Words that empower: The transformation of Indigenous language dictionaries

Words that empower FEATURED new
Words that empower FEATURED new
The Canadian Language Museum at the Glendon Gallery

Last fall, the Canadian Language Museum at the Glendon Gallery (Glendon Campus, York University) staged a compelling exhibition “Beyond Words: Dictionaries and Indigenous Languages.” The travelling show (which ran at Glendon from Sept. 19 to Oct. 23, 2019) examined the relationship between dictionaries and Indigenous languages – the former functioning, at first, as rudimentary translation tools to facilitate trade; then later, as vehicles through which to retain Indigenous languages for future generations. The show encapsulates several centuries and tells the story of this remarkable transformation.

Amos Key Jr. with the English-Cayuga Cayuga-English Dictionary at the opening

Guest speaker Amos Key Jr. (Tae ho węhs), inaugural vice-provost Indigenous Engagement at Brock University, spoke at the opening and set the stage for the exhibition. A member of Mohawk Nation, Key is an educator and advocate for First Peoples’ human, civil and linguistic rights; the decolonization of Indigenous education; and the emancipation of Indigenous Peoples. He was central to the creation of the digital archive of Onkwehonweh Ceremony and Rituals and the publication of an English-Cayuga Cayuga-English Dictionary, which was part of the exhibit.

Show examines the different roles of dictionaries over four centuries

“Beyond Words,” created by student curators Briahna Bernard and Stephen Shurgold, under the supervision of Elaine Gold, director of the Canadian Language Museum, has an ambitious objective: to trace the varied functions that dictionaries have played over 400 years. Given this massive scope, establishing themes was a brilliant idea. The show is built around six themes that frame the examination and, essentially, walk the viewer back in time. It is organized by:

  • first meeting and trade;
  • dictionaries for conversion;
  • early modern dictionaries;
  • community initiatives; and
  • embracing technology.

The show begins with first contact between European settlers and the Indigenous population. It features word lists, dictionaries and phrasebooks that were needed to communicate for economic trade – words such as “fur,” “cost,” and “value,” for example.

These early resources, created by non-Indigenous wordsmiths, were far from bias free. Bilingual dictionaries were used as tools of colonization, conversion and assimilation.

Beyond Words exhibit
The “Beyond Words” exhibition

In this way, the show exemplifies how dictionaries are a microcosm for the world at a particular point in time. “Dictionaries are not just lists of vocabulary; they are artifacts of the time and place they are made and reflect the goals of the people who create them,” says Gold.

In sharp contrast, today’s Indigenous language dictionaries are vehicles to retain and restore Indigenous languages for future generations. “They have become a powerful means of community-driven Indigenous language revitalization and cultural continuity,” says Gold.

Show offers compelling new resources to combat the loss of Indigenous languages

This exhibition provides an important opportunity to recognize that the loss of language in this community, over the last few decades, has been grave. Dislocation and fractured communities negatively affect a person’s or a community’s ability to retain a mother tongue.

Effort such as this traveling exhibition are turning this around. Today, there are more than 60 Indigenous languages and over 200,000 people speaking them. Cree and Inuktitut are the languages with the most speakers.

Books on display at the “Beyond Words” exhibition
Books on display at the “Beyond Words” exhibition

The interactive component of this show is an important part. The exhibition features an online tool where visitors can access language materials being developed by Indigenous communities to transmit the elders’ language knowledge to today’s youth.

“Beyond Words” is an engaging, comprehensive and interactive show containing historical insights and resources for the enrichment of Indigenous languages.

The show toured in 2019, from spring to fall, launching at the 2019 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences in June and displayed at venues including Glendon, the Markham Public Library and the University of Calgary.

The Canadian Language Museum promotes an appreciation of Canada’s rich language heritage: over 60 Indigenous languages, the official languages of French and English, and the many other languages brought to this country by immigrants from around the world. Exhibits at this museum explore important language issues such as bilingualism, multilingualism, and language endangerment, preservation and revitalization.

To learn more about the show, visit the Language Museum website. To learn more about the show on the Glendon Campus, visit the website.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca 

Corporeal meets ethereal: Provocative performance blends video, dance and virtual reality

FEATURED FREYA O performance
Freya Olafson’s “MÆ – Motion Aftereffect”

The best contemporary art can’t be pigeonholed into one genre because, more often than not, it combines a variety of approaches in new and innovative ways that press or even coerce the viewer/participant into considering their own reality. Simply put: It demands more of the viewer. This is the engaging terrain of York University Professor and intermedia artist Freya Björg Olafson.

poster screen capture of Olafso's show
Freya Olafson’s “MÆ – Motion Aftereffect”

Premiering last year (Oct. 31 to Nov. 3, 2019) at the Prairie Theatre Exchange (PTE) in Winnipeg, Man., Olafson’s “MÆ – Motion Aftereffect” is an unforgettable interactive, multimedia experience. It successfully blends dance, video, audio and virtual reality (VR), blurring the lines between the real and the virtual.

Trailer for MÆ-Motion Aftereffect Premiere Oct. 30 to Nov. 3,2019 from Freya Olafson on Vimeo.

“The MÆ project is a new work that aims to catalyze conversations about contemporary culture and performance while imagining societies future with advances in virtual reality, artificial intelligence, 360 video and related technologies,” Olafson explains.

Freya Björg Olafson
Freya Björg Olafson

“Boldly, and with levity and humour, Freya’s imagination and craft gives us a playful window into a world that we can only begin to imagine,” says PTE’s Artistic Director, Thomas Morgan Jones.

Olafson’s work combines different genres in a whole new way

Olafson came to York University just over two years ago. If one were to study her work over the years, to trace her evolution as an artist, it would be clear that she has embraced tremendous dexterity. She easily and naturally ventures into different media or genres, unfettered by conventional barriers.

A dozen years ago, for example, Olafson was a bold figurative painter. In the photo below Olafson sits in front of her New Icelander Series (2006). “In my early studio work, I based performances off of paintings and I created sets and props. This is before I started integrating video into my live works,” she explains.

Today, she is best known as an interdisciplinary artist and pioneering dancer/choreographer on the world stage. Between these two points in time, there have been many exciting developments in her work that drove the seamless shift from painting (a static, two-dimensional art form) to dance and VR – kinetic, three-dimensional art forms that engage viewers in wholly new ways.

Musician/collaborator Kristjanna Oleson and Freya Olafson in Olafson’s studio in front of sets and paintings from New Icelander Series (2006)
Musician/collaborator Kristjanna Oleson and Freya Olafson in Olafson’s studio in front of sets and paintings from New Icelander Series (2006)

Her most recent work centres around identity and the body informed by technology and the Internet, no doubt informed by her six years of classical training at the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. This new work considers what it means to be present in our contemporary screen-obsessed world and constructs an experience that interrogates the impact of technology on our bodies and psyches.

It’s not a heavy-handed delivery; Olafson’s performances are elegant, sophisticated. They feature evocative and multi-layered images with figures and shapes disappearing and re-emerging in a ghostly, elusive way. For audiences, the impact of these works is borne of the experience in its entirety.

“Motion Aftereffect” hones in on out-of-body experience

“Motion Aftereffect” is a body of work that comprises multiple short video works, this upcoming live performance and in the near future a VR installation for exhibition in galleries. Funded by the Manitoba Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts, “MÆ – Motion Aftereffect” was developed, from 2017 to 2019, through residences in Montreal, Portland, Winnipeg and San Francisco.

 “MÆ - Motion Aftereffect” series, Freya Olafson (2017). Photo credit: Robbie Sweeny.
“MÆ – Motion Aftereffect” series, Freya Olafson (2017). Photo credit: Robbie Sweeny

The premiere in Winnipeg is the latest incarnation of the series.

Olafson explains what is going on and what the viewers would see: “Onstage, I am working with live digital painting with a green screen glitch effect. Often in my work, I aim to conflate the live body with projections of digital figures/avatars. I also work with found video footage of folks testing out their home motion capture systems. In a later section of the work I actually use the VR headset.”

This work asks viewers to consider their own reality, through VR technology, to effectively destabilize meaning(s) of the corporeal body.

As Olafson noted, the project references and uses a variety of Internet content – such as material from open source motion capture libraries, ready-made 3D human models and monologues of individuals recounting their experiences with VR in live gameplay, explorative worlds and VR porn. “These texts and visuals combine with YouTube monologues about out-of-body experiences and astral projection,” she explains.

“MÆ - Motion Aftereffect” series, video stills: Freya Olafson (2017), overlaid photo credit: Ian McCausland
“MÆ – Motion Aftereffect” series, video stills: Freya Olafson (2017), overlaid photo credit: Ian McCausland

In an out-of-body experience, a person perceives the world from a location outside of their physical body. Astral projection (sometimes called astral travel) describes a person’s intentional out-of-body experience. This assumes the existence of a soul or consciousness, called an ‘astral body,’ that is separate from the physical body and capable of travelling outside and far beyond it – in fact, throughout the universe.

The result is a one-of-a-kind experience for viewers.

What’s next for Olafson? Upcoming publications include a score/script of her performance work AVATAR as part of Canadian Playwrights Press’ 2021 anthology on Digital Theatre in Canada.

Funding acknowledgement: The development of “MÆ – Motion Aftereffect” was possible via the AR/VR Artist Research Residency Pilot organized by Oregon Story Board, Eyebeam and Upfor Gallery in Portland as well as the 13th annual Montréal Choreographic Workshop. In 2017, this work was developed through the CounterPulse (San Francisco) ‘Artist Residency Commissioning Program’ with lead support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Kenneth Rainin Foundation, the Zellerbach Family Foundation, and the Ken Hempel Fund for the Arts.

To learn more about Olafson, visit her website or Faculty profile page. To learn more about the show in Winnipeg, visit her website or the PTE site.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca

Mosquito sperm research could aid pest control strategies in deadly viruses

A mosquito bites a human arm

Mosquitoes (specifically, Aedes aegypti) carry a variety of pathogens causing diseases including Zika, Yellow Fever, Chikungunya and Dengue Fever – the latter being the most widespread disease in humans infecting more than 500 million people every year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Mosquito
Aedes aegypti, a vector of several tropical diseases including Yellow Fever

York University graduate student David Rocco, supervised by Faculty of Science biology Professor Jean-Paul Paluzzi, led a team of researchers that included academics from Brazil’s São Paulo State University, in some groundbreaking research in this area.

Traditional research has focused on female mosquitoes (they bite), but this group of researchers took an unconventional approach by studying males (they don’t bite). What the team discovered led them to conclude that influencing male fertility (by decreasing sperm yield) could possibly, one day, lead to the development of novel approaches and the improvement of existing pest control strategies aimed at lessening the burden of these medically important vectors of disease.

The compelling results of this research, which funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, were published in Frontiers in Physiology (2019).

From left: David Rocco and Jean-Paul Paluzzi
From left: David Rocco and Jean-Paul Paluzzi

Rocco sits down with Brainstorm to discuss his work.

Q: Tell us about your work in the Paluzzi lab.

A: My research in the Paluzzi lab looks at vectors of disease – ticks, mites, mosquitoes predominantly. The driving notion behind it is: If we could better understand mosquito biology, then it could possibly help design targets for pest control research.

In biology, there are two main systems that function to regulate the body: the nervous system and the endocrine system, which are hormones. In this way, humans and mosquitoes are quite similar.

We’re essentially asking: By targeting different aspects of biology, including hormones, can we design novel pest control strategies or identify novel targets? Can we design something that will target this [some specific] hormone in this [some specific] species of mosquito and thereby reduce transmission?

Q: What were your objectives?

A: My research focused on a specific glycoprotein hormone in the mosquito: GPA2/GPB5. Hormones are often named after what they do in the body, but we don’t yet know what this one does. My objective was to determine what this hormone does in mosquitoes to better understand its function.

I was looking for where the receptor is for this hormone. Receptors are activated by specific hormones, released through the bloodstream, similar to a lock and key. So, I looked at the location of the receptor to learn more about the hormone.

Q: Is this original research?

A: The male mosquito reproductive system is very understudied. That said, most research in this area is about releasing sterilized males (whose sperm is not functioning) into the wild. If you breed thousands of sterilized males and you release them into the wild, then they will compete with other males to mate with a female. If a female mates with a sterilized male, then she won’t reproduce since her eggs won’t be fertilized. So effectively, you’ll reduce the population.

My work adds to this body of research.

Q: What were your key findings?

I was able to determine that the hormone GPA2/GPB5 was making sperm; its function was spermatogenesis. More specifically, it helps to make the flagella, the whip-like tail at the end of the sperm. To date, we had no idea how mosquito spermatogenesis was regulated – how sperm is made, controlled by things like the nervous system.

So, when I found out that this receptor plays a role in regulating the development of sperm, that was a really exciting find. The next question is: Could this hormone be used in the future? Could it be a target to sterilize males?

The Dengue virus affects more than a half million people annually (WHO)
The Dengue virus affects more than a half million people annually (WHO)

Q: How could this new knowledge inform policy or pest control strategies in the future?

A: We don’t make policy or draft strategy. In the lab, we provide the research, the evidence. Others, perhaps with Level 3 Containment facilities, can build on what we’ve done. [This refers to the biosafety level of labs required to isolate dangerous biological agents in an enclosed facility. The highest level is 4.] These facilities could go online, read our research paper and be able to follow up with any implications, applications and strategies for pest control.

Q: What is the current best practice to control mosquitoes?

A: Bed nets, sleeping with a large net over your bed. The approach is limited. You still get bit, you still get disease transmission.

Q: Could this research have a global impact in that it could inform future efforts to eradicate Dengue Fever or other deadly viruses?  

A: Yes, this species transmits at least four viruses. Zika’s not even the most prevalent or deadly. The prevalent diseases, especially in South America, are Yellow Fever, Chikungunya and Dengue Fever. The number of reported cases of Dengue in 2018 alone, was over half a million according to WHO.

To date, this particular mosquito that transmits these diseases has not established itself in Canada, but could it? With global climate change creating warmer and more humid environments, these populations could migrate.

My research could also be applied to other species of mosquitoes, such as the ones in Ontario that are transmitting West Nile, or to ticks, spreading Lyme Disease and more – any other vectors of disease.

Q: How has York supported your work?

A: York has funded almost all of my research. If it weren’t for York, I would not have been able to undertake this work.

To read the article, titled “Glycoprotein Hormone Receptor Knockdown Leads to Reduced Reproductive Success in Male Aedes aegypti,” visit the website. To visit Paluzzi’s lab, go here. To see his Faculty profile page, visit the website. 

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca

York Distinguished Research Professor Debra Pepler named an Officer of the Order of Canada

Debra Pepler

Faculty of Health psychology Professor Debra Pepler, an internationally recognized expert who has changed the way we think about bullying, has been named an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Pepler was among five Companions, 38 Officers and 77 Members named to the Order of Canada on Dec. 28, 2019 by the Governor General of Canada Julie Payette (DSc ’10). Her citation states that she is being honoured for her innovative, community-based research on social issues involving children and youth, which has changed the way psychologists study bullying.

Pepler has been a member of the Department of Psychology at York University since 1988. She served as the director of the LaMarsh Centre for Research on Violence and Conflict Resolution from 1994 to 2002. Pepler is a registered psychologist in the Province of Ontario and has co-authored four books, dozens of referred journal articles, book chapters, reviews and government reports. In 2008, she was awarded the title of Distinguished Research Professor by York University in recognition of her pioneering research.

“The entire York community extends our enthusiastic congratulations to Professor Pepler for this recognition of her leadership on one of the most important issues facing young people, their families, and our society today,” said President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton. “Her world-leading scholarship on bullying exemplifies the positive impact York University has on the communities we serve through our exceptional teaching, research and creative activities.”

In addition to her scholarly endeavours, Pepler has been a senior associate scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children since 2001. She has also served on the Ontario Minister of Education’s Safe Schools Action Team since 2004 and on several other advisory committees related to parenting, antisocial behaviour and school violence.

As part of her extensive research accomplishments, Pepler was awarded a Network of Centres of Excellence: New Initiatives grant to establish PREVNet (Promoting Relationships and Eliminating Violence Network) with Queen’s University psychology Professor Wendy Craig (MA ’89, PhD ’93), who was Pepler’s first PhD student at York University. PREVNet is a collaborative and interdisciplinary initiative that brings together 62 researchers from 27 Canadian universities and 49 national organizations.

Pepler has conducted two major research programs on children at risk within the context of peer relationships at school and in context of the family. To study aggression and bullying, she developed an innovative methodology to observe children’s interactions, which would normally be hidden from adults. Pepler was honoured for this research with the Contribution to Knowledge Award from the Psychology Foundation of Canada, the Educator of the Year Award from Phi Delta Kappa (Toronto), the University of Waterloo Arts in Academia Award and the Canadian Psychological Association Award for Distinguished Contributions to Public or Community Service. She is also the recipient of the 2015 Donald O. Hebb Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology as a Science from the Canadian Psychological Association.

To learn more about Pepler’s research, read this 2016 YFile article.

Members of the Order of Canada with connections to York University also named

Four other individuals affiliated with York University were also appointed as members of the Order of Canada. They are broadcaster Hana Gartner (MA ’17), author Katherine Govier (MA ’72), social justice advocate and politician Cheri DiNovo (BA ’94), and philanthropist and former York University Board of Governors member John Hunkin (LL.D [Hons.] ’04, MBA ’69).

New gift brightens learning, research opportunities for optical physics students

Maksym Stolyarevsky, Marshall McCall, Samer Bishay and EJ Janse van Rensburg

A new gift to the Faculty of Science will enhance learning and research opportunities for students studying optical physics at York University by creating awards for graduate and undergraduate students and upgrading a hands-on teaching laboratory for optical physics.

The gift, valued at $470,000, is supported by Iristel Inc, a Canadian telecommunications company founded and led by York University alumnus Samer Bishay. Bishay graduated in 1998 from York’s Space and Communications program, which was established by the Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Department of Computer Science, both being in the Faculty of Science at the time.

“We are deeply grateful to Samer Bishay for this very generous donation, from a company that is pushing the boundaries of the telecommunications industry,” said Professor EJ Janse van Rensburg, former interim dean of science at York University who was involved in securing the gift. “This gift will unlock more opportunities for students in optical physics to pursue learning, research and practical experiences in the field. The Faculty of Science really looks forward to this new partnership with Samer and Iristel.”

From left: Maksym Stolyarevsky, Marshall McCall, Samer Bishay and EJ Janse van Rensburg

“My years at York were both exciting and challenging and what I learned then helped propel me, and ultimately my company, forward,” Bishay said. “These are incredibly exciting times, and opportunities abound. And, York is a terrific university for honing the minds of young people with a passion for science and technology. This is our opportunity to give back.”

One portion of the gift ($100,000) will create an award for graduate students in the field of optical physics. Starting in spring 2020, the Iristel Graduate Award will be granted to two full-time graduate students each year in the field of optical or experimental physics and will support research and related scholarly and creative activities.

Another portion ($120,000) will create an undergraduate scholarship to reward academic performance and lab proficiency and to encourage students in their third or fourth year to pursue a career in optical physics. Recipients will have the opportunity to interview for an internship at Iristel. The Iristel Undergraduate Scholarship will be granted to two full-time students each year, starting in spring 2020.

Finally, $250,000 will be designated to expand, renovate and upgrade the Optical Physics Laboratory in the Petrie Science and Engineering Building. The Iristel Optical Physics Laboratory will enhance experiential education, research and other creative activities for students using the lab.

“This incredibly generous gift will allow our department to upgrade and expand our educational program in experimental optical physics and provide our students with laboratory experiences that are unique in Canada,” said Professor Marshall McCall, chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy. “The scholarships and internship will help to attract students to the field and to stimulate growth in the optical physics community at York.”

Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, January to March

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2019 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for January to March 2019, as chosen by YFile editors.

January

The official ribbon cutting for the Rob & Cheryl McEwen Graduate Study & Research Building

Schulich’s Rob and Cheryl McEwen Graduate Study & Research Building opens with focus on future
York University and the Schulich School of Business officially opened the Rob and Cheryl McEwen Graduate Study & Research Building on Jan. 10. The facility is designed to bring industry into the classroom and to stimulate interdisciplinary research in fields ranging from business ethics and big data to global enterprise and real estate and infrastructure.

Lassonde researchers develop portable cannabis detection device for roadside screening
Lassonde Assistant Professor Nima Tabatabaei and his team of researchers developed and tested a patent-pending technology for fast, on-site detection and quantification of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) – the psychoactive substance of cannabis – in saliva. The technology uses thermal signatures of gold nanoparticles attached to THC molecules.

Second-year Space Engineering student launching her dreams this April
For many Space Engineering students, launching a rocket into the ether is a dream that takes years of school and work experience to achieve. Second-year space engineering student Megan Gran is one of 24 students in the world who has been selected to participate in the Fly a Rocket! program offered by the European Space Agency at the Andøya Space Center in Norway.

Unravelling the mystery of a strange, deadly fungus that is infecting frogs worldwide
While completing her master’s degree in biology, Julia Gauberg spent three months in Australia trying to figure out how a particular fungus is causing the death of so many Australian green tree frogs and other amphibians around the world. Gauberg thought tight junction (TJ) proteins might play a role.

February

York University celebrates its green heroes
York University’s green heroes were celebrated during the annual President’s Sustainability Leadership Awards reception. York University President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton presented the awards and each recipient was presented with a bespoke award crafted from recycled material by York University student Maira Zafar.

Professor Ali Kazimi earns Governor General’s Award in Visual and Media Arts
Ali Kazimi, a filmmaker, writer, visual artist and associate professor at York University, is one of eight recipients of the 2019 Governor General’s Awards in Visual and Media Arts. Announced by the Canada Council for the Arts on Feb. 13, the award honours artists for their exceptional careers and excellent contributions to the arts.

Biologists identify honeybee ‘clean’ genes known for improving survival
The key to breeding disease-resistant honeybees could lie in a group of genes – known for controlling hygienic behaviour – that enable colonies to limit the spread of harmful mites and bacteria, according to genomics research conducted at York University.

Ideas intersect at the Elia Scholars Dinner honouring graduate student researchers
Art, science, philosophy and social justice all intersect at the Elia Scholars Dinner, an annual event that honours some of York University’s most innovative graduate student researchers. The Elia Scholars Program is York’s most prestigious internal award.

March

York research projects honoured by lieutenant-governor of Ontario
The Lieutenant-Governor’s Ontario Heritage Awards for Excellence in Conservation celebrate outstanding contributions to cultural and natural heritage conservation, environmental sustainability and biodiversity. This year, York University’s Department of History was honoured with two of these awards.

John Moores

New research led by York U planetary scientist provides clues on methane’s interaction with surface of Mars
A study led by John Moores, an associate professor in the Department of Earth & Space Science & Engineering, found evidence of a link between the surface rocks and the methane in the atmosphere detected by the Curiosity Rover on Mars. Researchers say it is this process that is controlling how much methane is released into the atmosphere above Gale Crater, the landing site of the Curiosity Rover.

Meet the inaugural recipients of the York Science Scholars Award
Ten students from the Faculty of Science are the first to be part of the prestigious York Science Scholars Award (YSSA) program, which includes an entrance scholarship and a summer research placement.

National recognition given to York student group supporting refugees
The World University Services of Canada (WUSC) awarded York University’s student Keele Campus Local Committee the 2018 Local Committee of the Year Award, the highest award given at the organization’s annual international forum. York-Keele is a local committee of the WUSC, a non-profit dedicated to improving education, employment and empowerment opportunities for youth around the world.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, April to June.

LA&PS Professor Natalie Coulter appointed director of IRDL

Featured image for the postdoc research story shows the word research in black type on a white background
Featured image for the postdoc research story shows the word research in black type on a white background

Professor Natalie Coulter, in the Department of Communication Studies in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies (LA&PS), has been appointed the new director of the Institute for Research on Digital Learning (IRDL), an Organized Research Unit (ORU) at York University. Coulter’s appointment went into effect on Jan. 1.

Natalie Coulter
Natalie Coulter

The centre has moved this year to co-leadership of the Faculty of Education and LA&PS, reflecting an expanded focus as Coulter steps into this leadership role.

IRDL has a broad mandate to engage in systematic inquiry, discussion and information sharing related to the uses of technology in teaching and learning by encouraging the formation of links with faculty members across the University and with schools, government, and industry to provide collaborative, multidisciplinary approaches to research problems and issues.

Originally established in 1987 within the Faculty of Education as the Centre for the Study of Computers in Education, the institute became a university-based research unit in June 2001 and was named IRLT at that time.

Coulter takes over from Professor Jen Jenson who was director of IRDL for more than six years. (Jenson is embarking on a new career at the University of British Columbia.)

“During my tenure at IRDL, I hope to expand IRDL’s mandate on digital learning to engage more broadly with digital cultures as informal sites of pedagogy and learning, and to produce research that responds quickly to changes in technology, media and culture,” Coulter says. She notes that IRDL will continue to promote research, scholarship, and pedagogic innovation in a digital age.

Coulter is an expert in the areas of digital culture, critical advertising studies, children’s media culture(s) and girls’ studies, with a special focus on the social construction of marketing niches such as the tween girl. She has recently published an edited collection with Communication Studies Professor Susan Driver titled Youth Mediations and Affective Relations (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018). Her book, Tweening the Girl:  The Crystallization of the Tween Market, was published by Peter Lang’s Mediated Youth Series in 2014.

She is a founding member of the Association for Research on the Cultures of Young People.

With funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, she presently has two research projects underway – one on the embodied tween, living girlhood in global and digital spaces; and another on digital childhood and fandom.

For more information, visit the ORU’s website.

Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, April to June

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2019 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for April to June 2019, as chosen by YFile editors.

April

Governor General Julie Payette presented the Order of Canada to Hédi Bouraoui

Professor Hédi Bouraoui invested as a member of the Order of Canada
Professor Hédi Bouraoui, York University’s writer in residence, was formally invested as a member of the Order of Canada during a ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on March 14. Bouraoui was recognized for his tremendous body of work and tireless advocacy for French-language literature.

York professor, students earn awards for leading trauma research
York University psychology Professor Robert T. Muller and three students in the Trauma & Attachment Lab were recognized at the 36th annual meeting of the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation (ISSTD) with two distinct awards for their work in trauma research.

York University chemists invent new Lewis acidity test using fluorescence
York University chemists have invented a new fluorescence-based method for accurately determining the strength of a range of Lewis acids, which could one day be used to help purify pharmaceutical drugs, improve industrial processes and explore next-generation technologies, according to a new study.

York University announces nine York Research Chair appointments
Nine emerging and established researchers across the University joined the York Research Chairs (YRC) program, York University’s internal counterpart to the national Canada Research Chairs (CRC) program, which recognizes outstanding researchers. The appointed YRCs belong to the sixth cohort of researchers to be appointed since the establishment of the program in 2015.

May

Researchers win $1.89M grant to search for AI solution to infant pain assessment
A team of York University researchers led by psychology Professor Rebecca Pillai Riddell, associate vice-president research and the director of the Opportunities to Understand Childhood Hurt (O.U.C.H.) Lab, was awarded a $1.5-million grant to study preterm infants’ subjective experiences of pain, despite their inability to speak.

York researchers to lead five-year project addressing youth and teen dating violence
Professor Sara Flicker, Faculty of Environmental Studies, and Professor Jen Gilbert, Faculty of Education, received $954,220 over five years to support a project aimed at preventing teen dating violence by teaching new skills with a focus on increasing awareness and understanding of healthy relationships.

Five York grad students receive prestigious Vanier Scholarships
Five PhD students from York University have been named Vanier Scholars and will receive support from the Government of Canada to pursue their cutting-edge research. Valued at $50,000 per year for three years during doctoral studies, the 2019 Vanier Graduate Scholarship is awarded to graduate students who demonstrate leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in the social sciences and/or humanities, natural sciences and/or engineering, and health.

Photo by Raffaele Camasta
A male hooded warbler in the Boyer Woodlot at York’s Keele Campus (image: Raffaele Camasta)

Rare songbird makes migration pit stop at York’s Keele Campus
Billions of tiny songbirds, some weighing as little as two loonies, undertook an arduous journey this past spring. These birds left their wintering grounds in the tropics and raced thousands of kilometres to their Canadian breeding grounds. Some, including rare species, stopped at York University’s woodlots.

June

York’s Merv Mosher recognized for decades-long contribution to volleyball
Merv Mosher was inducted into the Ontario Volleyball Hall of Fame on June 1. A long-serving faculty member in York University’s Faculty of Health, School of Kinesiology & Health Science, Mosher received recognition as one of the leading volleyball coaches in Canadian history.

York PhD candidate breaking down taboos surrounding sexuality after spinal cord injury
Changing lives for the better is a core focus for Jacqueline Kathnelson, a fourth-year PhD student in Kinesiology and Health Sciences. Kathnelson is researching the psychosocial needs associated with men’s sexuality following spinal cord injury.

The recipients of the 2018 President’s Staff Recognition Awards

President’s Staff Recognition Awards shine light on exceptional York employees
More than 150 members of the York University community gathered on June 5 to celebrate some of the University’s most dedicated, hard-working and enthusiastic staff members during the annual President’s Staff Recognition Awards.

2019 President’s University-Wide Teaching Award recipients celebrated during convocation
Four York University faculty members who have significantly enhanced the quality of learning and have demonstrated innovation in teaching were  recognized during the 2019 Spring Convocation ceremonies with a President’s University-Wide Teaching Award: Professors Russ Patrick Alcedo, Nicolette Richardson, Alistair Mapp and teaching assistant Mohamed Abdelhamid.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, July to September.

Need help making a good New Year’s resolution for your research?

The VPRI is excited to announce that registration for the Research Commons is now open.

The Research Commons is a brand new suite of research supports for researchers of all career stages. A set of 15 standalone workshops will cover integral topics designed to foster skill development across the career spectrum. Early career? New to York? Mid-career and want a kick start? Senior investigator and want to learn about what all these new federal programs are about? The Research Commons has a workshop for you.

The workshops will feature highly successful researchers, experienced staff and representatives directly from the tri-councils, who will offer in-depth and well-rounded views of research, so participants can take their research to the next level and beyond.

Sign up now at researchcommons.yorku.ca where full details on the workshops can be found.

For more information and questions, contact the Research Commons at rescom@yorku.ca.

Prof. Emeritus of theatre, Don Rubin, hosts Shakespeare authorship conference

Professor Emeritus of theatre Don Rubin, an original faculty member of the Faculty of Fine Arts, hosted an international conference for the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship (SOF) at the world-famous Mark Twain House and Museum in Hartford, Conn. this past fall.

On Oct. 17 to 20, more than 150 scholars and researchers from across the United States, Canada and Europe attended the event which – along with some two dozen scholarly papers – paid tribute to the late Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens. Stevens, who during his lifetime, is known for his belief that the name “Shakespeare” was a pen name for someone else or perhaps for a group of others who preferred not to put their individual names on the plays.

Professor Emeritus Don Rubin at the Mark Twain House and Museum holding a copy of a 1565 volume that may have been owned by Shakespeare. The volume was recently purchased at auction for $65,000

The conference also offered attendees an opportunity to examine a 1565 volume of Herodotus’ Delle guerre de Greci et de Persi originally owned by one of those believed to be involved in the writing of the plays, Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford. The volume was recently purchased at auction in London for $60,000 (U.S.) by Ben August, a member of the SOF.

Rubin’s keynote paper at the conference, titled “The New Field of Shakespeare Authorship Studies” endorsed recent arguments made by Professor William Leahy of Brunel University in London and Professor Gary Taylor of Florida State University, editor of the recent edition of Shakespeare’s Complete Works, published by the Oxford Univesity Press. Leahy and Taylor argue that multiple hands can be clearly found in the Bard’s plays. Oxford University Press has recently published a separate volume in the series devoted exclusively to examining such authorship issues.

“A new paradigm is emerging in this field,” said Rubin. “It would behoove younger scholars and university departments that offer courses in Shakespeare to take a look at the exciting research now being produced by people such as Diana Price, Roger Stritmatter, Bryan Wildenthal, Alexander Waugh, Bonner Cutting, Ramon Jimenez and James Warren in this field.

“The authorship debate goes back to the 16th century, contrary to what is still being argued by scholars who have not kept up with this research, and contrary to what is still being argued by the fusty Shakespeare Birthplace Trust (SBT), which obviously has a vested tourist interest in maintaining that Stratford-upon-Avon was the home of the only writer of the plays, a writer whose family was actually illiterate and a writer who never once claimed that he wrote even a single one of these works during his lifetime or even in his will.”

Rubin said it is baffling to him to understand how the SBT and the scholars it funds can continue to “simply attack the solid research now coming out in favour of both the group theory and the arguments for convincing alternative figures like de Vere.”

Scientists, Rubin added, don’t have problems looking at new research and incorporating such research into their teaching and their papers.

“Why are people in the humanities so hesitant to challenge themselves by at least reading this stuff rather than simply making ad hominem attacks on those presenting alternative ideas?” he asked.

The conference took place at the Twain House, Rubin added, because Twain himself – like Henry James, Orson Welles, Charlie Chaplin, Mark Rylance, Derek Jacobi and even Tyrone Guthrie (first artistic director of the Stratford Festival) – doubted that the Stratford man was the writer.

This spring, in honour of the 100th anniversary of the publication of one of the major books arguing for an alternative author, Thomas J. Looney’s Shakespeare Identified, Rubin is offering a free lecture on the subject titled “The Question That Won’t Go Away: Who Wrote the Plays of Shakespeare?” to universities, colleges and high schools in and around Ontario.

Anyone interested in booking a date should contact Rubin as early as possible by sending an email to drubin@yorku.ca.

Rubin is the general editor of Routledge’s six-volume World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre, editor of the standard volume Canadian Theatre History: Selected Readings and a founding editor of the quarterly journal Canadian Theatre Review. He is currently serving as managing editor of the web-journal Critical Stages published out of Paris by the International Association of Theatre Critics. He is a former Chair of York’s Department of Theatre, and a co-founder with Christopher Innes, of York’s graduate programs in theatre and performance studies.