The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Side 51

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Side 51
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 49 BDDK REVIEW: CANADIAN HISTORY SINCE CDNFEDERATION ESSAYS AND INTERPRETATIONS Bruce Hodglns and Robert Page. 607 pages, Irwin Dorsey Limited, Georgetown, Ont. 1972 Price: $10.00 The history of any given era remains the same unless new evidence comes to light by way of new discoveries or other related means. However, inter- pretations of specific facts and situ- ations are always subject to variation as time moves on. The revisionist thesis in this volume give it a uniqueness sorely needed to broaden the traditional points of view. To a large extent this is accomplished by many of the essays presented in this book in six general areas of Canadian History, namely, The Confederation Era; The Age of the National Policy: Late Victorian Canada and Pier Ex ternal Interests; Early Twentieth Cen- tury Canada; The Inter-War Years; Contemporary Canada. These six sections contain over thirty essays presented by over thirty authors. Consequently there is built into this material a great deal of variety and a lack of any single bias running through the full content. It offers rather refreshing reading as approach and style differ with the various auth- ors. As a result of the great number of historians involved in this eclecticism of Canadian history since Confeder- ation, there are reinforcing and excit- ing infusions of human interest that help to eliminate the monotony and drudgery that the student, or well est- ablished historian engaged in research, normally is faced wih. For them this book offers a new breath of vitality for history in general. For example it gives this reader considerable “relief” from tediousness when he “lives” through the essay “The Wake”, by Ralph Con- nor. What a delight to discover a hi- story “text” wherein one learns some- thing of the emotional background of the people who made history! Per- haps if we had a greater knowledge of how people thought, felt, believed and consequently reacted, we would be the better able to accept some of he events that evolved. In an essay abou Riel, edited from “The History of Quebec: A Patriot’s Handbook by Leandre Bergeron”, as far as this reader is concerned, Riel comes out the hero. It is refreshing that this view is expressed in an ap- parently reputable edition of Canadian History. Certainly few accounts of Canadian history include much, if anything

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