Skip To Content

Courses

History (HIST) 363

The Women's West: Women and Canadian Frontier Settlement (Revision 1)

Revision 1 closed, replaced by current version.

Delivery Mode:Individualized study.

Credits:3

Area of Study:Humanities

Prerequisite:None.

Precluded Course:HIST 363 is a cross-listed course—a course listed under two different disciplines—with WGST 363. HIST 363 may not be taken for credit if credit has already been obtained for HIST 325, WGST 363, or WMST 363.

Centre:Centre for Work and Community Studies

HIST 363 has a Challenge for Credit option.

Course website

check availability

Overview

HIST 363 introduces students to selected aspects of women's diverse experiences of western Canadian colonization and settlement. The course challenges myths of western expansion as an exclusively male enterprise, and evaluates women's contributions to Western Canada's social, cultural, political, and economic life during a formative time in history.

The course is organized along three general themes: the impact of European colonization and settlement on Aboriginal women, and its legacy; the homesteading experience of women new to the western plains; the opportunities and barriers women encountered on other economic, social, and political frontiers.

HIST 363 complements HIST 365: Girls and Women in Urban Canada, 1880 to 1940.

Outline

Unit 1: Native Women and the White Frontier

Unit 2: “No Place for a Woman”: Newcomer Women in the West

Unit 3: Other Frontiers: Pioneers, Reformers, and Renegades

Evaluation

To receive credit for HIST 363, you must complete assignments and a research project. Students must achieve a course composite grade of “D” (50 percent). The weighting of the composite grade is as follows:

Short Essay Book Review Outline Project Total
20% 30% 10% 40% 100%

To learn more about assignments and examinations, please refer to Athabasca University's online Calendar.

Course Materials

Textbook

Campbell, Maria. 1983. Half-Breed. Halifax: Goodread Biographies.

Other Materials

The course materials include a student manual, a study guide, and a reader.

Athabasca University reserves the right to amend course outlines occasionally and without notice. Courses offered by other delivery methods may vary from their individualized-study counterparts.

Opened in Revision 1.

Last updated by SAS  03/24/2014 10:10:31