Timothy Leduc, author of Climate, Culture, Change will be participating in an upcoming screening and discussion of the award-winning documentary Climate Refugees. The documentary takes a look at the people displaced by climatically induced environmental disasters: the products of climate change.
Experts predict that instances of extreme weather events such as hurricanes, cyclones, fires and flooding will increase dramatically in the coming years. As areas are hit with these disasters, people will be forced to leave their homes and seek asylum in other parts of the world. It is thought that border conflicts and potentially even wars will be fought over these issues. For the first time ever, climate change is being considered a national security risk.
To learn more about these issues, please attend the free screening of 'Climate Refugees' which will be held at the University of Toronto Campus in the the JJR Macleod Auditorium on Friday, April 29 at 6:30 PM.
The screening will be following by a panel discussion with Timothy Leduc, author of Climate, Culture, Change; Laura Westra, author of Globalization, Violence and World Governance; and Alfredo Barahona, Program Coordinator, Migrant and Indigenous Rights, KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives, and Member of the World Council of Churches' Global Ecumenical Network on Migration.
Watch the 'Climate Refugees' trailer here:
http://www.press.uottawa.ca/
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
4/13/2011
4/01/2011
Don’t miss out on these great April Fools jokes!
It’s April Fools day and the hunt is on for the day’s best internet prank. Here are a few that we’ve come across so far:
- Huffington Post erects Paywall for NYTimes employees
- GMAIL Motion BETA
- Release of the Appwood
- Scholarly Kitchen to Erect Pay Wall
- (Font Nerds only) Google “Helvetica”
- Hootsuite’s ‘Happy Owls’
- Rebecca Black mania
And our personal favourite....
- Harry Potter’s new TV show, The Aurors
Which is your favourite? Have we missed any? Let us know!
- Huffington Post erects Paywall for NYTimes employees
- GMAIL Motion BETA
- Release of the Appwood
- Scholarly Kitchen to Erect Pay Wall
- (Font Nerds only) Google “Helvetica”
- Hootsuite’s ‘Happy Owls’
- Rebecca Black maniaAnd our personal favourite....
- Harry Potter’s new TV show, The Aurors
Which is your favourite? Have we missed any? Let us know!
Labels:
new media technologies,
news
3/22/2011
Constance Backhouse, lauréate de la médaille David Walter Mundell 2010
Félicitations à Constance Backhouse, auteure du livre De la couleur des lois, qui a été choisie comme lauréate de la médaille David Walter Mundell pour l’année 2010. Le prix rend hommage à ceux et celles qui ont fait une contribution distinguée au droit et aux lettres.La professeure Backhouse est une spécialiste réputée de droit au Canada qui se concentre particulièrement aux inégalités systémiques. De la couleur des lois expose la discrimination raciale du système judiciaire au Canada entre 1900 et 1950.
De la couleur des lois est la traduction française de Colour-Coded: A Legal History of Racism in Canada (University of Toronto Press, 1999), qui a été gagnant du prix Joseph Brant en 2002.
Pour en lire plus au sujet du prix, veuillez cliquer le lien suivant :
http://www.commonlaw.uottawa.ca/index.php?option=com_content&Itemid=111&id=5579&task=view&lang=fr
Pour commander le livre, visitez: http://www.presses.uottawa.ca/book/de-la-couleur-des-lois
3/17/2011
Un dictionnaire à la hauteur des auteurs franco-ontariens
Voici une critique du Dictionnaire des écrits de l'Ontario français qui viens d'être publier dans le journal Le Goût de vivre.
Bonne lecture!
Bonne lecture!
2/22/2011
Association of American Publishers Announces 2010 PROSE Award Winners: University of Ottawa Press receives honourable mention for ‘My Life’
The Professional and Scholarly Publishing (PSP) Division of the Association of American Publishers recently announced the winners of the 2010 American Publishers Awards for the Professional and Scholarly Excellence (The PROSE Awards). Among the laureates was an honourable mention for the University of Ottawa Press in the ‘Biography & Autobiography’ category for its recent publication ‘My Life,’ the memoirs of Sofia Andreevna Tolstaya.
More than 45 awards were presented February 3, 2011 at the PSP Annual Conference in Washington, DC. Winners included Elsevier, American Psychological Association, Oxford University Press, John Wiley & Sons, University of Texas Press, Getty Publications and American Chemical Society.
A full list of winners can be found at the following link: http://www.proseawards.com/current-winners.html
The Association of American Publishers is the national trade association of the U.S. publishing industry. AAP’s members include most of the major commercial publishers in the U.S., as well as smaller and non-profit publishers, university presses and scholarly societies. The 2010 PROSE Awards received a record-breaking 491 entries from over 60 publishers across the country.
1/21/2011
Reingard Nischik Wins Margaret Atwood Society ‘Best Book’ Award For Second Time
Today, the Margaret Atwood Society announced the winners of the prestigious Margaret Atwood Society Awards. Among them was Engendering Genre: The Works of Margaret Atwood by UOP author Reingard Nischik.The Best Book Award is conferred each year by the Margaret Atwood Society, an international association of scholars, teachers, and students who are devoted to the Canadian icon’s work. Five awards are given to authors in the categories of best book, best article, best dissertation, best graduate essay and best undergraduate essay. The society’s goal is to promote scholarly exchange on Atwood’s oeuvre by providing opportunities for scholars to exchange information.
Engendering Genre explores how Atwood has developed her writing to be gender-sensitive, and argues that her use of gender and genre emphasizes the gender-bias inherent in traditional genres. The book also includes the first in-depth treatment of Atwood’s cartoon art, as well as an interview with the Canadian icon.
“We were thrilled to hear of the society’s choice” said Michael O’Hearn, Director of the University of Ottawa Press. “It is wonderful to see Reingard recognized for her outstanding work.”
Reviewers have had nothing but good things to say:
"Offering interpretations of some of Atwood's best-known and less-familiar works, Nischik has written chapters that are individually strong but which together provide a way to read Atwood's oeuvre as a 'significant cultural document of our times.' Highly recommended."
-- Choice
"Nischik's strength is in the minutiae and in her close reading. This is what Atwood scholarship needs now, and Nischik provides a strong framework for anyone interested in Atwood scholarship, whether one is just starting out or an experienced scholar." -- The Goose

Congratulations, Reingard!!
To find out more about Engendering Genre, or to buy a copy of your very own, visit: http://www.press.uottawa.ca/book/engendering-genre
Labels:
awards,
news,
University of Ottawa Press
12/15/2010
Je l’ai entendu à la radio : le Dictionnaire des écrits de l’Ontario français
À vrai dire, l’émission Grands Lacs Café est le rendez-vous radiophonique de la fin de semaine pour les Franco-Ontariens. Il n’y a pas longtemps, Gaetan Gervais et Jean-Pierre Pichette on fait la visite avec animateur Éric Robitaille.
L’excellente entrevue avec les codirecteurs de la nouvelle parution Dictionnaire des écrits de l’Ontario français a été diffusée le 4 décembre à la Première Chaîne de Radio-Canada.
Voici un extrait :
« C’est le moment de vous en parler de ce Dictionnaire des écrits de l’Ontario français 1613-1993. L’aboutissement d’une entreprise qui a été lancé en 1992 – ça fait 30 ans qu’on travaille là-dessus et enfin le projet se concrétise, se matérialise. Ça tombe bien aussi parce que le livre est publié l’année du 400e anniversaire de la présence francophone en Ontario avec les premiers voyages d’Étienne Brulé et Samuel de Champlain dans la baie Georgienne.
L’ouvrage - je l’ai reçu en primeur, il est beau, il est impressionnant, c’est une brique, il est magnifique, c’est une travaille colossale, minutieux. J'ai eu la chance de parler cette semaine avec quelques-uns des principaux artisans du dictionnaire, dont les deux codirecteurs du projet l’historien Gaetan Gervais et puis l’ethnologue Jean-Pierre Pichette … »
Pour écouter l’entrevue, cliquez le lien suivant :
Dictionnaire des écrits de l'Ontario français
Sujet: Reportage sur une oeuvre colossale et essentielle pour les francophones d'ici
L’excellente entrevue avec les codirecteurs de la nouvelle parution Dictionnaire des écrits de l’Ontario français a été diffusée le 4 décembre à la Première Chaîne de Radio-Canada.
Voici un extrait :
« C’est le moment de vous en parler de ce Dictionnaire des écrits de l’Ontario français 1613-1993. L’aboutissement d’une entreprise qui a été lancé en 1992 – ça fait 30 ans qu’on travaille là-dessus et enfin le projet se concrétise, se matérialise. Ça tombe bien aussi parce que le livre est publié l’année du 400e anniversaire de la présence francophone en Ontario avec les premiers voyages d’Étienne Brulé et Samuel de Champlain dans la baie Georgienne.
L’ouvrage - je l’ai reçu en primeur, il est beau, il est impressionnant, c’est une brique, il est magnifique, c’est une travaille colossale, minutieux. J'ai eu la chance de parler cette semaine avec quelques-uns des principaux artisans du dictionnaire, dont les deux codirecteurs du projet l’historien Gaetan Gervais et puis l’ethnologue Jean-Pierre Pichette … »
Pour écouter l’entrevue, cliquez le lien suivant :
Dictionnaire des écrits de l'Ontario français
Sujet: Reportage sur une oeuvre colossale et essentielle pour les francophones d'ici
Labels:
author interview,
français,
news
11/29/2010
100 Awesome Books - And We Made the Cut!
Great news! The University of Ottawa Press' premier edition of Sofia Tolstaya's memoirs, entitled My Life, was selected for the 2010 Globe 100: Non Fiction list. We are extremely excited to have been chosen. To see the complete listing, as well as the lists for Canadian and International Fiction, visit www.theglobeandmail.com
For more information about My Life, visit the University of Ottawa Press website at the following link: http://www.press.uottawa.ca/book/my-life
11/19/2010
Finding the Feminine Side of Engineering
An excellent article appeared in the autumn issue of the UK magazine Engineering Apprentice. Writer Ross Ringham had a chat with UOP author Monique Frize about her book The Bold and the Brave: A History of Women in Science and Engineering. They spoke about issues facing women in Engineering, and what needs to be done in both the education system and in the industry itself to achieve gender balance.
Here is some of what Frize had to say:
Increasing the pool of women engineers requires that policies, strategies and initiatives be invested at each level of education, from primary school, to college, to university. We must profile women and their work for generations to come, so that girls think, "I can also do this," and boys think, "Girls and women can also do this."
Equally important is the integration of feminine attributes and perspectives into the culture of engineering and technology, ensuring social relevance is included in the curriculum and using a teaching style that reaches a diversity of audiences.
Engineering needs women more than women need engineering roles. Women currently flock in great numbers to health-related careers, which are in great demand everywhere with the ageing population. So we must find the way to achieve more gender balance, and a culture where women no longer have to be bold and brave to choose engineering careers.
To read the full article, visit the Engineering Apprentice website. You may be asked to create an account to view the article, but it is very simple, and there is no cost.
Frize was selected by Professional Engineers Ontario and the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers to receive their annual Gold Medal for achievement in the field of engineering. The gold medal will be presented at a Gala tomorrow evening.
Congratulations, Monique!!
Here is some of what Frize had to say:
Increasing the pool of women engineers requires that policies, strategies and initiatives be invested at each level of education, from primary school, to college, to university. We must profile women and their work for generations to come, so that girls think, "I can also do this," and boys think, "Girls and women can also do this."
Equally important is the integration of feminine attributes and perspectives into the culture of engineering and technology, ensuring social relevance is included in the curriculum and using a teaching style that reaches a diversity of audiences.
Engineering needs women more than women need engineering roles. Women currently flock in great numbers to health-related careers, which are in great demand everywhere with the ageing population. So we must find the way to achieve more gender balance, and a culture where women no longer have to be bold and brave to choose engineering careers.
To read the full article, visit the Engineering Apprentice website. You may be asked to create an account to view the article, but it is very simple, and there is no cost.
Frize was selected by Professional Engineers Ontario and the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers to receive their annual Gold Medal for achievement in the field of engineering. The gold medal will be presented at a Gala tomorrow evening.
Congratulations, Monique!!
Labels:
engineer,
Monique Frize,
news,
review,
women
11/15/2010
Entrevue avec Denyse Côté, codirectrice de l'ouvrage « Famille et fragmentation »
Cette semaine, une entrevue intéressante au sujet de la garde partagée sera diffusée dans le cadre de l'émission « C'est ça la vie » à l'antenne de Radio-Canada. L’invitée est professeure Denyse Côté, codirectrice de l'ouvrage intitulé « Famille et fragmentation » qui a été codirigé avec Marie-Blanche Tahon.
L'entrevue sera diffusée à l'antenne de Radio-Canada, le 17 novembre entre 14 h et 15 h.
L'entrevue sera diffusée à l'antenne de Radio-Canada, le 17 novembre entre 14 h et 15 h.
Labels:
author interview,
news
11/12/2010
University Affairs article: The woman behind Tolstoy
Earlier this week, the magazine University Affairs/Affaires Universitaires published a short article about the publication of My Life -- the memoirs of Sofia Tolstaya, wife of the Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy.Writer Carolyn Wong interviewed UOP's Managing Editor Marie Clausén for a unique look at the production aspect of this massive project.
She writes:
"It took two years for Dr. Donskov and a team of two translators (John Woodsworth and Arkadi Klioutchanski, both members of the Slavic Research Group) and press staff to ready the book for publishing. With more than 1,200 pages to translate, scores of names and details to fact-check with experts in Russia, and 4,000 footnotes to create and index, managing editor Marie Clausén describes My Life as “the biggest and most complex book project I have ever worked on.”
With the book successfully completed and launched, Dr. Donskov has turned his attention to writing a critical study of Sofia’s work; none has ever been published in English. “She was an extremely bright woman,” he says. “What is most remarkable [about My Life] is if she had been given a chance, she would have been a very accomplished writer.”
To read the full article, visit the following link:
http://www.universityaffairs.ca/the-woman-behind-tolstoy-tells-her-story.aspx
11/11/2010
11/10/2010
Évènement: les cultural studies comme projet transdisciplinaire
Les PUO vous invite à la conférence de Boulou Ebanda de B'béri, auteur de la récente parution Les Cultural Studies dans les mondes francophones. Boulou Ebanda de B'béri est professeur au département de communications et directeur-fondateur du Laboratoire des médias audiovisuels pour l'étude des cultures et sociétés (LAMACS) de l’Université d’Ottawa.L’évènement s’agit d’une reflection sur les ‘cultural studies’ comme projet transdisciplinaire.
Coordonnées de l'événement:
Jeudi 11 novembre 2010, 16h30 à 18h
Pavillon Desmarais (DMS 3105)
Université d'Ottawa
Spotlight on Tom Symons, founder of Trent University
It looks like The Peterborough Examiner has scooped the UOP! Our publicist was surprised to find a link to this article in her inbox this morning, and incredibly impressed with how quickly the news has gotten out about one of our yet-to-be announced titles: Tom Symons, A Canadian Life. This project is so new to the UOP that we haven't yet prepared marketing copy on the title, so for today, we'll let The Examiner do the talking. Ed Arnold writes:
Peterborough's (we can proudly call him that now since he's lived here for more than four decades, can't we?) Tom Symons, the founder of Trent University, is being recognized with a new book on his professional life. Symons, who has more letters after his name than the alphabet, is one of Canada's educational/ cultural icons and has been for more than 50 years.
The book will be published next year by the University of Ottawa Press and, according to the alumni association newsletter, will tell "the story of Symons's leadership across many areas of Canadian and international life over the past 60 years."
The book Tom Symons, A Canadian Life will have a chapter by Denis Smith, Trent's first vice president, that is to be all about the university's first decade. Other chapters will look at Symons's national unity, Canadian, cultural, heritage and commonwealth roles. Various people including Walter Pitman, John Fraser, Rosalie Abella, ad Tom McMillan, will write chapters.
It's about time.
You can access the article here: http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2835626
We're happy to know that Peterborough locals are as excited about the book as we are, and we'll be sure to send The Examiner a review copy!
Labels:
news,
University of Ottawa Press
11/09/2010
Launch: The Doom Loop in the Financial Sector, by William Leiss
Come one, come all, to the launch of William Leiss' latest book:
The Doom Loop in the Financial Sector and Other Black Holes of Risk.
The Doom Loop in the Financial Sector and Other Black Holes of Risk.
Labels:
book launch,
event,
news
Nouveauté des PUO: Droits et voix, la criminologie à l'Université d'Ottawa
Dernièrement, le bulletin de découverte et d‘invention de l’Université d’Ottawa, Perspectives sur la recherche, a annoncé la parution d’une des nouveautés des Presses de l’Université d’Ottawa. L’œuvre est intitulée Droits et voix : La criminologie à l’Université d’Ottawa et a été rédigé sous la direction de Véronique Strimelle et Françoise Vanhamme..
Pour en lire plus: http://www.recherche.uottawa.ca/perspectives/
Pour en lire plus: http://www.recherche.uottawa.ca/perspectives/
11/08/2010
War and Peace, Love and Marriage, Globe and Mail
We are thrilled to announce that an excellent article about Sofia Tolstaya's My Life appeared in Saturday's Globe and Mail. The article, called War and peace, love and marriage: How the University of Ottawa Press nabbed the rights to a memoir by Tolstoy's long-suffering wife was written by Jeremy Mesiano-Crookston,a local freelance writer.

Here's an excerpt:
In the academic world, Leo (Lev Nikolaevich) Tolstoy is a colossus. He’s talked about, read, discussed, dissected and forms a pillar of studies of the novel itself. So how did the written memoirs of Tolstoy’s indomitable wife, Sofia Tolstaya (the Russian feminine version of Tolstoy), one of the most important and anticipated works in modern Tolstoy scholarship, land at a university press in Canada’s capital city? As with most things in academia, it involves an almost obsessive love of the subject, and lots of time.
Twelve years ago, the University of Ottawa formed the Slavic Research Group under the direction of Andrew Donskov, a world-renowned Tolstoy expert. Since its inception, the group has produced nearly 40 volumes of high-calibre work. “I don’t think I’m exaggerating when I say that ours would be called the centre of Tolstoy studies in North America,” Donskov says. [...] Over the years, Donskov worked in [Russia], published jointly with the Russian museums and organizations and eventually became the only foreign scholar on the editorial board of the Russian Academy of Sciences. When Tolstaya’s memoirs were scheduled to be printed in Russia as a coffee-table book, Donskov was entrusted with creating the full scholarly edition, as well as the obligation to treat the material as seriously as it deserved.
To read more, visit the Globe and Mail website at the following link:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/how-a-canadian-university-nabbed-the-rights-to-the-memoirs-of-tolstoys-wife/article1786973/page1/
Here's an excerpt:
In the academic world, Leo (Lev Nikolaevich) Tolstoy is a colossus. He’s talked about, read, discussed, dissected and forms a pillar of studies of the novel itself. So how did the written memoirs of Tolstoy’s indomitable wife, Sofia Tolstaya (the Russian feminine version of Tolstoy), one of the most important and anticipated works in modern Tolstoy scholarship, land at a university press in Canada’s capital city? As with most things in academia, it involves an almost obsessive love of the subject, and lots of time.
Twelve years ago, the University of Ottawa formed the Slavic Research Group under the direction of Andrew Donskov, a world-renowned Tolstoy expert. Since its inception, the group has produced nearly 40 volumes of high-calibre work. “I don’t think I’m exaggerating when I say that ours would be called the centre of Tolstoy studies in North America,” Donskov says. [...] Over the years, Donskov worked in [Russia], published jointly with the Russian museums and organizations and eventually became the only foreign scholar on the editorial board of the Russian Academy of Sciences. When Tolstaya’s memoirs were scheduled to be printed in Russia as a coffee-table book, Donskov was entrusted with creating the full scholarly edition, as well as the obligation to treat the material as seriously as it deserved.
To read more, visit the Globe and Mail website at the following link:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/how-a-canadian-university-nabbed-the-rights-to-the-memoirs-of-tolstoys-wife/article1786973/page1/
11/04/2010
Black Holes of Risk: author W.Leiss featured in Research Perspectives
UOP author William Leiss was recently featured in the magazine Research Perspectives. The issue, which focussed on risk, was the perfect place to showcase one of our newest titles: The Doom Loop in the Financial Sector: And Other Black Holes of Risk
The book, which hit shelves last week, tells an important story about uncontrolled risk, set against the backdrop of the global financial crisis.
Leiss is a nationally recognized risk management expert and an Associate-Director at the McLaughlin Center for Population Health Risk Assessment. He's a Fellow and former President of the Royal Society of Canada, and an Officer in the Order of Canada. Overall, he has written or edited over 15 books, including Risk and Responsibility and my favourite: Mad Cows and Mother’s Milk, both of which were published by McGill Queen's University Press.
The book, which hit shelves last week, tells an important story about uncontrolled risk, set against the backdrop of the global financial crisis.
Leiss is a nationally recognized risk management expert and an Associate-Director at the McLaughlin Center for Population Health Risk Assessment. He's a Fellow and former President of the Royal Society of Canada, and an Officer in the Order of Canada. Overall, he has written or edited over 15 books, including Risk and Responsibility and my favourite: Mad Cows and Mother’s Milk, both of which were published by McGill Queen's University Press.
Labels:
author interview,
news
11/01/2010
Two-for-One Book Launch Tomorrow!
A launch will be held tomorrow evening for two of our recent titles: The 1956 Hungarian Revolution: Hungarian and Canadian Perspectives edited by Christopher Adam, Tibor Egervari, Leslie Laczko and Judy Young, as well as Gender and Modernity in Central Europe edited by Agatha Schwartz.
If you're planning on being at the uOttawa campus tomorrow, we encourage you to come out and support the wonderful folks who made these (very attractive) books possible.
If you're planning on being at the uOttawa campus tomorrow, we encourage you to come out and support the wonderful folks who made these (very attractive) books possible.
Labels:
book launch,
event,
news
10/08/2010
UOP Renovations at Home and Online
You may have heard that our offices underwent renovations not that long ago. At the same time, we were renovating our online home – our website. You may have already noticed the changes.
For the month of October, we’ll be posting a little note each week about a new feature on our website. We’d like for you to try it out and let us know what you think. Consider it an informal beta test.
And just so we can get the obvious out of the way, we'll start with the shopping cart. Yes, you can now buy UOP books in the comfort of your own home, regardless of where you are! We’ll ship them to you and in no time you’ll be enjoying your very own UOP book.
Our entire catalogue is up there, so go nuts. Seriously. And let us know how you felt about your shopping experience.
UOP Home Page: http://www.press.uottawa.ca/
Labels:
news,
University of Ottawa Press,
website
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







