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JULIEN MASSICOTTE enseigne l’histoire et la sociologie à l’Université de Moncton, Campus d’Edmundston. Il est également doctorant en histoire à l’Université Laval. EDWARD MACDONALD is an associate professor of history at the University of Prince Edward Island, where he specializes in the social and cultural history of Prince Edward Island within a regional context. His most recent book is If You’re Stronghearted: Prince Edward Island in the Twentieth Century (Charlottetown, PE: Prince Edward Island Museum and Heritage Foundation, 2000). PAULINE GREENHILL is a professor of women’s and gender studies at the University of Winnipeg. Her most recent book (co-edited with Liz Locke and Theresa A. Vaughan) is Encyclopedia of Women’s Folklore and Folklife (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2008). Her Make the Night Hideous: Four English Canadian Charivaris, 1881-1940 is forthcoming from the University of Toronto Press (2010). PATRICK WEBBER received his undergraduate degree from St. Thomas University and his master’s degree from the University of New Brunswick, defending his thesis on the New Brunswick Waffle in March 2008. He is currently revising a paper on Trotskyism in 1970s New Brunswick, which will be published in Left History. BARBARA C. MURISON teaches history at the University of Western Ontario and is the author of numerous articles and book chapters, the most recent of which is “Lapidary Inscriptions: Rhetoric, Reality and the Baillies of Mellerstain,” in Finding the Family in Medieval and Early Modern Scotland, ed. Elizabeth Ewan and Janay Nugent (Surrey, UK: Ashgate Press, 2008). She is currently working on cultural transfer between Scotland and England as well as between Scotland and British North America. LISA PASOLLI received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Lethbridge and her master’s degree from the University of New Brunswick. She is currently at the University of Victoria, where she is researching the history of child care politics in British Columbia. TINA LOO is a professor and Canada Research Chair in the Department of History at the University of British Columbia. Her most recent book is States of Nature: Conserving Canada’s Wildlife in the Twentieth Century (Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, 2006). DENIS LEBLANC holds undergraduate degrees in both psychology and social work (l’Université de Moncton) and a master’s degree in social work (McGill). He has worked with First Nations in New Brunswick as a community research coordinator and as a co-investigator on a number of funded community-based research projects. He is currently completing his third year at the University of New Brunswick in an interdisciplinary doctoral program focused on Aboriginal health research capacity building.