Source: Library and Archives Canada
May 14th, 2008
OTTAWA, ONTARIO–(Marketwire - May 6, 2008) -
Editors Note: Two photos are included with this press release.
Library and Archives Canada, in collaboration with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) in the United States, is launching today a unique international exhibition at 395 Wellington Street in Ottawa, on the occasion of the 225th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Paris. The exhibition entitled 1783: Subject or Citizen? marks the first collaborative educational initiative between the two national institutions.
“The Treaty of Paris changed forever the life of not only one nation, but two,” said the Librarian and Archivist of Canada, Ian E. Wilson. “This exhibition tells the story through a unique partnership, one which serves as an elegant metaphor for the special friendship Canada has with the United States.”
This exhibition recounts the story of two nations and sheds light on the individuals and their beliefs in the changing world during this period. The Treaty of Paris not only ended the American Revolution, but also provided the foundation for what was to become the Canadian nation. It shaped the political development and social fabric of our country and led to the creation of new international relationships. The Treaty also greatly affected the lives of North Americans including First Peoples, African-Americans, Loyalists, Patriots and French-Canadians in ways which are still felt today.
The evolution of these societies following the Treaty is clearly outlined in the three key themes featured in the exhibition: “Forming New Identities,” “New Relationships” and “Lives in the Wake of the Treaty.” The curators of the exhibition have provided an introduction to the voices, values and visions that are representative in each unique theme.
1783: Subject or Citizen? contains approximately 60 important documents, half of which were drawn from the Library and Archives Canada collection. Some of the items include maps from 1755, books, paintings, letters and stamps from 1765, a copy of the Loyalist Oath as well as the Quebec Gazette from August 1790. The highlight of the exhibition is the actual Treaty of Paris which has never before been seen in Canada and seldom been displayed even in Washington.
Tags: archives, national
May 14th, 2008 at 3:47 pm
If Acrobat reader didn’t suck so badly on every single platform, then xpdf, Preview, etc. wouldn’t exist. Adobe isn’t exactly known for making quality apps.
May 14th, 2008 at 4:37 pm
If the Gimp was better, there would be no Photoshop. This problem could be solved if there was a programmer that had the motivation to replace their software with quality products.
May 14th, 2008 at 5:28 pm
Yea, that was my concern too.
May 14th, 2008 at 6:18 pm
Um…. because google won’t index the text content of random flash apps, and that breaks the internet? Because some people actually like simple text without the zingy things?
May 14th, 2008 at 7:09 pm
Also, DVI doesn’t seem to embed the fonts that you use. (At least I assume that it doesn’t given the way xdvi behaves.) I’m not so fond of Computer Modern — my tastes run more towards Garamond.PS on the other hand tends to be rather bulky unless you compress it (.ps.gz or such) and even then any embedded raster images are going to be fairly huge since the interpreters don’t understand PNG or JPEG compression.HTML doesn’t really have a widely used standard format for bundling the HTML itself with all of the images and such that it relies on. One of my big pet-peeves is when people use a raster format when a vector format would do the job far better (e.g., charts, graphs, diagrams, etc.) HTML pretty much forces all images to be in a raster format. Yes, SVG is slowly improving this situation but it’s not widespread enough to be relied on.Another thing that I dislike about HTML for this sort of thing is that the line justification is usually pretty lousy. I can get optical justification out of PDFLaTeX and I can also control for widows and orphans. Word processors tend to be pretty terrible at this too — it’s very annoying to open a document on a different computer and find that what was ten full pages before now suddenly spills two lines over onto an eleventh page.PDF gives all this in one nice, neat, (usually) compressed file that’s consistent across all platforms. Google can index it on the web. Spotlight can index it locally.[Nice handle, by the way!]