Faculty of Arts

Faculty Matter

At the University of Winnipeg having outstanding faculty matters. It matters to our students, to their disciplines and to our community. The University works to support and enhance the work that our faculty does. One example is the Arts Research Seed Money Awards, which are used to strengthen research grant applications. This is one way we can help our faculty do what they do.

These winning applications provide a window on the research activity going on here. The projects range from a study of snack foods in Canada to modern Japan. A quick look at these will indeed show you why faculty matters.


Department of Criminal Justice

The Centre for Interdisciplinary Justice Studies
Dr. Richard Jochelson and Dr. Steven Kohm

Dr. Richard Jochelson, left, Dr. Steven Kohm, right

The Centre for Interdisciplinary Justice Studies, located in the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Winnipeg, was designed to bring together the various stakeholders in the criminal justice system. One goal was to generate conversations with legal, political, philosophical, historical, linguistic, and international scholars and practitioners. Through a series of workshops and publications, these ideas are shared with community groups serving youth, indigenous peoples, immigrants, seniors and others. The Centre expects to be a place where we can learn from each other by “working with the community, listening to the justice community and disseminating the research findings of that community in as open a manner as possible."

Department of History

Black and female in the sixteenth century
Dr. Darlene Abreu-Ferreira

While slaves from Africa are most readily thought of as a North American phenomenon, Dr. Darlene Abreu-Ferreira looks at its European face. Her research shows that Portugal, in the fifteen and sixteenth centuries, played the central role in bringing slaves to Europe. They came as spoils of war and were treated like other commodities. Men were shipped to south Portugal, but women and their children, who were thought to be more malleable, were dispersed throughout Europe as domestics and market vendors. From legal records, Dr. Abreu-Ferreira shows that the transitions were not always smooth. Her study will look at the lives of these women and examine how their situations differed from the treatment of and acceptance by those around them and will, she notes, “in the process, make a contribution to the growing scholarly debate on the extent to which we can trace modern Western notions of race to pre-industrial European concepts of blackness and whiteness.”

Snack Foods: A Canadian Social History, 1945-2010
Dr. Janis Thiessen


If we are what we eat, then what we eat is fodder to an historian. What our snack foods say about us is the subject of a study undertaken by Dr. Janis Thiessen of the History Department. What you might think of as your small snack involves an industry of 7500 workers generating $1.6 billion in product. In one study, the snack meal is second only to dinner in importance to the average Canadian. Snacks impact business and commerce, governance, how we interact socially, as well as our health - obesity and diabetes becoming all too common. “This project will investigate the manufacturing, advertising and consumption of snack food and will incorporate business, labour and social history.” Need I say that there is much food for thought here.


Department of Religion and Culture

Multiculturalism Liberalism and Religion in Canada
Dr. Carlos Colorado

Canadian liberalism and multiculturalism are often seen as connected and supportive of similar goals. But a look at some of the issues arising around multiculturalism shows a tension between the two. “A large number of Canadian political conflicts that are located along religio-ethnic lines are articulated in terms of the infringements on rights and the right to non-interference.” Quebec has been particularly sensitive to these issues. Incidences of accommodation to the religious, ethnic and cultural requirements of one group have been presented in media reports as an assault on the freedoms of the majority. These conflicts cast multiculturalism and accommodation as an adversary of traditional liberal values. As Dr. Colorado notes “the widespread perception was that accommodation often amounted to interference on freedom.” Society’s resultant agitation “demonstrates how quickly a large proportion of the population [can become] increasingly entrenched against any cultural accommodations that [have] even the possibility of undermining liberal values.”

But these tensions need not grow. Solutions, he proposes, can be found in a broader concept of liberalism, particularly as it relates to religion. He notes that “what is obscured in the liberal telling of wars of religion or those accounts, which emphasize only religion’s divisive character, are the ways in which religion can and does play a central role in peacemaking, reconciliation, and national and international humanitarianism.” His goal is “to develop a fuller model of citizenship participation that incorporates religionists and their worldviews as potentially constructive and democratic forces in the secular—which is to say, religiously neutral rather than non- or anti-religious—public sphere.” Societal waters are often turbulent. Rather than the all-too-frequent agitation cycle, this more inclusive approach might help to set a better way forward. We invite you to join Dr. Colorado in these explorations.

Myths and Modernity in Nineteenth Century Japan
Dr. Jeffrey Newmark

For half a century, at least since a 1961 Princeton conference, scholars have tried to identify the beginnings of modernity in Japan. Dr. Jeffrey Newmark considers the when in the context of how Modern Japan came to be. In attempting to establish a definitive date, scholars have looked to developments in the macro economy and the political sphere. These were top-down events that shifted the culture and shared common attributes. One such trait “was the embrace of rational-mindedness and the abandonment of superstitious thinking.” The impression is that this embrace happened later. But Newmark feels that Japan, by this criteria, became modern at the beginning of the nineteenth century—at least half a century earlier than had been considered. And they did so for reasons important to ordinary people—business and commerce. 

His work shows ordinary citizens using and manipulating the myths in a rational way for their own ends. In some cases, ordinary Japanese acted in opposition to government dictates. This is an interesting study of how change happens.

Department of Sociology

A Research Proposal on Immigrant Families in Winnipeg
Dr. Wei Xing

Immigration in Winnipeg is continuing to climb in part due to the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program (PNP). But now that the immigrant families are here, the question is how do they become Winnipeggers. Dr. Xing will look at the families, the social programs and government options that assist with the social integration of these newcomers into the existing city fabric. The research will also offer opportunities for students of her immigration course to pose hypotheses, conduct research and draw conclusions.