Candice Klein
Research Description
In April of 1971 six Indochinese delegates met with over 600 women from North America during the Vancouver Indochinese Women鈥檚 Conference to discuss feminist anti-war activism and attempt to build a transnational, transcultural, and transracial united front against imperialism. My Master鈥檚 thesis will focus on internal discord around issues of race, class, and sexuality at this Conference, an important yet largely unexamined event central to the North American women's movement, and its creation of solidarity networks with Southeast Asian women.
Working Dissertation Title
鈥淪isterhood is Powerful but Not Easy": Conflict and the Vancouver Indochinese Women鈥檚 Conference of 1971.
Biography
An interest in detective novels, my own family history, the Prairies, feminism, and hip hop greatly influenced my decision to become a historian.
Originally from rural Southwestern Ontario, I made the trek westward in 2003 with long pauses through Calgary and Banff, eventually settling in Vancouver, British Columbia in 2005. As a fledgling historian of gender and sexuality, the zeitgeist of the women鈥檚 movement during the 鈥渓ong 60s鈥 deeply influences my current research interests.
In my spare time I enjoy making jewelry and art installations, as I am one of the founding members of the Radical Spirits Art Collective based in East Vancouver.
Teaching Assistantships
HIST 101: Canada to Confederation (Fall 2015)
Awards
The Rosslyn and Mary Penney Community Service Award
Douglas Cole Memorial Graduate Entrance Scholarship in Cultural History