The Tragedies of Canadian International History

Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
The Tragedies of Canadian International History
Résumé
The early twenty-first century witnessed a shift in Canadian international action, how such action is portrayed, and how Canada’s international history is deployed to understand Canada and its evolution. This shift has contributed to a growing awareness of the intellectual and political significance of Canada’s international history and a heightened awareness of the need for a re-engagement with this history to produce more complex narratives. Demonstrating and encouraging such a re-engagement is the purpose of this historiographical article, which traces the writing of Canadian international history from its origins to a period of crisis in the last three decades of the twentieth century. In so doing, it explores how “empire” and its legacy run through this historiography’s various overlapping currents. Flowing from this discussion, the article highlights three “tragedies” that have marked the historiography and that are reflective of, and linked to, tragedies in the history of Canadian encounters with the world. This is followed by an examination of current trends that are contributing to a renewed, more expansive literature, thereby emphasizing the value and potential of Canadian international history as a means to obtain greater understanding of Canada as a project of rule.
Publication
The Canadian Historical Review
Volume
96
Numéro
4
Pages
534-566
Date
2015
Langue
Anglais
ISSN
1710-1093
Consulté le
19/01/2024 16:34
Catalogue de bibl.
Project MUSE
Extra
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Référence
Meren, David. « The Tragedies of Canadian International History ». The Canadian Historical Review 96, no 4 (2015) : 534‑66. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/50/article/604648.
Années
Corps professoral