Graduate research connects to past and present
The Canadian Association for Graduate Studies has honoured Faculty of Arts and Science graduate C茅lia Romulus with the 2023 CAGS-ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award in the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences category.
The CAGS-ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award has been recognizing outstanding Canadian dissertations for 25 years. The award seeks to showcase original and innovative doctoral research that makes significant contributions, both to their respective academic communities and to Canadian society at large.
She is currently an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies of the University of Ottawa.
鈥淚 am truly honored to receive this award and it is a wonderful recognition of all the support and labour of many notably of Haitian men and women who agreed to share and trust me with their stories, insights, archives and analysis about Duvalierism while caring for me before, during and after the completion of this dissertation,鈥 Dr. Romulus says.
In her dissertation, Remembering the Duvalierist State 鈥 Gender, State Repression, and Migration Patterns between Haiti and Canada, Dr. Romulus closely examines Haitian gendered experiences and Haitian diasporic experiences in Haiti and in Montreal during the brutal dictatorship of Jean-Claude Duvalier (1971-1986). The dissertation seeks to understand the impact of, and the ways in which, Duvalierism and its relationship to Canadian and Qu茅becois political culture, are remembered by multiple generations.
鈥淭his research has allowed me to connect the past and present, to remember stories I was never told. Because I chose to follow stories that are part of my life and that are similar to mine 鈥 stories that took people to various countries I have drawn from various story-making and story-making processes. These life stories illustrate multi-located resistance strategies as deployed by opponents of the Haitian dictatorial regime, but also by Haitian men and women in negotiating their citizenship between two or more countries including Canada.鈥
The thesis was funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Scholarship. Learn more about the award on the .