolittle. Three of Canada’s most distinguished playwrights – Tremblay, Pollock and Murrell – depict vivid manifestations of the feminine.

 Jennie’s story ; & Under the skin /Betty Lambert. Winner of the 1983 Chalmers Canadian Play Award, Jennie’s Story is set in the late 1930s on the Canadian prairies. It concerns the Sexual Sterilization Act  allowing a sterilization procedure to be performed without consent on individuals that were deemed to be unfit or mentally challenged. Jennie McGrane takes the title role, and her discovery of what the priest Father Fabrizeau has done to her is the central drama of the play. Believing she had an appendectomy when she was a teenager, the truth is revealed when she’s unable to conceive. In Under the Skin, Emma, the twelve-year-old daughter of Maggie Benton, has disappeared. John and Renee Gifford, Maggie’s neighbours and friends, attempt to console her, but their own ominous behaviour makes this a cold comfort.

Joyce, O’Casey, and the Irish popular theater /Stephen Watt. This study explores Ireland’s late 19th-century popular theater and its impact on the works of two of its major writers, James Joyce and Sean O’Casey. Employing the strategies of Marxist cultural analysis and the “New Historicism,” Watt recreates a seldom-discussed aspect of Irish popular culture and assesses its contribution to various political and social discourses in turn-of- the-century Dublin.

 Livingstone /Tim Jeal. Teal draws on fresh sources to provide the most fully rounded portait yet of this complicated man, dogged for years by private and public failure despite his full share of success.

Making sense of the journey: the geography of our faith : Mennonite stories integrating faith and life and the world of thought /edited by Robert Lee and Nancy V. Lee ; foreword by Loren E. Swartzendruber. The Mennonite writers of this book were Depression-era babies who amid experiencing World War II, the Korean, Vietnam, and the Cold wars, helped Eastern Mennonite College and North American Mennonites develop more global perspectives and commitments.

 North ; also, Soldiers ; Act of union ; Mary’s men: four plays /by Seamus Finnegan.

Ourselves alone /by Anne Devlin. Three women in Belfast dream of escaping the political peril that marks their lives, but cannot because of the family loyalties instilled in them and their complicated relationships with men.

 Plays–one /Enda Walsh ; with a foreword by the author.  The first eight astonishing plays by Enda Walsh, ‘one of the most dazzling wordsmiths of contemporary theatre’ . Bursting onto the theatre scene in 1996 with Disco Pigs, Enda Walsh has delivered a sustained fusillade of strikingly original plays ever since. This volume, with a Foreword by the author, contains: The Ginger Ale Boy about a Cork cabaret about a ventriloquist who loses control. Disco Pigs , his breakthrough play, that ‘does for Irish kids what Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting did for young Scots’. Misterman  in which we meet Thomas Magill on his obsessive mission to bring God to the townsfolk of Inishfree. bedbound, his Fringe First Award-winning play, in which a father and daughter are trapped in their own compulsive and claustrophobic story. The Small Things, a ‘harrowingly precise and poetic’ exploration of language and our need for words to survive. Chatroom, a chilling tale of teenage manipulation. Also included are two previously unpublished short plays, How These Desperate Men Talk and Lynndie’s Gotta Gun , written during Walsh’s time working with European theatremakers.

 The beauty queen of Leenane and other plays /Martin McDonagh. These three plays are set in a town in Galway so blighted by rancor, ignorance, and spite that, as the local priest complains, God Himself seems to have no jurisdiction there. The Beauty Queen of Leenane portrays ancient, manipulative Mag and her virginal daughter, Maureen, whose mutual loathing may be more durable than any love. In A Skull in Connnemara, Mick Dowd is hired to dig up the bones in the town churchyard, some of which belong to his late and oddly unlamented wife. And the brothers of The Lonesome West have no sooner buried their father than they are resuming the vicious and utterly trivial quarrel that has been the chief activity of their lives.

 The Canadian pavilion, Expo 67 /National Film Board of Canada. The visit to the Canadian Pavilion at Expo 67 highlights Canada’s natural resources and advances in technology and science.

 The canoe /National Film Board of Canada. Utilizing engineering ingenuity that is centuries old, Atikamekw elders Agatha and Cézar Néwashish build a small-scale version of a birch-bark canoe. With their expert hands, a stunning work of art is created

The cemetery of Europe: The Spanish play, The German connection, The Murphy girls: three plays /by Seamus Finnegan.

 The custom of the country /John Fletcher and Philip Massinger ; this edition prepared by Nick de Somogyi. This 17th-century play by John Fletcher and Philip Massinger traces the fortunes of two brothers shipwrecked in a foreign land. By turns poignant and risqué, sentimental and satirical, its beautifully crafted plot embodies the collaborative art of its authors.

The field, and other Irish plays /John B. Keane. The Field, Sive, & Big Maggie portray ordinary people confronting change in modern Ireland.

 The Gigli concert /by Tom Murphy. ‘One of the greatest Irish plays of the century’ (Irish Times.)  Murphy’s gift – here and in his other plays – is at once to stimulate and destabilise. It’s a thrilling and intense experience to sit in a theatre and hardly to know where you are or that anything exists beyond the stage in front of you. This is a dark, funny, consuming evening of high points, breaking points, hangovers and hints – uncertain hints – of hope’ (Observer)”

 The magnificent voyage of Emily Carr /Jovette Marchessault, translated by Linda Gaboriau. Emily Carr lived in a magical place that she had christened The House of All Sorts. In this house ,Carr, with all her greatness and her imperfections, receives visitors

The matrix of Christian ethics: integrating philosophy and moral theology in a postmodern context /Patrick Nullens & Ronald T. Michener.  This book begins to delve into this relevant and contemporary subject through methodological reflection on the commands, purposes, values, and virtues of Christian life in today”s context. To address these factors, an integrative approach to ethics is proposed, borrowing from classical ethical models such as consequential ethics, principle ethics, virtue ethics, and value ethics. This is what the authors call a matrix of Christian ethics.   It concludes with some practically oriented guidelines to help the reader consider contemporary ethical questions and conflicts within a framework of biblical wisdom, in view of the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit in the lives of followers of Christ.

The Melville boys /Norm Foster. Two men arrive at their cabin in the woods for a weekend of drinking and fishing. The arrival of two sisters changes everything.

The mousetrap: a play in two acts /by Agatha Christie.

The Oxford history of Ireland /edited by R.F. Foster.  This volume captures all the varied legacies of the Emerald Isle, from the earliest prehistoric communities and the first Christian settlements, through the centuries of turbulent change and creativity, right up to the present day. Written by a team of scholars–all of whom are native to Ireland–this book offers the most authoritative account of Irish history yet published for the general reader.

 The Pillowman /Martin McDonagh. A writer in a totalitarian state is interrogated about the gruesome content of his short stories and their similarities to a number of child-murders that are happening in his town.

 The steward of Christendom /Sebastian Barry. The play that established Barry as one of Ireland”s most powerful contemporary playwrights. Thomas Dunne, ex-chief superintendent of the Dublin Metropolitan police looks back on his career built during the latter years of Queen Victoria”s empire, from his home in Baltinglass in Dublin in 1932. Like King Lear, Dunne tries valiantly to break free of history and himself.

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