UWinnipeg’s Cheryl Parisien launches debut novel
A book launch will be held for Parisien's novel, The Unweaving, on Wednesday, November 13.
Explore a selection of publications by UWinnipeg alumni and academics. If you're looking for more, visit our alumni authors page.
A book launch will be held for Parisien's novel, The Unweaving, on Wednesday, November 13.
Professor in UWinnipeg’s Department of Rhetoric, Writing, and Communications, Dr. Jason Hannan earns prestigous 2024 Erving Goffman Award for his new book on trolling, politics, and social media.
A new book co-edited by UWinnnipegger Dr. Laura Forsythe, "Around the Kitchen Table: Métis Aunties' Scholarship", celebrating Métis women launches on Thursday, April 11 at McNally Robinson Booksellers.
Dr. Jason Hannan's new book, "Trolling Ourselves to Death," riffs on Neil Postman's classic thesis.
The past year was an exciting and eventful one at UWinnipeg! Look back with us.
Michael Dudley, Librarian for History and Theatre and Film, turned his longtime interest into a book.
Co-authored by UWinnipeg's Dr. Shauna MacKinnon, 'Indigenous Resistance & Development in Winnipeg 1960-2000' explores the rich historical grounding of Indigenous peoples grassroots organizing developed through resistance and community work and traces Indigenous city development through the decades, encompassing generations of Indigenous community organizers.
UWinnipeg's Dr. Fiona Joy Green has published her eighth book, 'Coming Into Being: Mothers on Finding and Realizing Feminism,' now available in the library, at the UWinnipeg Campus Store, and online with Demeter Press.
Dr. Mary Jane Logan McCallum has published a new book – Nii Ndahlohke: Boys’ and Girls’ Work at Mount Elgin Industrial School, 1890-1915 – looking at student labour at Mount Elgin Indian Residential School.
UWinnipeg Drs. Fiona Green and Jaqueline McLeod Rogers have co-edited a collection of parent essays — Parenting/Internet/Kids: Domesticating Technologies — that ask the question: re technologies helping or harming us, and are they opening possibilities or taking away initiatives and agency?