Canada’s Prime Ministers and the Shaping of a National Identity
Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Canada’s Prime Ministers and the Shaping of a National Identity
Since Confederation, Canadian prime ministers have consciously constructed the national story. Each created shared narratives, formulating and reformulating a series of unifying national ideas that served to keep this geographically large, ethnically diverse, and regionalized nation together. This book is about those narratives and stories.
Focusing on the post–Second World War period, Raymond B. Blake shows how, regardless of political stripe, prime ministers worked to build national unity, forge a citizenship based on inclusion, and define a place for Canada in the world. They created for citizens an ideal image of what the nation stood for and the path it should follow. They told a national story of Canada as a modern, progressive, liberal state with a strong commitment to inclusion, a deep respect for diversity and difference, and a fundamental belief in universal rights and freedoms. Ultimately, this innovative history provides readers with a new way to see and understand what Canada is and what holds it together as a nation.
448 pages | 23 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2024
The C.D. Howe Series in Canadian Political History
History: General History
Political Science: Political Behavior and Public Opinion

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