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The Rise and Fall of United Grain Growers
Cooperatives, Market Regulation, and Free Enterprise
Paul Earl
University of Manitoba Press, 2019

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Mac Runciman
A Life in the Grain Trade
Paul D. Earl
University of Manitoba Press, 2000
One of the most turbulent periods in the history of prairie agriculture is chronicled in a new book about the life and times of Alexander "Mac" Runciman, the Saskatchewan farmer who led the United Grain Growers as president from 1961 to 1981. Mac Runciman earned the respect and admiration on both sides of the great agriculture debates of the 1960s and 1970sófrom individual farmers to Pierre Trudeau, who offered Runciman a cabinet post in 1980 (Mac turned him down).Mac Runciman: A Life in the Grain Trade tells the story of how Runciman rose through the ranks of the UGG to play a central role in the fierce debates over the modernization of grain handling, subsidized freight rates, and the role of The Canadian Wheat Board. Runciman's reminiscences give new insights into the events and personalities of that critical period in Canadian agricultural history, a time in which the rural community began to question highly centralized and regulated marketing and transportation systems. The events and decisions of those years continue to reverberate in today's controversies over grain marketing and grain transportation.
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Growing Resistance
Canadian Farmers and the Politics of Genetically-Modified Wheat
Emily Eaton
University of Manitoba Press, 2013

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Music from Within
A Biography of the Composer S.C. Eckhardt-Gramatté
Ferdinand Eckhardt
University of Manitoba Press, 1985

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The Iron Rose
The Extraordinary Life of Charlotte Ross, MD
Fred Edge
University of Manitoba Press, 1992

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Travelling Knowledges
Positioning the Im/Migrant Reader of Aboriginal Literatures in Canada
Renate Eigenbrod
University of Manitoba Press, 2005
In the context of de/colonization, the boundary between an Aboriginal text and the analysis by a non-Aboriginal outsider poses particular challenges often constructed as unbridgeable. Eigenbrod argues that politically correct silence is not the answer but instead does a disservice to the literature that, like all literature, depends on being read, taught, and disseminated in various ways. In Travelling Knowledges, Eigenbrod suggests decolonizing strategies when approaching Aboriginal texts as an outsider and challenges conventional notions of expertise. She concludes that literatures of colonized peoples have to be read ethically, not only without colonial impositions of labels but also with the responsibility to read beyond the text or, in Lee Maracle's words, to become "the architect of great social transformation." Features the works of: Jeannette Armstrong (Okanagan), Louise Halfe (Cree), Margo Kane (Saulteaux/Cree), Maurice Kenny (Mohawk), Thomas King (Cherokee, living in Canada), Emma LaRocque (Cree/Metis), Lee Maracle (Sto:lo/Metis), Ruby Slipperjack (Anishnaabe), Lorne Simon (Miíkmaq), Richard Wagamese (Anishnaabe), and Emma Lee Warrior (Peigan).
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A Bibliography of Northern Manitoba
Richard A. Enns
University of Manitoba Press, 1991

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Taking Back Our Spirits
Indigenous Literature, Public Policy, and Healing
Jo-Ann Episkenew
University of Manitoba Press, 2009

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We're Going to Run This City
Winnipeg's Political Left after the General Strike
Stefan Epp-Koop
University of Manitoba Press, 2015

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Mennonite Women in Canada
A History
Marlene Epp
University of Manitoba Press, 2008

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The Politics of the Canoe
Bruce Erickson
University of Manitoba Press, 2021


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