Introduction.
Bryden, P.E. ; James, Matt
HISTORIANS OF, SAY, 19TH OR EARLY 20TH-CENTURY labour would
certainly not be surprised to encounter monarchism, militarism, and
manliness as the raw materials of an invented national tradition pushed
by a faux-nostalgic elite. That this description captures at least
something of the state of official national identity discourses in
contemporary Canada is a bit more perplexing. In the following short
essays, a group of twelve distinguished historians and political
scientists grapples with the manifold political and interpretive
challenges of this perplexity.
"History Under Harper" was the title of the joint
roundtable of the Canadian Historical Association and Canadian Political
Science Association that we organized for the 2013 meetings of the
Canadian Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities held at the
University of Victoria. Struck by the audacity and persistence of Prime
Minister Stephen Harper's use of royalist and martial touchstones
to attempt a sweeping reinvention of Canadian identity, we asked ten
contributors (five each from the disciplines of history and political
science) to address "History Under Harper" in three-minute
"microlectures." Two commentators from political science and
history, Avigail Eisenberg and Bryan Palmer, were recruited to reflect
on the proceedings as a whole.
Just as the final preparations for Congress were being made,
however, there was another twist in the progress of the Harper
government's embrace of history. At the end of April 2013, the
Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage--a twelve-member committee of
the House of Commons that included seven Conservative mps, four NDP
members and one Liberal--met to discuss how history is taught. That in
camera session resulted in the decision to commence a thorough review of
"significant aspects in Canadian history" that would ominously
include "a breakdown and comparison of relevant standards and
courses of study offered in primary and post-secondary institutions in
each of the provinces and territories." Historians were outraged.
It seemed important to hold another forum specifically dealing with the
proposed history review during the Congress proceedings, this time at a
public venue and designed to open up the discussion beyond the confines
of the academy. Both sessions were extraordinarily well-attended and
exciting interdisciplinary events; we are delighted that so many of the
participants, including the two commentators, have agreed to put their
thoughts to paper for this special forum.
Although Canadian officialdom's new emphasis on militarism has
certainly begun to attract scholarly attention, it is also urgent to
think more synoptically, about both the sheer diversity of the reshaping
of identity underway in Conservative Canada and about the overarching
role of history in the enterprise. The Heritage Committee's review
of how history is taught in Canadian schools; the unprecedented
anniversary celebrations of the War of 1812; the revision of the
Canadian Citizenship Guide to emphasize the military and the Crown
instead of peacekeeping and citizen rights; the abandonment of the
cultural-cum-anthropological focus of the former Canadian Museum of
Civilization as it becomes the Museum of Canadian History; the
restoration of the prefix "Royal" to the various segments of
the Canadian armed forces these initiatives, and many cognate others,
need to be understood and assessed as an interrelated ensemble.
While exploring their own particular concerns and foci, the
contributions in this special forum provide precisely this sort of
panoptic view. While none emerge as cheerleaders for the Conservative
enterprise that we might call "Warrior Nation Goes to Downton
Abbey," the diversity of interpretations and assessments among them
is striking. The contributors disagree on the logic and coherence of
history-under-Harper; its likely durability and long-run impact; the
extent to which it is purely Harper's affair or rather a phenomenon
with deeper historical and sociological roots; how opponents ought best
to respond; and even whether Canadian academia is victim or villain in
the enterprise.
But now it is time to let the authors speak for themselves. We hope
that you will enjoy engaging as much as we have with positions that are
certain to play central roles in debates about "History under
Harper" for years to come.