Franca Iacovetta Explained

Franca Iacovetta
Nationality:Canadian
Alma Mater:York University
Thesis Year:1988
School Tradition:Feminism
Doctoral Advisor:Ramsay Cook
Discipline:History
Workplaces:University of Toronto

Franca Iacovetta (born 1957) is a "feminist/socialist" historian of labour and migration currently working at the University of Toronto.

Her dissertation, published as Such Hardworking People: Italian Immigrants in Postwar Toronto, was supervised by York University's Ramsay Cook. She has since edited numerous collections of case studies, examining the lives of so-called "marginalized peoples" in Canada and the United States. Her most recent book Gatekeepers was awarded the Canadian Historical Association's John A. Macdonald Prize in 2008.

She has been critical of J. L. Granatstein, who questioned the dominance of social history in recent Canadian historical-writing in Who Killed Canadian History?, calling it a "clearly offensive", "ill-conceived little book".[1]

Selected bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Franca Iacovetta, "Gendering Trans/National Historiographies: Feminists Rewriting Canadian History," Journal of Women's History, Vol. 19, No. 1 (2007), 209-210.