INTRODUCTION; PART ONE: THE ROLE OF CULTURE; Much Ado About Something: A Brief Study of the History of Canadian Art Exhibitions; Christ in the Crowsnest: Religion and the Anglo-Protestant Working Class in the Crowsnest Pass, 1898-1918; Swiling and Newfoundland Identity; Desperately Seeking the Audience for Early Canadian Radio; PART TWO: NATIONALISM, RACISM, AND THE CANADIAN QUESTION; Hors du Quebec, point de salut: The Intellectual Liquidation of Minority Francophones in the Imagination of Nationalist Quebec, 1945-1969; Seduced by the Dark Side: Racism and Anti-Semitism in the Slipstream of Nationalism; PART THREE: CANADIAN WOMEN EXERCISING AGENCY AT HOME AND ABROAD; The Problem of 'Passivity' and Female Workers in the Quebec Cotton Industry, 1880-1910; Standard versus Sisterhood: Dr Murray, President Kim and Distinctive Approaches to Medical Education at Ewa woman's University, Seoul, 1947-50; Native Feminism vs. Aboriginal Nationalism: The Native Women's Association of Canada's Quest for Gender Equality, 1983-1994; PART FOUR: IDEAS AND THEIR IMPACT; James A. Macdonald and the Theology of the Regenerators, 1890-1914; The Concept of Academic Freedom in English Canada: 1919-1964; The Anatomy of Power: A Theme in the Writings of Harold Innis; 'Wanted: A Phoenix': Ramsay Cook and the Exhaustian of Ideas, 1960-68; PART FIVE: NATIVE VOICES: FROM NEW FRANCE TO THE CANADIAN PRAIRIES; Ignored Voices: Nineteenth Century French Canadian Views of Iroquois-French Relations; The Indian Vote in Saskatchewan Elections; RAMSAY COOK: A BIBLIOGRAPHY; PHD DISSERTATIONS SUPERVISED BY RAMSAY COOK; CONTRIBUTORS
This is an admirable collection of essays, topical, provocative and lively and often with a distinctly political edge. The whole collection is very accessible to the non-historian and is particularly useful for British readers in setting a context for a number of issues running through Canadian culture. British Journal of Canadian Studies
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