Image for So vast and various: interpreting Canada's regions in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

So vast and various: interpreting Canada's regions in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Part of the Carleton Library Series series
See all formats and editions

John Warkentin looks at the work of geographers from 1831 to 1977 through the regional descriptions of seven perceptive observers of Canada who provide very different but illuminating interpretations: Joseph Bouchette, a surveyor-general from Lower Canada; George Parkin, an educator and journalist from New Brunswick; J.D. Rogers, a British barrister and scholar; Harold Innis, the great economic historian; R.C. Wallace, a geologist with administrative experience in the North; Bruce Hutchison, a brilliant BC journalist with deep regional insights; and Thomas Berger, who presided over a Royal Commission on northern development in the 1970s. Warkentin's introduction reveals how their descriptions and interpretations of Canada's areas helped provide the perceptions that influence contemporary conceptions of the country - both its regions and as a whole.

Read More
Available
£73.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
077359101X / 9780773591011
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
911.71
01/11/2010
Canada
English
492 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%