Stuart Robert Henderson is a Canadian historian, culture critic, filmmaker, and musician. He is a writer and producer with 90th Parallel Productions, a documentary film company. He is the author of the Clio award-winning book Making the Scene, Yorkville and Hip Toronto in the 1960s (University of Toronto Press, 2011). "Making the Scene" focuses on the history of 1960s Yorkville as a mecca for Toronto's and Canada's counterculture.

Since joining 90th Parallel Productions in 2014 he has produced several award-winning documentaries including The Skin We're In, Invisible Essence: The Little Prince, and My First 150 Days. Working with Jesse Wente and Justine Pimlott, he produced Inconvenient Indian, a feature documentary from director Michelle Latimer. The film, based on the best-selling book by Thomas King, will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2020.[1]

Henderson has held post-doctoral fellowships at McMaster University (2008-2009) and York University (2009-2011) where he conducted research on Toronto's Rochdale College and what he has termed "hip separatism" in the 1970s. He has taught Canadian cultural history courses at the University of Toronto and Queen's University. His doctoral dissertation was honoured by the Canadian Historical Association with the John Bullen Prize for best PhD thesis (2008).

Henderson's academic work has appeared in the Journal of Canadian Studies,[2] the Canadian Historical Review,[3] LeftHistory,[4][5] the Journal of Canadian Historical Association[6] and the Journal for the Study of Radicalism.

He has worked as the editor of the Americana section at Exclaim! and as a features editor at PopMatters Media Inc, where he was also a frequent contributor. He has conducted interviews with a wide range of artists, including Keira Knightley, Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead, Richard Thompson, Sarah Harmer, Steve Earle, and Viggo Mortensen.

Henderson is on the jury for the Polaris Music Prize and has worked as the national pop culture columnist for CBC Radio One. On May 15, 2011 Henderson was elected to the executive board of the Popular Culture Association of Canada. He lives in Toronto.

References

  1. "Inconvenient Indian".
  2. ""While there is Still Time...": J. Murray Gibbon and the Spectacle of Difference in Three CPR Folk Festivals, 1928-1931", Journal of Canadian Studies:
  3. "Off the Streets and into the Fortress: Experiments in Hip Separatism at Toronto's Rochdale College, 1968–1975", Canadian Historical Review
  4. "All Pink and Clean and Full of Wonder? Gendering Joni Mitchell, 1966-74", Left History:
  5. "Disappointment, Nihilism, and Engagement: Some Thoughts on Active History", Left History:
  6. "Toronto’s Hippie Disease: End Days in the Yorkville Scene, August 1968", Journal of Canadian Historical Association:
  • GhostWalk Creek on MySpace
  • PopMatters archive contributor
  • Robert Fulford "On the hippies of Yorkville Yore", The National Post
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