BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260201T213801EST-3883l1eCJs@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260202T023801Z DESCRIPTION:Join MISC at 4:00 pm on Monday\, February 2ndth at the Faculty Club (3450 McTavish Street) for a lecture by Cecil Foster\, Determining ne w international and domestic orders: reflections on Modern Canada's endura nce and more so resilience as Black and West Indian.\n\nThe enduring domin ant narrative of Canada is of a social ideal produced by two founding peop les of Western European ancestry. Even as Canada demographically appears m ost multicultural than ever\, the dominance of this narrative presupposes that essentially Canada was and always should be a white man's country\, w hether organically Anglo\, Franco or a combination of both. It is this whi teness that supposedly provides Canada its social resilience.\n\nDr. Foste r will offer the counter argument that from even its earliest days as a se ttler colony\, Canada was inherently Black and that to this day its social justice model of development based on ideals of diversity\, equity and in clusiveness reflects Canada's undeniable historical\, cultural and Black B ritish West Indian heritage. This is an identity that dominant Canada alwa ys tried to deny in preference for a whiteness imposed through structural and institutional conformity and cooption. Ironically\, recognition of thi s identity is at the heart of Canada's Official Multiculturalism that save d the Canadian Confederation. And it could save Canada again. It is this s ame quest for a social order grounded in Blackness and the search for endu ring freedom that could set Canada apart as a truly modern country in this moment of disruptions of established orders and systems domestically\, bu t particularly elsewhere in the Americas and the rest of the world.\n\nThe lecture will be followed by a Q&A and reception. This event is free and o pen to public\; registration is required via Eventbrite.\n\nCecil Foster i s a leading author\, academic\, journalist and public intellectual. His wo rk speaks about the challenges that Black people have encountered historic ally in Canada in their efforts to achieve respect and recognition for the ir contribution to what is now a multicultural Canada. He highlights their fight for social justice and human dignity. In particular\, Foster addres ses the issues of immigration in his critical discussions on who is a Cana dian in the ever-evolving social narrative toward a genuine multicultural Canada. Dr. Foster is a professor in the Department of Africana and Americ an Studies at the University at Buffalo\, State University of Buffalo.\n DTSTART:20260202T210000Z DTEND:20260202T230000Z LOCATION:Faculty Club\, CA\, QC\, Montreal\, H3A 0E5\, 3450 rue McTavish SUMMARY:Determining new international and domestic orders: reflections on M odern Canada's endurance and more so resilience as Black and West Indian URL:/misc/channels/event/determining-new-international -and-domestic-orders-reflections-modern-canadas-endurance-and-more-so-3703 57 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR