Rosana Barbosa Saint Mary’s University History Department Halifax, Nova Scotia Canada B3H 3C3 (902) 420­5133 [email protected] DEGREES: Ph.D. History, History Department. University of Toronto, 1998 M.A. History History Department. University of Toronto, 1988 B.A. History Universidade Santa Ursula, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1984 Teaching Degree Universidade Santa Ursula, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1984 Teaching Diploma (Primary School, JK to Grade 4) Sacred Heart of Mary Collegiate, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1980 RESEARCH INTERESTS: Brazilian History, Migration, Slavery, Nationalism, Brazil­Canada Relations EMPLOYMENT: Assistant Professor and Acting Graduate Coordinator, (Tenure­track position) Saint Mary’s University, Department of History Adjunct Professor: Dalhousie University, Department of International Development Studies, Faculty of Graduate Studies Thesis Committee: Alessandro Zir. Pre and Para­Scientific Patterns of Reasoning in the Knowledge of the Portuguese Colonizers of the 16 TH , 17 TH and 18 TH Centuries Concerning the Use of Elements of the Brazilian Fauna and Flora For Therapeutic Aims. Ph.D. Interdisciplinary Studies, Dalhousie University.
Rosana Barbosa, continued Emily Burton. Sixteenth Century Portuguese Settlement in Northeastern North America: A Historiographical Assessment. Master of Arts in History. Saint Mary’s University. EDITED BOOKS Rosana Barbosa (ed). Brazil and Canada in the Americas. Halifax: A Co­publication of the Canada Visiting Chair in Brazilian Studies and the Gorsebrook Research Institute, Saint Mary’s University, 2007. Manuela Marujo, Aida Batista and Rosana Barbosa. The Voice and Choice of Portuguese Immigrant Women/A Vez e a Voz da Mulher Imigrante Portuguesa. Toronto: University of Toronto, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, 2005. Barbosa Nunes, Rosana and Domenico Mazzeo (eds.) Brazil: The Emergence of a World Power. Toronto: Glendon College/York University, 2002. CHAPTERS IN BOOKS: “Brazilian and Canadian Relations: A Historical Survey.” Rosana Barbosa (ed). Brazil and Canada in the Americas. Halifax: A Co­publication of the Canada Visiting Chair in Brazilian Studies and the Gorsebrook Research Institute, Saint Mary’s University, 2007, pp. 31­54. “Portuguese Immigration to Rio de Janeiro: The Early National Period.” Francico Cota Fagundes & Irene Maria F. Blayer (eds). Tradições Portuguesas /Portuguese Traditions in Honour of Claude L. Hulet. San Jose: Portuguese Heritage Publications of California, 2007, pp. 403­415. “The Inclusion of Immigrant Women in the Male dominated Job Market of 19 th Century Rio de Janeiro,” and “Afterword/Posfacio.” Manuela Marujo, Aida Batista and Rosana Barbosa. The Voice and Choice of Portuguese Immigrant Women/A Vez e a Voz da Mulher Imigrante Portuguesa. Toronto: University of Toronto, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, 2005, pp. 72­78 and 206­207. “Immigration and the Formation of the Brazilian People.” Brazil: The Emergence of a World Power. Toronto: York University, 2002, pp. 17­23. (Available on line at: http://www.glendon.yorku.ca/rosananunes ) ARTICLES: “Brazilian Immigration to Canada.” Accepted for publication by the Journal of Ethnic Studies. (Peer reviewed)
2 Rosana Barbosa, continued “Portuguese Women In Rio de Janeiro in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century.” Encruzilhdas/Crossroads, UCLA (2007), pp. 58­64. (Peer reviewed) “A Presença Francesa no Brasil da Primeira Metade do Século XIX.” Revista Nossa História, Brazil. Ano 4, n. 38, November 2006, pp. 60­63. (Peer reviewed). “A Presença Portuguesa no Brasil Pós­Colonial.” Revista Arquipélago, Açores/Portugal. (October, 2004), pp. 173­196. (Peer reviewed) "Brasileiros no Canadá: um novo e crescente grupo de imigrantes." Revista de Estudos Canadenses, CANADART XI, Março, 2004.Brazil, pp. 197­215. (Peer reviewed) “Immigration, Xenophobia and the Whitening of the Brazilian Population.” Journal of Transatlantic Studies . Issue 3, Spring 2004, pp. 59­74. (Peer reviewed) “Mulheres Brancas e Pobres no Brasil Imperial ­ o caso da portuguesa Rosa da Cunha de Jesus.” Impressão Régia. Boletim Oficial do Pólo de Pesquisa sobre Relações Luso­Brasileiras. (Número 1 ­ novembro 2001). “Imigração Portuguesa para o Rio de Janeiro na Primeira Metade do Século XIX.” Revista História & Ensino, (Número 6 ­ 2001), pp. 163­177. (Peer reviewed) “Portuguese Immigrants in Brazil: An Overview.” Portuguese Studies Review. Volume 8: 2 (Spring/Summer 2000), pp. 27­44. (Peer reviewed) “Immigration to Rio de Janeiro, 1822/1850,” The Americas. (July 2000), pp. 37­61. (Peer reviewed) ENCYCLOPEDIAS: “Brazil,” pp. 71­72; “Pedro Alvares Cabral, p. 92; “Vasco da Gama,” pp. 159­ 160; “Treaty of Tordesillas,” pp. 159­160; “Rio de Janeiro,” p. 501; “Portuguese Empire,” pp. 481­484; “Xenophobia,” p. 639. Encyclopedia of Colonialism. Edited by Melvin E. Page. Santa Barbara: ABC­CLIO, 2003. “Migration to Brazil.” Encyclopedia of Ibero and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History, pp. 697 to 701. Edited by J. Michael Francis. Santa Barbara and Oxford: ABC­Clio, 2005. “Brazil,” “Chile,” “Peru” and “The Male Revolt.” Encyclopedia of Africa and the Americas. Edited by Richard M. Juang, Noelle Morrissette Searcy, and Kim Searcy (in press, to be published by ABC­Clio in 2006).
3 Rosana Barbosa, continued BOOK REVIEWS: Jeffrey H. Cohen. The Culture of Migration in Southern Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004. Journal of Ethnohistory, (Spring­Summer 2006). Daniel M. Masterson's. The Japanese in Latin America. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2004. Canadian Journal of History, (Spring­Summer 2006), pp. 170­172. Sandra Lauderdale Graham. Caetana Says No: Women’s Stories from a Brazilian Slave Society. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Labour/Le Travail, (Issue 55, Spring 2005), 302­303. Darlene J. Sadlier. Nelson Pereira dos Santos. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2003. Labour/Le Travail, (Issue 53, Winter 2004)., pp. 321­322. Gloria La Cava. Italians in Brazil. The Post­World War II Experience. Revista di Studi Italiani, (Vol. XIX, n. 1, June 2001), pp. 325­326. MANUSCRIPT SENT FOR PUBLICATION: Immigration and Xenophobia in Early 19 th Century Rio de Janeiro. MANUSCRIPTS IN PROGRESS: Brazil­Canada Relations. PAPERS PRESENTED: “Brazilian and Canadian Relations: A Historical Survey.” Paper presented at the colloquium, Brazil and Canada in the Americas. Saint Mary’s University May 1 st 2007. “French and Portuguese Immigration to Rio de Janeiro in the 1830s and 1840s.” Paper presented at the Canadian Association of Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CALACS) Conference. Calgary University, September 28­30, 2006. “The Other North American Destination: Brazilian Immigration to Canada.” Paper presented at the National Conference on Brazilian Immigration to the USA. Harvard University March 18­19, 2005. “Prostituição e Imigração: Portugueses no Rio de Janeiro, 1822­1850.” Paper presented at the Seventh International BRASA Congress. Rio de Janeiro, PUC University, June 9­12, 2004.
4 Rosana Barbosa, continued “The Portuguese in the Era of the European Discoveries.” Paper presented at the Colloquium “Portuguese Days.” University of Western Ontario, January 21­22, 2004. “Brazilian Identity in the Early National Period.” Paper presented at the AHA/CLAH Conference, Washington, January 2004. “The Inclusion of Immigrant Women in the Male dominated Job Market of 19 th Century Rio de Janeiro.” Paper presented at the I Congresso Internacional: A Vez e a Voz da Mulher Imigrante Portuguesa/The Voice and Choice of Portuguese Immigrant Women. University of Toronto, Spanish and Portuguese Department, September 19­21 2003. “Xenophobia and Nationalism in 19 th Century Brazil: The Case of the Portuguese.” Paper presented at the International Congress of Americanists, “Nationalism in the New World: The Americas and the Atlantic World, 1776­ 1919.” Santiago, Chile, July 13­18, 2003. “Brasileiros em Toronto: Um novo e crescente grupo.” Paper presented at the “Ciclo de Conferência das Nove Horas,” Universidade UNIRIO, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. July 7­9, 2003 “The Portuguese Presence in 19 th Century Brazil” Paper Presented at the Conference: Portugal in The World. Junior Common Room, Winters College, York University, Toronto. March 15 th , 2003. “Brazilian Emigration: A Late 20 th Century Phenomenon.” Paper presented at the Congress of the Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CALACS) “Latin America: Between Representations and Realities.” Université du Québec à Montréal, October 24­26, 2002. “Xenophobia and the Whitening of the Population in 19 th Century Brazil.” Paper presented at the Transatlantic Studies Conference. The University of Dundee, Scotland. July 8­11, 2002. “A Profile of the Brazilian Community in Toronto.” Paper presented at the Sixth International BRASA Congress: Brazil: New Visions. Atlanta Georgia ­ April 4­ 6, 2002. “Immigration and the Formation of the Brazilian People.” Paper presented at the International Conference, Brazil: The Emergence of a World Power. York University/Glendon Campus. February 23, 2002.
5 Rosana Barbosa, continued “Imigração Portuguesa, nacionalismo e xenofobia no Primeiro Reinado.” Presented at the XXI Simpósio Nacional de História ­ A História no Novo Milênio: entre o Individual e o Coletivo. Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. July 2001. Nakajima, Kazuko and Rosana Barbosa Nunes. “Losing Heritage Language While Learning Japanese: Portuguese­Speaking Children in Japanese Schools.” Presented in Japanese by Kazuko Nakajima at the 2001 ATJ Annual Meeting Seminar of Association of Asian Studies. Sheraton Chicago Hotel, March 2001. “Lusophobia During the Early National Period in Brazil.” Presented at: The Portuguese Presence in Brazil in the Last Five Centuries. University of Toronto. November 2000. “Brazilian Nationalism and the Response to the Abolition of the Slave Trade in the 1830s and 1840s.” Presented at: Enslaving Connections: Africa and Brazil During the Era of the Slave Trade. York University. October 2000. “Portuguese Women in Rio de Janeiro in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century.” Paper presented at the XXIII Symposium on Portuguese Traditions. University of California, Los Angeles. April 2000. “Brazil: Peoples and Culture.” Paper presented at Tokyo Women’s Christian University, Tokyo, Japan. December 1998. “Portuguese Emigration.” Paper presented for the Course: HIS 348F “Aspects of Modern Portugal, 1640­1974.” University of Toronto. November 1998. “Immigration to Brazil.” Paper presented at the National Language Research Institute, Tokyo, Japan. February 1998. “Imigração Portuguesa para o Rio de Janeiro.” Paper presented at the Colloquium “Sociologia da Emigração.” Universidade de Évora, Portugal. July 1988. “Imigração Portuguesa para o Brasil na Virada do Século.” Paper Presented at the Colloquium “Tradição e Futuro.” Universidade de Trás­os­Montes, Portugal. July 1985. “A Revolução Mexicana.” Paper presented at the Conference “I Semana de Estudos Históricos Latino­Americanos.” Universidade Santa Ursula, Brazil. September 1984. Chair ­ Conference Panels:
6 Rosana Barbosa, continued Panel: “Perspectives on Brazilian Popular Culture.” Canadian Association of Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CALACS) Conference. Calgary University, September 28­30, 2006. Panel: “Transnational Ties.” National Conference on Brazilian Immigration to the USA. Harvard University March 18­19, 2005. Panel: “Women in the Labour Force/A Mulher no Trabalho.” I Congresso Internacional: A Vez e a Voz da Mulher Imigrante Portuguesa/The Voice and Choice of Portuguese Immigrant Women. University of Toronto, Spanish and Portuguese Department, September 19­21, 2003. TEACHING: Assistant Professor: St. Mary’s University “Colonial and Modern Brazil (HIS 3496.1),” Fall 2006 “Forced and Free Immigration to Latin America (HIS 4573.1), Fall 2006 “Modern Latin American History (HIS 2375.0),” Fall/Winter 2006/2007 “The United States Since 1865 (HIS255.2),” Winter 2007 “Modern Latin American History (HIS 2375.0),” Fall/Winter 2005/2006 “The United States Since 1865 (HIS255.2),” Winter 2006 “Issues in Latin American History (HIS 4573.2),” Fall 2005 “Latin American Revolutions (HIS 3496.1),” Fall 2005 “Issues in Latin American History (HIS 573.2),” Winter 2005 “Latin American Revolutions (HIS 496.1),” Fall 2004 “Modern Latin American History (HIS 375.0),” Fall/Winter 2004/2005 Adjunct Professor: Dalhousie University “Colonial Brazil”, Direct Reading Course with Ph.D. candidate Alessandro Zir, Fall 2005. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR Brock University “Topics in Latin American History (HIST 4V26),” Winter 2004 “The Americas (HIST 1F96),” Fall/Winter 2003/2004 “Honors Tutorial – Reading Course (HIST 4F99),” Fall/Winter 2003/2004 “Latin American Revolutions (HIST 3P94),” Brock University, Fall 2003 “Modern Latin America (HIST 3F81),” Fall/Winter 2002/2003 “Glory and Despair: The United States 1608­1865 (HIST 2P15),” Fall 2002 “Ambiguities of Greatness: The United States 1860 to the Present (HIST 2P16),” Winter 2003 “Honors Tutorial – Reading Course (HIST 4F99),” Fall/Winter 2002/2003
7 Rosana Barbosa, continued COURSE DIRECTOR York University/Glendon Campus, “Modern Latin American History (HIST 2200),” Fall/Winter 2003/2004 “Brazil in the Atlantic World : The 16 th to the 19 th Centuries (ILST/HIST 3014),”Fall 2002 “Brazil in the Era of Globalization (ILST/HIST 3015),” Winter 2003 “Modern Latin American History (HIST 2200),” Fall/Winter 2001/2002 INSTRUCTOR Brock University “Modern Latin America (HIST 3F81),” Fall/Winter 2001/2002 “Latin American Revolutions (HIST 3P94),” Brock University, Winter 2002 Guelph University “Colonial Americas: A Comparative History (HIST 2110),” Fall 2001 “Colonial Americas: A Comparative History (HIST 2110),” Fall 1999 Ryerson Polytechnic University “Themes in Latin American History (CHST 213),” Spring 2001 University of Toronto “Brazil: History, Peoples, and Culture (IAS 320H),” Spring 2001 “Brazil: History, Peoples, and Culture (IAS 320H),” Spring 2000 “Brazil: History, Peoples, and Culture (IAS 320H),” Spring 1999 TEACHING ASSISTANT University of Toronto “Caribbean History and Culture, 1600­1840,” 1997­1998 “Caribbean History and Culture, 1600­1840,” Summer 1995 “Caribbean History and Culture, 1600­1840,” 1994­1995 “Latin America From Conquest to Revolution, 1492 ­ the Present,” 1994­1995 “Caribbean History and Culture, 1600­1840,” 1993­1994 “Europe in the Contemporary Era,” 1993­1994 “Europe in the Contemporary Era,” Summer 1993 “Latin America From Conquest to Revolution, 1492 ­ the Present,” 1991­1992 “The Emergence of the Third World,” 1989­1990 “The Emergence of the Third World,” 1988­1989 Universidade Santa Ursula, Brazil “Prática de Pesquisa,” 1982 SERVICES: Organizer with the GRI: May 1, 2007 ­ A day celebration sponsored by the Brazil Chair and the GRI. In addition to officials of the Brazilian and Canadian
8 Rosana Barbosa, continued governments, there will be three guest speakers. The day will focus on the contemporary political moment in South America, on issues of border security and drug smuggling. Committee Member of the Faculty Curriculum Committee. Faculty of Arts, Saint Mary’s University. September 2006. Organizer with the IDS Visiting Speaker Program of Prof. Cleonice Lebourlegat and Prof. Antonio Brand’ s visit to Saint Mary’s, November 3 rd 2006. Both of them are from the University of Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil and they will be attending a Brazil Chair conference in Montreal at UQAM. Canada Visiting Research Chair in Brazilian Studies: Comprised of York University, University of Western Ontario, UQAM, Calgary University and Saint Mary’s University. In 2006, Saint Mary’s officially became a member of the Canada Visiting Research Chair in Brazilian Studies. Organizing Committee of the Canada Visiting Research Chair in Brazilian Studies Brazil­Canada Cities Conference, Toronto, October 19 to 22, 2005. Organizing Committee of Prof. Lucio Kowarick’s (University of São Paulo, Brazil) visit to Canada (London, Toronto, Montreal, Calgary and Halifax). Organizer of Prof. Lucio Kowarick’s visit to Saint Mary's University, October 31 to November 2, 2005. Prof. Kowarick gave a research presentation on October 31 “Poor Barrios of São Paulo. Networks of Solidarity in a Situation of Social Vulnerability.” On November 2 nd Prof. Kowarick gave a lecture for students, “Latin American Metropolis: Poverty, Vulnerability and Social Networks.” He also visited the Campus, the Gorsebrook Institute and met SMU professors and staff. Community Public lecture at Keshen Goodman Library, Halifax. “Women in Latin American History. The Experience of Eva Duarte de Perón.” May 12, 2006. Librarian representative: History Department at Saint Mary’s University Editorial Board: Journal of Transatlantic Journal. Edited by Edinburgh Press. Research Associate: Ceris /Toronto – the Joint Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement. MEDIA: • A two­page interview on the Brazilian­Canadian magazine Sotaque Brasileiro. Ano 2, número 7.
9 Rosana Barbosa, continued
• Radio­Canada International ­ interview for a program broadcasted to Brazil (available in Canada on the internet) on emigration from Brazil. March 11, 2005. • Interview to the T.V. channel OMNI 1 (Portuguese edition) during the launch of the book on Portuguese immigrant women. University of Toronto, April 6, 2005. LANGUAGES: • Fluent: in English and Portuguese (speaking, reading and writing) • Working knowledge: Spanish (speaking, reading and writing) • Working Knowledge: French (reading and speaking) MEMBERSHIPS: • American Historical Association (AHA) • Associação Nacional de História/Brasil (ANPHU) • BRASA ­ Brazilian Studies Association • Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CALACS) • Transatlantic Studies Association (TSA) SCHOLARSHIPS & BURSARIES: • Internal Grant Saint Mary’s University, 2005 • University of Toronto Bursary, 1995 • Federation of Portuguese­Canadian Business and Professionals, January 1992 • Secretaria de Estado da Emigração, Portugal, 1988 • Secretaria de Estado da Emigração, Portugal, 1985 • Grupo Brasil of Ontario VOLUNTEER: Board of Director Grupo Comunitário de Informação Brasil/Angola (2000 to 2002) Pueblito Canada (1993 to 1996) Grupo Brasil of Ontario (1986 to1995) Coordinator Grupo Brasil of Ontario (1993 to1995) Library Assistant Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean. York University.
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Rosana Barbosa - Saint Mary`s University