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The frontier reality of confronting new conditions, adapting
cultural inclinations, and dealing with a volatile environment in
an effort to establish and nurture new communities is central to
the western Canadian experience. It has shaped many aspects of our
heritage, and it is within that context the essays assembled here
strive to identify and critique the impact of the frontier on our
region, culture, and society. Challenging Frontiers is a
multidisciplinary study using critical essays as well as creative
writing to explore the conceptions of the "West," both past and
present. Considering topics such as ranching, immigration, art and
architecture, as well as globalization and the spread of
technology, these articles inform the reader of the historical
frontier and its mythology, while also challenging and reassessing
conventional analysis. With a comprehensive introduction to situate
the geographic and cultural boundaries of the western frontier,
this collection is a must for anyone interested in uncovering what
it means to be a westerner and how the new frontier has influenced
every part of our society.
In the past, Western Canada was a place of new directions in human
thought and action, migrations of the mind and body, and personal
journeys. This book anthology brings together studies exploring the
way the west served as a place of constant movement between places
of spiritual, subsistence and aesthetic importance. The region, it
would seem, gained its very life in the movement of its people.
Finding Directions West: Readings that Locate and Dislocate Western
Canada's Past, showcases new Western Canadian research on the
places found and inhabited by indigenous people and newcomers, as
well as their strategies to situate themselves, move on to new
homes or change their environments to recreate the West in
profoundly different ways. These studies range from the way
indigenous people found representation in museum displays, to the
archival home newcomers found for themselves: how, for instance,
the LGBT community found a place, or not, in the historical record
itself. Other studies examine the means by which MA (c)tis
communities, finding the west transforming around them, turned to
grassroots narratives and historical preservation in order to
produce what is now appreciated as vernacular histories of
inestimable value. In another study, the issues confronted by the
Stoney Nakoda who found their home territory rapidly changing in
the treaty and reserve era is examined: how Stoney connections to
Indian agents and missionaries allowed them to pursue long-distance
subsistence strategies into the pioneer era. The anthology includes
an analysis of a lengthy travel diary of an English visitor to
Depression-era Alberta, revealing how she perceived the region in a
short government-sponsored inquiry. Other studies examine the ways
women, themselves newcomers in pioneering society, evaluated new
immigrants to the region and sought to extend, or not, the vote to
them; and the ways early suffrage activists in Alberta and England
by World War I developed key ideas when they cooperated in
publicity work in Western Canada. Finding Directions West also
includes a study on ranchers and how they initially sought to
circumscribe their practices around large landholdings in periods
of drought, to the architectural designs imported to places such as
the Banff Centre that defied the natural geography of the Rocky
Mountains. Too often, Western Canadian history is understood as a
fixed, precisely mapped and authoritatively documented place. This
anthology prompts readers to think differently about a region where
ideas, people and communities were in a constant but energetic
flux, and how newcomers converged into sometimes impermanent homes
or moved on to new experiences to leave a significant legacy for
the present-day.
Hardly a day goes by without news of the extinction or endangerment
of yet another animal species, followed by urgent but largely
unheeded calls for action. An eloquent denunciation of the failures
of Canada's government and society to protect wildlife from human
exploitation, Max Foran's The Subjugation of Canadian Wildlife
argues that a root cause of wildlife depletions and habitat loss is
the culturally ingrained beliefs that underpin management practices
and policies. Tracing the evolution of the highly contestable
assumptions that define the human-wildlife relationship, Foran
stresses the price wild animals pay for human self-interest. Using
several examples of government oversight at the federal,
provincial, and territorial levels, from the Species at Risk Act to
the Biodiversity Strategy, Protected Areas Network, and provincial
management plans, this volume shows that wildlife policies are as
much - or more - about human needs, priorities, and profit as they
are about preservation. Challenging established concepts including
ecological integrity, adaptive management, sport hunting as
conservation, and the flawed belief that wildlife is a renewable
resource, the author compels us to recognize animals as sentient
individuals and as integral components of complex ecological
systems. A passionate critique of contemporary wildlife policy, The
Subjugation of Canadian Wildlife calls for belief-change as the
best hope for an ecologically healthy, wildlife-rich Canada.
The stories told in this collection, though tragic for many, also
illustrate the steadfast determination and courage of people in the
face of misfortune and extreme distress. From the lesser-known weed
outbreaks and tornadoes to the world-wide influenza outbreak in
1918 that devastated many Calgary families, these stories focus on
the human side of these disasters. It may be a heroic individual or
the collective response of a community, but what is truly
remarkable in these stories is the human response to the world
being turned upside down by famine and disease, by flood, fire, or
rock slide, by wind and cold, by dynamite or gas explosions, or
even by the seemingly mundane threat of weeds upon crops. It is the
resolution to continue to fight and the persistence of the human
spirit and its adaptability to challenges that is the true story of
a century of development in western Canada.
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