Footnotes

  1. G. Douglas Vaisey, compiler, The Labour Companion: A Bibliography of Canadian Labour History Based on Materials Printed from 1950 to 1975 (Halifax, 1980). Also disappointing is Gary Chaison, Leslie Cockburn, John Morris, eds., Labour Education: A Bibliography of Selected Reading Materials Available at Libraries in New Brunswick (Fredericton, 1978). More useful is Eric L. Swanick, compiler, New Brunswick History: A Checklist of Secondary Sources; Second Supplement (Fredericton, 1984).
  2. For an introduction to the field, see W. J. C. Cherwinski and Gregory S. Kealey, eds., Lectures in Canadian Labour and Working-C1ass History (St. John's, 1985) and Labour/Le Travail: Journal of Canadian Labour Studies/Revue d'études ouvrières canadiennes (1976- ).
  3. An early effort to survey primary materials is Russell G. Hann, Gregory S. Kealey, Linda Kealey, Peter Warrian, Primary Sources in Canadian Working Class History. 1860-1930 (Kitchener, 1973). The researcher must, however, consult the various individual archives for source materials of this type.
  4. See Ronald Labelle, réd., Inventaire des sources en folklore acadien (Moncton, 1984), and Gary N. Chaison and Edward D. Maher, “Labour and Business in New Brunswick: An Oral History Project”, Bulletin of the Committee on Canadian Labour History, no. 5 (Spring 1978), pp. 12-18.
  5. See the film and video catalogue, available from the NFB offices in Saint John and Moncton.
  6. See Russell Harper, Historical Directory of New Brunswick Newspapers (Fredericton, 1961).
  7. The most useful surveys are Marguerite Maillet, Histoire de la littérature acadienne (Moncton, 1983) and W. R. Gair, ed., Literary and Linguistic History of New Brunswick (Fredericton, 1986).
  8. Labour/Le Travail, Department of History, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland AIC 5S7.
  9. Acadiensis, Department of History, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, N.B. E3B 5A3