id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_qnzomioclfgcjm7m5mhqlkm22u Tina Adcock Canadian History Blogging: Reflections at the Intersection of Digital Storytelling, Academic Research, and Public Outreach 2016.0 40 .pdf application/pdf 14085 944 48 Canadian History Blogging: Reflections at the Intersection of Digital Storytelling, Academic Research, and Public Outreach Drawing upon the experiences and practices of fi ve collaborative or multi-author Canadian history blogs — ActiveHistory.ca, and edit historical blogs, however, they will not only help shift the practice of Canadian history inside and outside university campuses, but will Canadian historians are increasingly publishing work in collaborative and multi-author blogs.1 Like peer-reviewed journals, publications, but can help attract non-academic readers to history blogs even as they educate them about this often-obscured and Canadian environmental history.23 Like the editors of ActiveHistory.ca, those of Borealia and The Otter~La Loutre actively post-academic scholars in Canadian history blogging merits consideration. Several Canadian history blogs also publish author interviews, book reviews, and essays on recent historiography, taking the posts published on Canadian history blogs. Blogging has already reshaped the work of researching, teaching, and communicating Canadian history in manifold ways. ./cache/work_qnzomioclfgcjm7m5mhqlkm22u.pdf ./txt/work_qnzomioclfgcjm7m5mhqlkm22u.txt