Showing 40 results

Subjects
Subjects term Scope note Archival description count Authority record count
Architecture and planning
  • SCA supports research, teaching and learning in the broad fields of architecture and planning with a variety of primary sources. Included are the personal papers and drawings of architects and architectural historians such as W.H.E. Schmalz, Arthur Gordon Shoosmith, Ross Dixon, John Ivan Rempel, and William Dendy. The department maintains collections focused on conservation efforts to preserve Ontario’s built environment, including the records of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario: North Waterloo Region and the Breithaupt Hewetson Clark Collection, which also includes records documenting the development of Guildwood Village in Scarborough, Ontario. Collections focused on the development of the Region of Waterloo including maps and fire insurance plans, the papers of Herbert Johnston, a city engineer who work with local cities and townships, and the papers of Bill Thomson, an urban planner who worked extensively in the Region and served as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Waterloo in the School of Urban and Regional Planning are also available. These collections are supplemented by several acquisitions featuring plans and drawings of local buildings and homes, and a selection of rare books on architecture and design.
25 0
Biology 6 0
Business (1) 30 0
Campus experience 34 0
Changing climate and the natural environment 33 0
Computer science 9 0
Creative process
  • SCA is home to rare books and special collections that document innovation through the creative process, along with the steps taken when generating new and original ideas, concepts, or artistic expressions. Collections include a selection of papers from twentieth-century Canadian artists and authors of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and drama such Alice Mary Hagen, David Hill, Elaine M. Catley, Eric P. McCormack, John Herbert, and Jane and Tony Urquhart. Combined, the collections document all stages of the creative arts process including handwritten manuscripts, typescripts, computer outputs, drafts, revisions and proofs, sketchbooks, idea books, original illustrations, and artworks. Many of these collections also include photographs, correspondence, diaries, ephemera, and other material that reveal additional insight into the artistic creative process.
61 0
Drama 12 0
Education 21 0
Engineering 11 0
English (1) 70 0
Faculty papers 56 0
Fine arts 41 0
First Nations, Inuit, and Métis 16 4
Geography 3 0
Geology 2 0
German 13 0
History 88 0
History of science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM) 52 0
Indigenous peoples (1)
  • SCA holds books, newspapers, maps and other materials pertaining to First Nations, Inuit, and Métis (FNIM) peoples in Canada, as well as records related to Indigenous peoples abroad. Included is correspondence regarding a rebellion by the Mohawk Nation in the eighteenth century, the journals of fur traders Colin Rankin and Donald McKay, and five land grants issued by the Department of Indian Affairs bestowing lands formerly promised to the Ojibwe and Odawa of Manitoulin Island. The department's Indigenous publications collection consists of a growing number of rare books, newspapers, zines, and other print material written by and about Indigenous peoples, with a focus on FNIM peoples. Of note are zines covering contemporary issues like Land Back activism and gender identity, as well as religious texts in languages such as Cree, Iroquois, Montagnais, and Ojibwa. Additionally, the department holds the research and publications of Waterloo faculty E Palmer Patterson, a historian who wrote about the history of Indigenous communities in Canada with a focus on the West Coast, and Sally Weaver, an anthropologist whose work focused on land rights and sovereignty for Indigenous peoples in Canada and Australia. SCA is also home to a collection of correspondence, reports, publications, and other written records related to FNIM peoples gathered by Andrew Telegdi, a former Member of Parliament and Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister with special emphasis on Aboriginal Affairs.
3 6
Kinesiology 5 0
Labour relations 10 0
Legal studies 11 0
Media 19 0
Medicine 23 0
Music 6 0
Pharmacy 5 0
Philosophy 2 0
Physics and astronomy 4 0
Political science 29 0
Print culture
  • SCA maintains many examples of printed materials from the beginning of the hand press era to today. This includes artists’ books by Greg Curnoe, Sara Press, and Damien Hirst, as well as editions of books, newsletters, magazine, and zines printed by small presses. SCA’s book collection has many rare volumes featuring fine binding, including examples from well-known bookbinders such as Joseph Zaehnsdorf and Sangorski & Sutcliffe. In addition, the department holds rare editions and early printings of books produced by private presses like the Strawberry Hill Press, the Kelmscott Press, and the Hogarth Press, as well as hundreds of pulp fiction books in the Lesbian Literature Collection and the bpNichol Library of Science Fiction that reflect the genre’s graphic and colourful art. Also available are the organizational records of records of Dumont Press Graphix that document the radical roots of Kitchener-Waterloo’s typesetting shop in the 1970s and 1980s.
16 0
Race, racism, and colonialism
  • SCA supports research on race, racism, and colonization through a range of print material and archival collections. These include a growing number of contemporary periodicals and zines focused on and produced by equity deserving communities both re-claiming and celebrating cultural practices prohibited or lost during colonization. The department holds records that reflect multiple perspectives on the advancement and impact of colonialism. Examples include the journals and other records of Colin Rankin and Donald McKay, the photograph album of Canadian and British missionaries in India, five land grants issued by the Department of Indian Affairs bestowing lands formerly promised to the Ojibwe and Odawa of Manitoulin Island, and a variety of Indigenous publications written by and about First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples, groups and associations. Additionally, the department holds the research and publications of Waterloo’s Sally Weaver, an anthropologist whose work focused on land rights and sovereignty for Indigenous peoples in Canada and Australia. Further of note are editions of _Black News_, a Brooklyn-based publication from the 1970s documenting the experiences of Black communities at a critical moment in the history of the Civil Rights Movement, and Camilla Young's photograph album, documenting the upbringing and day-to-day life of an African-American woman from New Jersey between the mid-1940s to the 1980s. The department also houses a Black Experience Collection of pulp fiction titles, and a selection of Black Oral Histories with students, faculty and staff connected to the University of Waterloo.
34 0
Regional development, industry, and settlement
  • SCA holds a variety of local history resources related to development, industry, and settlement in what is today the Region of Waterloo. Collections include maps, fire insurance plans, business and city directories, yearbooks from local high schools, government documents outlining local county or village by-laws, and newspapers including restored copies of issues of the _Berliner Journal for the years 1859-1889. The department is also home to the Kitchener-Waterloo Record Photographic Negative Collection, which documents local news events, community activities, regional development, and human-interest stories between 1938-2001. Many of SCA’s local history collections consist of the institutional archives of local businesses and organizations, such as Dare Foods Limited, Electrohome, Fritsch Pharmacy, the Dominion Rubber Company, Kitchener-Waterloo Record_, and the Rotary Club of Kitchener. In addition, the department maintains the papers of the Breithaupt, Bolender Ball, Ratz, Rieder, Schantz, and Schneider families, among many others. These collections complement several printed genealogies, family histories, and monographs also held by the department. Combined, topics of note in these collections include cultural and community association development, family planning, mourning and grief as understood through spiritualism, and the lives of early settler families, including those of women and children.
200 0
Religious studies 36 0
Reproductive rights and justice
  • SCA has a selection of print and archival material that document the history of birth control in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, women’s reproductive health, and family planning. Collections include the organizational papers of the Parents' Information Bureau, a Kitchener-based clinic for family planning and birth control set up by A.R. Kaufman of the Kaufman Rubber Company, and records related to Marie Stopes, the founder of Mother's Clinic for Constructive Birth Control, the world’s first birth control clinic. In addition to documenting the early advancement of reproductive rights, SCA's collections support research about eugenics-informed rhetoric used to advance reproductive issues and advocacy in and outside of feminist circles. SCA also holds records and trial transcripts related to the trial of Dorothea Palmer, who was arrested in 1936 for advertising birth control to women in the Eastview neighbourhood of Ottawa.
17 0
Sociology 29 0
Sport, recreation, and leisure
  • SCA holds print and archival material that document sport, recreation and leisure activities in the Region of Waterloo and beyond. These include cookbooks, scrapbooks, knitting and crafting patterns, and ephemera and photographs related to theatre and performance, SCA also maintains the records of various organizations including the Concordia Club, the Kitchener-Waterloo Young Men's Christian Association, the Young Women's Christian Association of Kitchener-Waterloo, and Westmount Golf and Country Club.
  • SCA maintains, but no longer actively collects, records and rare books related to the history and performance of dance. These collections contain material describing the history of various types of dance including ancient dance and sport (particularly as performed by the Greeks), Scottish dancing, as well as the cotillion, waltz, minuet, and the quadrille. Additionally, the collections feature a significant amount of material related to ballet including choreography, dance notations, lithographs, engravings, over 150 rare books, and records detailing the scheduling and planning of the Vestris Prize for choreography. Dance related collections were acquired to support the Department of Dance within the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, and dance courses that began being offered during the 1969-1970 school year, which predated the department’s founding as an independent program in 1972. The Dance Program was closed in 1996.
31 0
Waterloo 0 0
Women’s studies, gender, and sexuality
  • SCA was founded in 1976 with a significant collection of materials related to women’s history and women’s studies as the cornerstone of the department. Acquired in 1967 by university librarian Doris Lewis from the National Council of Women of Canada, the donation included the Council’s library on the history of women in Canada. Present in these collections are the papers of individual women and women’s organizations, and reference files that support the study of women’s history in Canada from the mid-nineteenth century to the late twentieth century. In general, the collections fall into the following broad categories: birth control and eugenics, broadcasting and journalism, domestic arts, education, medicine and science, organizations, politics, women’s rights and suffrage, and writers. SCA's ever-growing book and periodical collections have a wide historical and geographical focus, including works on the role and place of women in society from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. Of note is the British Women's Periodicals Collection, which consists of some 35,000 issues of British women's magazines published from 1893 to 1977 that cover topics such as cooking, crafts, advice, fashion, and health, along with advertisements illustrating contemporary attitudes and concerns. In addition, SCA actively collects materials that support the study of gender diversity, sexuality, and social justice, including collections that document intersectional and/or racialized identities. Current collections include poems, plays, essays, and other works by John Herbert, a Canadian playwright and theatre director, best-known for his play, Fortune and Men’s Eyes, and the records of the Glow Centre for Sexual and Gender Diversity at the University of Waterloo, the longest-running queer and trans student organization in Canada. Additional collections include zines authored by and focused on queer, trans and Two-Spirit people, and a wide selection of paperback books featuring lesbian themes by authors such as Ann Bannon, Artemis Smith, and Randy Salem.
139 0
World wars and global conflict 47 0