Locating Canadian Slavery

Logo with red maple leaf and blue star to represent Canadian-American studies

WHEN
Friday, February 17, 2023
1:00-2:15 p.m. (Pacific Time)

LOCATION
Online
Zoom

PRICE
Free


 

Check out this video to watch the Locating Canadian Slavery.

A Comparative and Transnational Approach

Why Canada Matters Speakers Series

This webinar is a part of Canadian-American Studies' Black History Month programming


Co-sponsored by the Center for Canadian-American Studies, the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, the department of History, and in partnership with the WWU Alumni Association

The history of slavery in Canada can only be understood in a comparative and transnational context. Proximity to the United States and the wider Atlantic world shaped enslaved people’s experiences in bondage in the Maritime colonies of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. Their stories help us grasp the vast, violent, and insidious power of slavery in North America and give nuance to the opportunities they seized and obstacles they faced as a result of their enslavement in what would later become part of Canada.

Portrait of speaker Sarah Chute

SPEAKER

Sarah Chute

Sarah Chute is a PhD student studying slavery and freedom in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century North America. Her research interests are in the history of enslavement in Canada, transnational free and forced migration, trade, and how slavery connected the Maritime colonies to other parts of the Atlantic world, including the British Caribbean.

Questions and Accommodations

Contact the WWU Alumni Association for this event. Feel free to call at (360) 650-3353 or email at alumni@wwu.edu if you have any questions or comments.

There will be auto-captions available for this event.