presentation on experiential learning for the Intellectual Speaker Exchange Program (Mount Alliso... more presentation on experiential learning for the Intellectual Speaker Exchange Program (Mount Allison University and University of Guelph)
Overview of a large collection of rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials on Scottish his... more Overview of a large collection of rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials on Scottish history and culture
This article considers the creation, publication, and reception history of The Home Cook Book, Ca... more This article considers the creation, publication, and reception history of The Home Cook Book, Canada’s first community and fundraising cookbook. Published initially in Toronto in 1877 as a fundraiser for the Hospital for Sick Children, the text of the work was heavily derived from a volume of the same name issued in Chicago several years earlier. Comparison of the text of the 1877 Toronto edition with the earlier Chicago text proves many of its recipes were not Canadian in origin. As a result, the work offers a clear demonstration of how American food preferences and cooking practices came to permeate Canadian cuisine. Although its affiliation with the hospital quickly faded away, the Canadian version of The Home Cook Book remained continuously in print for fifty-two years, its content undergoing only very modest changes across that half century. We locate The Home Cook Book as a hybrid of two genres: the commercial domestic manual and the community cookbook. Our analysis combines...
This article describes the background behind and the process of the digitization of travel epheme... more This article describes the background behind and the process of the digitization of travel ephemera contained within the University of Guelph’s Scottish Studies Collection. Developed as an experiential learning opportunity for undergraduate students at the University of Guelph, this project explores the place that postcards held in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Scotland, the technologies involved with the printing and creation of postcards, their intended purpose, and what can be learned about Victorian, Edwardian, and postwar society based on postcard design, descriptions, and use. Through the creation of an Omeka online exhibit, those involved with this digitization project were able to share their analysis with the public, while making these materials digitally available for consultation and review.
presentation on experiential learning for the Intellectual Speaker Exchange Program (Mount Alliso... more presentation on experiential learning for the Intellectual Speaker Exchange Program (Mount Allison University and University of Guelph)
Overview of a large collection of rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials on Scottish his... more Overview of a large collection of rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials on Scottish history and culture
This article considers the creation, publication, and reception history of The Home Cook Book, Ca... more This article considers the creation, publication, and reception history of The Home Cook Book, Canada’s first community and fundraising cookbook. Published initially in Toronto in 1877 as a fundraiser for the Hospital for Sick Children, the text of the work was heavily derived from a volume of the same name issued in Chicago several years earlier. Comparison of the text of the 1877 Toronto edition with the earlier Chicago text proves many of its recipes were not Canadian in origin. As a result, the work offers a clear demonstration of how American food preferences and cooking practices came to permeate Canadian cuisine. Although its affiliation with the hospital quickly faded away, the Canadian version of The Home Cook Book remained continuously in print for fifty-two years, its content undergoing only very modest changes across that half century. We locate The Home Cook Book as a hybrid of two genres: the commercial domestic manual and the community cookbook. Our analysis combines...
This article describes the background behind and the process of the digitization of travel epheme... more This article describes the background behind and the process of the digitization of travel ephemera contained within the University of Guelph’s Scottish Studies Collection. Developed as an experiential learning opportunity for undergraduate students at the University of Guelph, this project explores the place that postcards held in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Scotland, the technologies involved with the printing and creation of postcards, their intended purpose, and what can be learned about Victorian, Edwardian, and postwar society based on postcard design, descriptions, and use. Through the creation of an Omeka online exhibit, those involved with this digitization project were able to share their analysis with the public, while making these materials digitally available for consultation and review.
Uploads
Conference Presentations by Melissa McAfee
Papers by Melissa McAfee