Laden...

From the Study of Canada to Canadian Studies

To Know Our Many Selves Changing Across Time and Space

von Dirk Hoerder
ISBN: 978-3-89639-495-8
Drucken
vergriffen
Teile diese Seite auf Facebook
  • Beschreibung
Beiträge zur Kanadistik, Band 13 (Hrsg. Gesellschaft für Kanada-Studien)
  • 347 Seiten, Paperback
  • Format 23,5 x 15,5 cm
  • 1. Auflage
  • Erscheinungsdatum: 29.11.2005


In the early 1970s, the Commission on Canadian Studies prepared its report under the title "To Know Ourselves." Taking a perspective from outside of Canada and a focus on issues of diversity of the 1990s – "our many selves" – the present study argues that rather than place the beginning of Canadian Studies in the 1960s and 70s, the Study of Canada evolved in three major phases of innovation since the 1840s:
(1) the study of natural resources by the Geological Survey since mid-19th century encompassed complex notions of both social spaces inhabited by First Peoples knowledgeable about the terrain and future arrival of immigrant farming families, labouring people, and investors;
(2) research on urban as well as prairie societies by social scientists and political economists since the 1920s;
(3) from the 1960s on such studies of society became "Canadian Studies" with an emphasis on literatures.
While around 1900, Country Studies in Europe began from self-images propagated by "high culture," Canadian Studies, in contrast, began from the analytical social sciences and in the 1960s became a self-study to counter the still predominant colonial contexts. However, it neglected Canada's own colonized Native peoples. Thus decolonization approaches and nationhood perspectives clashed with or engaged each other.

Zum Autor:
Dirk Hoerder, formerly at the University of Bremen, Germany, teaches history at Université de Paris 8 - Saint Denis, France. His publications include Creating Societies: Immigrant Lives in Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen's Univ. Press, 1999), Cultures in Contact: World Migrations in the Second Millennium (Durham, N.C.: Duke UP, 2002), and with Christiane Harzig and Adrian Shubert, eds., The Historical Practice of Diversity: Transcultural Interactions from the Early Modern Mediterranean to the Postcolonial World (New York: Berghahn, 2003), as well as numerous essays on Canadian, United States, and global migration history.

Kürzlich angesehene Bücher

Einloggen

Einen Login anlegen

Wenn Sie Ihr Passwort zurücksetzen möchten, wenden Sie sich bitte direkt an uns über das Kontaktformular.
Wir benutzen Cookies
Wir nutzen Cookies auf unserer Website. Einige von ihnen sind essenziell für den Betrieb der Seite, während andere uns helfen, diese Website und die Nutzererfahrung zu verbessern (Tracking Cookies). Eine nachträgliche Opt-out Möglichkeit für das Tracking mit Matomo finden Sie in der Datenschutzerklärung unter dem Punkt Matomo. Sie können selbst entscheiden, ob Sie die Cookies zulassen möchten. Bitte beachten Sie, dass bei einer Ablehnung womöglich nicht mehr alle Funktionalitäten der Seite zur Verfügung stehen.