Contributors / Collaborateurs

Contributors / Collaborateurs

ANNA ADAMEK, a native of Cracow, Poland, studied the history of literature at Jagiellonian University. She is the library reader services assistant at the National Museum of Science and Technology in Ottawa.

ANNMARIE ADAMS is an associate professor at the School of Architecture at McGill University in Montreal, and the author of Architecture in the Family Way: Doctors, Houses and Women, 1870-1900 (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1996).

DENNIS BARTELS is a professor of anthropology at Sir Wilfred Grenfell College, Memorial University of Newfoundland, in Cornerbrook. He is co-author, with Alice Bartels, of When the North Was Red: Aboriginal Education in Soviet Siberia (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1995).

RANDALL BROOKS is Curator of Physical Sciences and Space at the National Museum of Science and Technology in Ottawa.

CHRISTOPHER CLARKE-HAZLETT is senior historian at the Strong Museum in Rochester, New York, where he has developed exhibitions on the material foundations of class in America, African-American culture and identity in the twentieth century, and environmental history.

JEAN-FRANÇOIS GAUVIN prépare un doctorat en histoire des sciences à l'Université de Montréal. Avec le Musée David M. Stewart, il travaille à une exposition et à un catalogue illustré sur les instruments scientifiques de l'abbé J. A. Nollet.

BONAR A. (SANDY) GOW is an associate professor in the Department of History, Concordia University College of Alberta, in Edmonton.

PETER KAELLGREN is associate curator for silver in the Department of Western Art and Culture, Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto.

ELIZABETH H. KENNELL is Director of Development at the McCord Museum of Canadian History in Montreal.

DAVID MCGEE received his doctorate from the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Toronto. In 1997-98, he will be a postdoctoral fellow at the Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in Boston.

PAUL NATHANSON of Montreal holds degrees in art history and religious studies. He is the author of Over the Rainbow: The Wizard ofOz as a Secular Myth of America.

JEAN-MARC RAN OPPENHEIM is the administrator and financial officer of the Middle East Institute at Columbia University in New York and an adjunct professor of history at Brooklyn College.

GERALD L. POCIUS is editor in chief of Material History Review and director of the Centre for Material Culture Studies at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St John's.

FREDERICK JOHN THORPE est conservateur émérite au Musée canadien des civilisations. Spécialiste de la politique des fortifications, il poursuit des recherches sur l'histoire coloniale française des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles.

LUCE VERMETTE est historienne aux Services historiques de Parcs Canada à Hull.

CYNTHIA WALLACE-CASEY is a heritage development officer for the Province of New Brunswick. She received a graduate degree in material history from the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton.