Dedicated to exploring #BC's cultural, economic, and political life; past and present. Peer-Reviewed. #BCStudies is housed @UBC on unceded Musqueam territory.
"During the interwar era of burgeoning imperial mountaineering exploits around the world from Mount Everest to Canada’s highest summit Mount Logan in the Yukon, the new mountain gained notoriety as a giant believed to be Canada’s highest unclimbed peak."
Read more ⬇️
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): The Final Spire: ‘Mystery Mountain’ Mania in the 1930s by Trevor Marc Hughes (@ronsdalepress).
Reviewed by PearlAnn Reichwein (@UAlbertaArts).
Read: https://t.co/N0KxtVQTV5
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#mountwaddington
A new issue of BC Studies, no. 229 (Spring 2026) is coming soon 👀
Check back on our socials to see the cover reveal + featured content!
#bcstudies#newissue#no229#spring2026
Submissions for our upcoming special issue on The Politics of Sikh Art / Activism and Material: Cultural Production in the Diaspora closes this month!
Learn more ⬇️
We're accepting submissions for a special issue: The Politics of Sikh Art / Activism and Material: Cultural Production in the Diaspora.
Seeking submissions on Sikh art, activism & Sikhi in BC in relation to broader ecologies and communities.
Learn more: https://t.co/PUgPTJcKdB
See our newest issue No. 228 (Winter 2025/26) plus complimentary bookmarks - the perfect additions when reading your copy of the latest BC Studies issue!
Featuring cover art by Trace Yeomans.
Visit https://t.co/2KU5ciUxNU to purchase!
#bcstudies #228 #bookmarks
"By presenting multiple voices rather than a single authoritative narrative, the book disrupts the structure of academic authorship itself. It reflects a Coast Salish way of understanding knowledge as something held collectively, not owned individually."
Read more ⬇️
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): The Teachings of Mutton: A Coast Salish Woolly Dog by Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa (@Harbour_Publish).
Reviewed by Brandon Gabriel (@KwantlenU).
Read here: https://t.co/qVnVUC05Ky
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#woollydog
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): The Teachings of Mutton: A Coast Salish Woolly Dog by Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa (@Harbour_Publish).
Reviewed by Brandon Gabriel (@KwantlenU).
Read here: https://t.co/qVnVUC05Ky
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#woollydog
This article in our newest issue is written by Jack Little (@SFUHistory) and examines the settler history of the hundred acres surveyed as Section 1 on Penelakut Island's Lamalcha Bay.
Visit https://t.co/DRt9QImL4S to read!
#bcstudies #228 #Gulfislands#Penelakut
Written by Colin Murray Osmond (@ubcokanagan), this article in our newest issue explores the legacy of British Columbia’s Indian Reserve Commissioner Gilbert Malcolm Sproat and the ‘Indian Land Question’ in the late 19th Century.
Visit https://t.co/Jck3CAaIbM to read!
We're accepting submissions for a special issue: The Politics of Sikh Art / Activism and Material: Cultural Production in the Diaspora.
Seeking submissions on Sikh art, activism & Sikhi in BC in relation to broader ecologies and communities.
Learn more: https://t.co/PUgPTJcKdB
Giveaway alert!
We're giving away a special journal prize pack to celebrate the release of our latest issue no. 228 (Winter 2025/26). Read the post for prize details, and head to our Instagram (https://t.co/PzfHL4eqTV) to enter!
Giveaway ends Tuesday, May 19 at 12pm Noon PDT.
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): The Final Spire: ‘Mystery Mountain’ Mania in the 1930s by Trevor Marc Hughes (@ronsdalepress).
Reviewed by PearlAnn Reichwein (@UAlbertaArts).
Read: https://t.co/N0KxtVQTV5
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#mountwaddington
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): Land and the Liberal Project: Canada’s Violent Expansion by Éléna Choquette (@UBCPress).
Reviewed by Mckelvey Kelly (@UAlbertaArts).
Read: https://t.co/MQzLhh3jAM
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#land#settlercolonialism
Book review in our upcoming issue no. 229 (Spring 2026): Native Plants of British Columbia’s Coastal Dry Belt by Hans Roemer and Mary Sanseverino (@Harbour_Publish).
Reviewed by David E. Giblin (@UWBiology).
Read: https://t.co/wd3l33sDxV
#bcstudies #229 #bookreview#botany
Congratulations to JP Catungal and May Farrales, winners of the 2025 BC Studies Prize for their article "The Race to Indigeneity: Three Vexations in Filipinx Diasporic Politics," in no. 227 (Autumn 2025).
Also congratulations to runner-ups Nate Crompton and Rebecca Hartley!
Congratulations to JP Catungal and May Farrales, winners of the 2025 BC Studies Prize for their article "The Race to Indigeneity: Three Vexations in Filipinx Diasporic Politics," in no. 227 (Autumn 2025).
Also congratulations to runner-ups Nate Crompton and Rebecca Hartley!
We're accepting submissions for a special issue: The Politics of Sikh Art / Activism and Material: Cultural Production in the Diaspora.
Seeking submissions on Sikh art, activism & Sikhi in BC in relation to broader ecologies and communities.
Learn more: https://t.co/PUgPTJcKdB
A case comment by James Hickling (@AllardLaw) from our latest issue no. 228 (Winter 2025/26) has been featured in a clip from CHEK Media on discussions around unceded land in BC.
Read the case comment: https://t.co/lqofLKUl5k
Credit: CHEK Media
#bcstudies#cowichan#landrights