Blog — In 2014, Meytal Radzinski, a young scholar, founded Women in Translation Month to be held annually in August in response to the gender disparity she noticed in works of translation....
Blog — ...how we got here. If you are interested in Canada’s modern welfare system, The Wages of Relief: Cities and the Unemployed in Prairie Canada, 1929–39 describes the enduring impact of...
Blog — ...Alberta is a particularly interesting place to conduct such a study because of its complicated relationship with the oil and gas industry, government support of that industry, and previous public...
Blog — ...ILP during the tumultuous interwar period. He argues that the ILP made a lasting contribution to British politics in general, and to the modern Labour Party in particular, by preserving...
Blog — ...you’re not sure where to start, we have some reading recommendations for you. Click “Read Online” on each of these book pages to dive in! kiyâm by Naomi McIlwraith is...
Blog — ...removal of barriers to knowledge. The 2016 theme is “Open in Action” which calls for scholars and publishers to commit to various open access practices. You can find more information...
Blog — This week’s #AUPBookOfTheWeek is Mark McCutcheon’s debut collection of poetry, Shape Your Eyes by Shutting Them. In this inventive collection of poems, Mark A. McCutcheon engages in sophisticated literary play...
Blog — ...anyone. Check out this study for some fascinating stats on MOOCs in 2014. Blended Learning: a combination of online and in-person learning which allows for personalized and independent study. Our...
Blog — ...The Winter 2017/18 issue of Prairie Books Now arrived in our mailbox and contains three AU Press titles! Pick up your copy at your local library. Canada’s History released their...
Blog — ...Indigenous people in Canada. His memoir is a study in the effects of intergenerational and colonial traumas. If you are teaching in t he twenty-first century, you’ll love Assessment Strategies...