University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 298
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-61147-849-5 • Hardback • June 2015 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-61147-851-8 • Paperback • October 2018 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-61147-850-1 • eBook • June 2015 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Kurt Korneski teaches in the Department of History at Memorial University of Newfoundland.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Empire, Nation and City
Charles W. Gordon and the Christian Democracy
Minnie J.B. Campbell: Loyalism, Nation, and Empire
Secular Settler Nationalism in the Politics of John W. Dafoe
Francis M. Beynon, Progressivism, and the Pursuit of Order
Conclusion
Bibliography
This is a remarkable little book. Although coming in at just slightly over 200 pages – including endnotes – it manages to pack a brief and theoretically sophisticated précis of Canadian and Winnipeg history, four de facto biographies, and much new analysis of seemingly well-known subjects into a coherent and eminently readable whole…. All in all, this is a book that makes a contribution to several fields at once. It fits well with a host of new works that study settler colonialism, certainly fits well with many of the newer approaches to British Imperial history and is a valuable addition to the historiography of both western Canada and Winnipeg. It is well worth the read.
— Labour/Le Travail: Journal Of Canadian Labour Studies
[A] valuable addition to this growing literature.... [A]n insightful look at the intellectual and social history of an urban outpost of empire…. [T]his book successfully combines the tools of social and intellectual history to reframe the city of Winnipeg as part of an expanding Greater British settler society. By reinterpreting Anglo-Canadian ideas of race, nationalism, and social reform in both local and global contexts, Korneski illuminates the extent to which the problems of urban industrial development – in a word, modernity – were the products of, and conceived within, Britain’s imperial world-system. One need not embrace its framework of a liberal capitalist order to learn from this valuable study of the Western Canadian corner of the British World.
— Britain and the World