Royden Loewen
Quick Facts
Biography
Royden Loewen (born 26 October 1954 in Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada) is a Canadian History Professor and Chair in Mennonite Studies at the University of Winnipeg. His book about the Mennonite Communities 1850-1930 is a leading publication about the emigration waves from south Russia to Canada.
Education and career
Royden Loewen was born in the town of Steinbach in southern Manitoba as the son of Dave and Gertie Loewen. Dave was a poultry producer and wheat farmer and for many years chairman of the Steinbach Credit Union. Gertie was a homemaker and mother to six children. Royden attended elementary school in nearby Blumenort, highschool at Steinbach Christian High School, and college at Mennonite Brethren Bible College where he earned his university degrees and fulbright at the University of Chicago. He taught Junior and High School at Fisher River First Nation in Manitoba's interlake district and Canadian history at the University of Manitoba. Since 1996 he holds the Chair in Mennonite Studies.
Loewen visited the Mennonite population in Bolivia several times for a book on anti-modernity in Canada and Latin America. He currently is involved in the two-year project Seven Points on Earth, funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, where he visits seven Mennonite farm villages around the world with graduate students from around the world. The project paints an environmental history of the villages in Java, Siberia, Friesland, Bulawayo, Santa Cruz departmento (Bolivia), Kansas and Manitoba.
Royden Loewen lives in Steinbach with his wife Mary Ann, who teaches academic writing at the University of Winnipeg.
Academic reviews of Loewen's works
- Seeking Places of Peace: Global Mennonite History Series, North America. Journal of Mennonite Studies. 2013, Vol. 31, p233-235. 3p. Historical Period: ca 1601 to 2012.
- Immigrants in Prairie Cities: Ethnic Diversity in Twentieth-Century Canada. Journal of International Migration & Integration. Aug 2012, Vol. 13 Issue 3, p399-400. 2p. Historical Period: 1901 to 2000. DOI: 10.1007/s12134-011-0204-6.
- Immigrants in Prairie Cities: Ethnic Diversity in Twentieth-Century Canada. H-Net Reviews in the Humanities & Social Sciences. Nov 2011, p1-4. 4p. Historical Period: ca 1910 to ca 2000
- Diaspora in the Countryside: Two Mennonite Communities and Mid-Twentieth-Century Rural Disjuncture. American Historical Review. Jun 2009, Vol. 114 Issue 3, p728-729. 2p. Historical Period: ca 1890 to 1950.
- Diaspora in the Countryside: Two Mennonite Communities and Mid-Twentieth Century Rural Disjuncture. Social History / Histoire Sociale. May 2008, Vol. 41 Issue 81, p293-295. 3p. Historical Period: 1930 to 1989.
- Diaspora in the Countryside: Two Mennonite Communities and Mid-Twentieth-Century Rural Disjuncture. Canadian Historical Review. Sep 2008, Vol. 89 Issue 3, p439-441. 3p. Historical Period: 1930 to 1989
- Hidden Worlds, Revisiting the Mennonite Migrants of the 1870s (Book). Journal of American Ethnic History. Fall 2003, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p124-125. 2p. Historical Period: 1870 to 1879.
- Hidden Worlds (Book). Western Historical Quarterly. Summer2003, Vol. 34 Issue 2, p237. 2p. Historical Period: 1870 to 1879.
- Family, Church and Market: A Mennonite Community in the Old and the New Worlds, 1850-1930. Social History / Histoire Sociale. Nov96, Vol. 29 Issue 58, p509-512. 4p. Historical Period: 1850 to 1930.