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Who Killed Canadian History?

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Who Killed Canadian History?
Cover art of Who Killed Canadian History?
Cover of the first edition
Authors J. L. Granatstein
Country Canada
Language English
Subject
Published 1998 by HarperCollins
Media type Print (hardback and paperback)
ISBN 0-00-255759-2

Who Killed Canadian History? is a 1998 book by J. L. Granatstein. The book argues that Canadians lack national unity because of their failure to teach their country's history. Granatstein contends that multiculturalism, social historians and weak history teaching standards are responsible for Canada's lack of a historical narrative. He advocates for a greater emphasis on the study of Canadian history in schools and university history departments, especially political and military history.

The 1980s and 1990s saw increasing disputes among Canadian historians, splitting between political and social historians. Historian Adam Chipnick describes Who Killed Canadian History? as "the pinnacle" of these disputes, termed the "history wars".[1] According to Granatstein, the expanding reach of social historians in the history departments of Canadian universities has resulted in ineffectual and uneducated graduates. He further argues that poor teaching standards and political correctness have led to historical ignorance among Canadians, leaving them unable to properly appreciate their present and future. He suggests a number of measures to increase historical awareness, including implementing national teaching standards.

The book was a national bestseller but received generally negative reviews from historians, leading to major debates in Canadian history journals. While many historians agreed that Canadians are ignorant of their past, they disputed the book's contention that the blame lay with social historians and multiculturalism. Several criticized the book as poorly written and unfocused in its argumentation. Following its publication, the provinces Alberta and Manitoba implemented new history curricula emphasizing Canadian content; Historica Canada was founded, an organization whose stated goal is increasing awareness of Canadian history; and Granatstein was appointed director and CEO of the Canadian War Museum.

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Background

Author

Jack Lawrence Granatstein is a Canadian historian and former professor. While serving in the Canadian Army, he received a BA from the Royal Military College of Canada and an MA from the University of Toronto. After receiving a PhD in 1966 from Duke University, he taught history at York University until his retirement in 1995.[2] Stephen Azzi of Carleton University describes Granatstein as the "most prolific Canadian historian of his generation",[2] and Peter Farrugia of Wilfrid Laurier University calls him "one of Canada's best known historians".[3] In the 1970s and 80s, Granatstein's writing focused primarily on the Canadian government during the Second World War – especially Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King – before pivoting to military history in the 1990s.[2]

Historian Leon Fink writes that, besides his history writing, Granatstein is best known for "his stinging neoconservative critique" of Canadian post-secondary institutions – especially tenure, journal subsidies, multiculturalism and political correctness.[4] Granatstein wrote his first polemic against Canadian universities, The Great Brain Robbery: The Decline of Canada's Universities (1984), with his fellow historians David Bercuson and Robert Bothwell. He published his next a year before Who Killed Canadian History?, again coauthored with Bercuson and Bothwell, Petrified Campus: The Crisis in Canada's Universities (1997).[2]

History wars

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Disputes between Canadian historians, dubbed the "history wars",[5] marked the 1980s and 1990s.[1] Historian Cecilia Morgan writes that historians were increasingly "[working] within the structures (some might say strictures) of the academy and their departments", causing "considerable anxiety" for others in the field.[6] Dummitt classifies the two groups as the older generation, made up of "nationalists" who focus on studying historical leaders, and the younger generation of "inclusivists", approaching the field differently to study the stories of those generally passed over in previous research. Historian Adam Chipnick describes Granatstein as occupying the former group, and sees the book Who Killed Canadian History? as marking "the pinnacle (or the nadir) of ... the 'history wars'."[1]

Historian Graham Carr describes the book as fitting in a larger tradition of historiography books written since the 1960s, lamenting a decline in the popular appreciation of history.[7][note 1] Historian Robert Wright and journalist Andrew Cohen argue that the book advances points made by historian Michael Bliss in a 1991 Creighton Centennial Lecture,[8] later released in a Journal of Canadian Studies piece titled "Privatizing the Mind: The Sundering of Canadian History, the Sundering of Canada."[9] Bliss's piece argues that, beginning in the 1970s, Canadian history-writing shifted from professional historians to "Via Rail nationalists" who "identified Canada and things Canadian with ... the age of big government, universal social welfare programs, and subsidized culture."[10] Granatstein had previously contributed to the dispute by criticizing what he saw as the increasingly narrow focus of social historians,[11] referring to their study as "the history of [a] housemaid's knee in Belleville in the 1890s."[12]

The book also coincided with increased fears regarding Canadian unity, coming three years after a near secessionist victory in the 1995 Quebec independence referendum.[13] Historian Chris Lorenz writes that for both Granatstein and Bliss, the Quebec sovereignty movement is "only the most visible symptom" of Canada's fragmentary society and that further societal division is likely if Canada cannot attain a central national identity.[14]

Content

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The nation is fragile indeed and one reason for this lamentable state of affairs might well be a lack of history that binds Canadians together. It is not that we do not have such a history. It is simply that we have chosen not to remember it.[15]

J. L. Granatstein, Who Killed Canadian History?

HarperCollins first published the book in 1998.[16] In 2007, Granatstein released an extensively revised and updated version, published in paperback by Harper Perennial.[17] Granatstein writes that the study and teaching of Canadian history has gradually degraded since the 1960s, and that this degradation is due to several factors, including "parochial regionalism", multiculturalism, "anti-élitist" methods of education and "victimization and blame seeking" in analysis of the past by both academics and the media.[18] It describes Canadian unity as weak,[15] arguing that Canadians lack the uniformity seen in other countries due their lack of a historical narrative.[19] Canadian history, Granatstein writes, merits study and would provide a basis for unity among Canadians, both natural born and immigrants.[20] Finding a lack of national standardization in history curricula,[21] he disapproves of the fact that only four provinces have compulsory history courses for students.[22] Canada's refusal to teach its own history, he continues, is due to fear of engaging in "its own cultural traditions – the European civilization on which our nation is founded – on the grounds that to do otherwise would systematically discriminate against those who come from other cultures."[23]

Granatstein writes that while most in academia can "study whatever they choose without fear of losing their [job]",[24] there is a struggle for control in Canadian history departments.[3] The struggle, he writes, takes place between political historians – those who emphasize narrative, chronology and personality – and social historians – those who have little interest in political, military or "élite" history, but instead use its study for their own political purposes.[25] As an example, he discusses a popular two-volume university textbook, the History of the Canadian Peoples, whose second volume was written by historians Margaret Conrad, Alvin Finkel and Veronica Strong-Boag.[26] The textbook's preface states that they wrote it to counter the previous history as written by "a small élite of educated white men to be read by others like themselves",[27] with the textbook focusing not on war and political developments or history from the perspective of leaders, but instead the working class, minorities and regions outside of Central Canada.[27] Granatstein laments that such methods of study have resulted in university history departments that lack experts in military and political history,[28] ultimately "teaching ignorance", "professing trivia" of "the blandest mush".[29] The trend of new historians studying "tiny, trivial subjects" via "methodological nonsense"[30] has produced graduates who "emerge into the market place culturally illiterate, ignorant of the basic details about their nation and their society that every thinking citizen requires."[31]

The book compares Canada's situation to that of the United States and the Netherlands.[14] Comparing the United State's idea of a cultural "melting pot" against Canada's "mosaic", he refers to American intellectuals Robert Hughes, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. and Richard Rorty as discussing the downsides of multiculturalism,[32] especially as espoused in Schlesinger's The Disuniting of America (1991), Hughes' Culture of Complaint: The Fraying of America (1993) and a 1994 piece Rorty wrote for The New York Times.[33][note 2] Regarding the Netherlands, Granatstein writes that the Dutch have heavily emphasized in their schools the Canadian's contribution in liberating the Netherlands from Nazi Germany: "The Dutch remember. They teach their children about the war in their schools; they teach that freedom is everything and that, if not defended, it can be lost."[34] Canadians by contrast, he writes, have largely forgotten about this and other historical events, such as D-Day and the Battle of Vimy Ridge, leaving them unappreciative of their past and present.[35]

The book concludes that preventing the "decimation of [Canadian] history" and "resurrecting" the past are key to improving Canadian unity.[36] To combat the concerns expressed, it offers solutions of national history standards, the institution of a "Canadian History Day", creating five "national history" chairs in Canadian Universities, a Centre for Canadian History, federally funded scholarships and the expansion of resources for libraries and history teachers.[37]

Reception

The book was a bestseller in Canada, selling around twenty thousand copies.[21] It received positive reviews from the press,[21] yet received generally negative reviews from professional historians.[2] Its publication resulted in an outburst of debate among historians and educators regarding history education in Canada,[38] many responses being written in Canadian history journals like the Canadian Historical Review.[13] Though some of Granatstein's colleagues reacted positively to the book, including Desmond Morton, Bercuson and Bothwell,[21] social historians were strident in their criticisms.[39] In a 1999 piece for the Canadian Historical Review, social historian A. B. McKillop summarizes most critiques of the book, writing that it presents only a partial understanding of what defines the Canadian identity. In particular, people need to be "made conscious of all aspects of their shared past", necessitating an "understanding of what it means to be weak as well as powerful".[40] Not all historians have agreed with McKillop's assessment,[41] such as Timothy Stanley, who criticizes both Granatstein and McKillop for "[assuming] that all Canadians have a 'shared past'". He writes that Canadians are divided by racism, with some privileged and others oppressed by it, and that the idea of a shared past arises from an inadequate account of this difference of experience.[42] He continues that, though McKillop is more "textured and inclusive" than Granatstein, he still narrows the study of history to "nationalist purposes".[43] Stanley agrees with concerns laid out by Bryan Palmer,[44] who writes that McKillop reduces the study of history to the civic necessities of a nation.[45] Historian Jennifer Reid is critical of the book's position that Canadian historians overemphasize the country's history of violence and that it is "benign" when compared to other countries that have "overcome" their histories.[46][note 3] She writes that Granatstein's perspective of a "benign" history is due to his removing the stories of those who have experienced violence from the country's historical narrative, especially its Indigenous population.[48]

Fink, Strong-Boag and Carr are critical of the book's writing style, describing it as poorly written and unfocused, veering into diatribes beyond its original premise.[49] Lorenz and historian Deborah Gorham describe it as uneven in its studies of Canadian historiography, suggesting that historian Carl Berger provides a more balanced take on the subject.[50][note 4] Though many historians agree with Granatstein's original premise that Canadians are generally ignorant of their country's history, they dispute the reasons why.[52] Fink, Strong-Boag and historians Brian Gobbett and Alan Gordon point to political correctness and multiculturalism being relatively recent phenomena when compared to Canada's lack of a national identity,[53] Strong-Boag writing that there are accounts of "bored audiences" dating as far back as Confederation.[54] Wright contends that Canadian's lack of interest in history is more fundamental than the poor teaching standards Granatstein mentions, with history "largely irrelevant to the lives of ordinary Canadians."[55] He continues, "if history provided [Canadians] the social, cultural, economic, and political architecture within which they contextualized their lived experience", then school curricula "would be the robust and exciting program that Granatstein imagines it ought to be."[56]

In her study of Louis Riel historiography, Reid agrees with the book's sentiment that Canadians regret their lack of cultural heroes, but questions why Granatstein opposes the celebration of Riel.[57] In the book he writes that Riel was a "crazed religious fanatic" and that not all Canadians could agree on whether his actions were heroic.[58] According to historian George Goulet, by Granatstein's standard no historical figure could ever be fit to be a Canadian hero.[59] In his study of Jacques Cartier historiography, Gordon writes that the 20th-century shift from embracing historical heroes to the "trivial and empty idols of Hollywood and hockey" is not due to political correctness and multiculturalism in Canada, but is instead part of a larger worldwide shift in the historical method and "meaning" of history.[60] Historians, he writes, need to understand the inherently political nature of their field, and to reassess their discipline's limited role in shaping the "common sense knowledge", concluding that attempts to "rebuild a lost national identity" by celebrating historical figures like John A. Macdonald will ultimately prove fruitless.[61] Fink concludes that none of Granatstein's proposed solutions will avoid the ultimate problem of "boring Canadian history pedagogy",[62] and Strong-Boag writes that the initiatives proposed are insufficient without historians that provide "faithful accounts of the past".[54]

Legacy

Following the book's publication, Granatstein was appointed director and CEO of Ottawa's Canadian War Museum (pictured) in 1998.

Azzi writes that despite the negative reception from historians, the book improved the general public's knowledge of Canadian history.[2] Following its publication, the provinces Alberta and Manitoba implemented new and expanded history curricula covering more Canadian content. The former included more information for elementary school students on pre- and post-Confederation history, as well as high school courses covering Canadian military history, while the latter made Canadian history a large focus of grades four through seven.[63] Granatstein laments in the preface to the revised 2007 edition that "most [provinces] did nothing".[64]

The book inspired Lynton Wilson, then a chair at the telecommunications firm BCE Inc., to promote Canadian history.[65] He and fellow executive Charles Bronfman made large contributions to start Historica Canada, an organization whose stated goal is increasing awareness of Canadian history.[2] In 1998, Granatstein was appointed director and CEO of the Canadian War Museum,[2] serving in the position from 1 July 1998 to 30 June 2000.[66] In 2000, the Canadian government provided $134 million (equivalent to CAD$180 million in 2021) for the building of a new museum building,[67] Granatstein playing a major role in its creation.[2]

Ken Osborne writes that while it set off major debates among Canadian academics when first published in 1998, the revised and republished edition of the book from 2007 attracted comparatively little attention in the public, press or academia, concluding that, "For the time being ... the history wars seem to be over."[68] Reflecting in 2014, historian Gregory Kealey writes that the book's "jeremiad for a lost, mythical world of manly men in politics and war, ended in an easy victory for social and cultural history."[69] Dummitt agrees, writing that the "inclusivists" have won out over the "nationalists", mostly due to retirements among the latter.[5] Despite this victory, he writes that the "inclusivists" have still failed to reach a popular audience, and finds the lack of debate among recent historians regrettable for the field.[70]

See also

Notes

  1. Carr specifically mentions the following: Plumb 1970, Giroux 1981, Bliss 1991–1992, Windschuttle 1997 and Fukuyama 1992.[7]
  2. Refer to Schlesinger 1991, Hughes 1993 and Rorty 1994.
  3. In particular, Granatstein mentions Germany, Japan and Russia as having "overcome" their violent histories.[47]
  4. In particular, Deborah Gorham and Lorenz mention Berger 1986, especially pp. 259–320.[50] Lorenz also mentions Ramsay Cook as providing a "far better argued view" regarding the problems of Canadian nationality. Specifically, Cook 1995, especially pp. 85–98, 159–196 and 237–247.[51]

References

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Chapnick 2010, p. 726.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Farrugia 2005, p. 9.
  4. Fink 1999, p. 211.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Dummitt 2009, p. 102, quoted in Chapnick 2010, p. 726.
  6. Morgan 2016, p. 178.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Carr 1998, p. 167.
  8. Wright 2000, p. 648; Cohen 2008, p. 53.
  9. Bliss 1991–1992.
  10. Bliss 1991–1992, quoted in Wright 2000, p. 648.
  11. Gorham 1999, pp. 119–120.
  12. Bliss 1991–1992, quoted in Granatstein 2007, p. 75.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Lorenz 1999, p. 26.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Granatstein 1998, p. xvii, quoted in Reid 2012, p. 242.
  16. Granatstein 2007, p. iv.
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. Granatstein 1998, pp. 17, 64, 76, 140, quoted in Carr 1998, p. 167.
  19. Reid 2012, p. 92.
  20. Granatstein 2007, p. xvii.
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 Cohen 2008, p. 52.
  22. Granatstein 2007, p. 28.
  23. Granatstein 2007, p. xii.
  24. Granatstein 2007, p. 55.
  25. Granatstein 2007, pp. 60–61.
  26. Granatstein 2007, p. 59.
  27. 27.0 27.1 Conrad, Finkel & Strong-Boag 1993, quoted in Granatstein 2007, p. 59.
  28. Granatstein 2007, pp. 60–69.
  29. Granatstein 1998, pp. 19, 41, 51, quoted in Carr 1998, p. 167.
  30. Granatstein 1998, pp. 46, 76, quoted in Carr 1998, p. 167.
  31. Granatstein 2007, p. 68.
  32. Granatstein 1998, pp. 89–92, quoted in Lorenz 1999, p. 26.
  33. Granatstein 2007, pp. 92–94.
  34. Granatstein 1998, p. 114, quoted in Lorenz 1999, pp. 26–27.
  35. Granatstein 1998, pp. 88, 114, 132, quoted in Lorenz 1999, pp. 27, 27n6, 27n7.
  36. Granatstein 1998, pp. 137, 139, quoted in Carr 1998, p. 168
  37. Fink 1999, p. 215: standards, Canadian History Day, five chairs; Gobbett 1999, p. 315: Centre for Canadian History, scholarships, expanded resources.
  38. Levesque & Croteau 2020, pp. 27–28.
  39. Reid 2012, p. 93.
  40. McKillop 1999, quoted in Reid 2012, p. 93.
  41. Stanley 2000, pp. 88, 88n37.
  42. Stanley 2000, p. 88.
  43. Stanley 2000, p. 28.
  44. Stanley 2000, p. 88n37.
  45. Palmer 1999, pp. 676–686.
  46. Granatstein 1998, pp. xiv, 3–5, 139, quoted in Reid 2012, p. 93.
  47. Granatstein 2007, p. 4.
  48. Reid 2012, pp. 93–94.
  49. Fink 1999, p. 214; Strong-Boag 1999, p. 283; Carr 1998, p. 175.
  50. 50.0 50.1 Lorenz 1999, pp. 26n3; Gorham 1999, pp. 119, 119n2.
  51. Lorenz 1999, p. 28n9.
  52. Fink 1999, pp. 214–215; Gobbett 1999, p. 315; Strong-Boag 1999, p. 284; Wright 2000, p. 647; Gordon 2010, pp. 188–189.
  53. Fink 1999, pp. 214–215; Gobbett 1999, p. 315; Strong-Boag 1999, p. 284; Gordon 2010, pp. 188–189.
  54. 54.0 54.1 Strong-Boag 1999, p. 284.
  55. Wright 2000, p. 647.
  56. Wright 2000, p. 648.
  57. Reid 2012, pp. 92–93.
  58. Granatstein 1998, pp. xiii, xvi, quoted in Reid 2012, p. 93.
  59. Goulet 1999, p. 13, quoted in Reid 2012, p. 93.
  60. Gordon 2010, pp. 188–189.
  61. Gordon 2010, p. 189.
  62. Fink 1999, p. 215.
  63. Granatstein 2007, pp. xiii–xiv, 28–29.
  64. Granatstein 2007, p. xiii.
  65. Granatstein 2007, pp. xiv, 167.
  66. Granatstein 2007, p. xiv.
  67. Granatstein 2007, pp. xvi–xvii.
  68. Osborne 2011, p. 74.
  69. Kealey 2014, p. 213.
  70. Chapnick 2010, pp. 726–727.

Sources

Books

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Book chapters

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Journal and newspaper articles

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External links