Friday, February 07, 2025

Denis Smith RIP (1932-2025), political scientist, writer, hockey star

I have not seen a published obit, but the death of political scientist and author Denis Smith is noted on the Puckstricken Instagram account of his son Stephen Smith (who produces the Puckstruck blog about the history of Canadian hockey).

Obituary now up. at the Globe and Mail.

Denis Smith, who taught for a long time at Trent University (and later at Western) was one Canadian political scientist with an interest in Canadian history, and the author of a book about the 1970 October crisis, one on Canadian foreign relations, and perhaps best known, Rogue Tory, his biography of John Diefenbaker. While a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in the 1950s he played for Oxford's hockey team (!) in international competitions.

We never met, but we corresponded a bit. He shared my view (or I his) that the leadership selection processes favoured by the Canadian political parties (i.e., reducing to spectators the MPs actually elected to represent the Canadian people) is the best and highest support of prime ministerial autocracy ever created, and needs to be done away with. Given the profound resistance to that idea among political scientists and historians (let alone politicians), we used to cheer each other on from time to time. 

Book Notes: David Thompson at the Champlain Society

Members of the Champlain Society have been receiving their annual members' book for 2024 recently. Or at least I did. (Actually, I thought my membership had lapsed, but evidently there has been a lapse in record-keeping at one end or the other, presumably at mine.) 

The essence of the Champlain Society for over a century has been that by having a membership you assist in the publication of edited volumes of essential documentary collections from Canadian history. In exchange you get a copy of the new volume each year. Nowadays they do various other things too, as documented on their website. Notable: the Witness to Yesterday podcast, which must do more interviews on historians of Canada and their new books than everybody else combined.

Anyway, this year's members' book is a big one. Even physically big: two big hardcovers in a boxed set. But significance-big as well. In 19th century Canadian literature as well as in exploration history, David Thompson's Travels and other writings have been reckoned as essential reading. And since I've never done much more than dip into them for an anecdote or two, I may actually read widely in this year's volume (not always the case, I confess). Here are the blurbs for Volume One, edited and introduced by John Warkentin (geographer and longtime pillar of the society) and William Moreau, and for Volume Two (by Moreau).

Sometimes Society books are published commercially as well.  Not this one I think, but from the links non-members can order individual copies through University of Toronto Press, the publishing partner for all the Society books.

Book notes here on recent and interesting works on Canadian history have been a bit scarce lately.  Got some catching up to, mebbe.

Wednesday, February 05, 2025

Rules for living (with the USA)

  • Remember the 19th century statesman (or maybe it was Machiavelli, or de Gaulle, views differ) who said: Great nations do not have friends, only interests. Applied to Canada-US relations, it might better be phrased, Great nations think they have friends, but first of all they have interests. Events like the tariff threat have happened before in Canadian-American relations and will happen again. 
  • Remember the argument that for small nations, "the decisive causes of their politics lie outside their boundaries." (Barrington Moore Jr, The Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy, 1966.) We can boycott the orange juice but we are not actually going to close the 49th Parallel.
  • Remember that the tariff question is very important to us, and somewhat important to the United States. But we and the US could survive a tariff war. The current threat that the US Constitution may not continue to operate in the United States is fundamental, and Gaza and Greenland and the 51st State hoo-hah are not. 
Update February 7:  Not that he got it from me, but Paul Krugman makes the same point in the Substack that has replaced his New York Times column: it's the coup d'etat, not the crazy stuff, that is fundamental:
No, Trump isn’t going to take over Gaza, annex Canada, try to retake the Panama Canal or seize Greenland. But Trump’s bizarre announcements are a feature, not a bug: they distract from the ongoing autogolpe. 

 [Autogolpe: Spanish for self-coup, an elected leader overthrowing the constitution under which they were elected.]

Sunday, February 02, 2025

History of Trade


I once wrote a column that started, "The American inclination to sign trade agreements and then resist being bound by them is longstanding."  

I was writing about a fishing agreement signed in 1871. But the point holds.   
 

Salute a history teacher today

The Canada's History Foundation administers the Governor General's History Awards program which, among other things, honours Canadian history teachers for doing terrific things. 

I know, you read all the time, "They don't teach Canadian history in the schools!" But they do, often in ways you never dreamed of, and here is somewhere that they get noticed.

Anyway the foundation is inviting nomination for history teachers.  Details here.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Middlemarch 2

[previous Middlemarch post January 10]


One month and eight chapters into Middlemarch: right on schedule. The rural scene has been set, and we have some plot development, with sweet foolish Dorothea already engaged to dry old Mr Casaubon, whom everyone of good senses understands to be a terrible match for her.  

But I can't say it is enough dram to make me rush to find out what happens next. A 2025 reader  might guesses this wedding night is going to be a disaster, but I can't imagine George Eliot will be able to take us there in much detail. In fact, it is still the sentences that keep me going. Take this sentence from Chapter Eight, which takes us into the thoughts of Sir James Chettam, who had assumed he was the one Dorothea would accept, whenever he got around to proposing. 
Nevertheless, while Sir James said to himself that he had completely resigned her, since with the perversity of a Desdemona she had not affected a proposed match that was clearly suitable and according to nature; he could not yet be quite passive under the idea of her engagement to Mr. Casaubon.

Few editors today would let this sentence stand. In fact it's unlikely any writer would deliver a manuscript containing it.  Look at it:  "Nevertheless," the first word, modifies "he could not yet" but is separated from it by no fewer than 34 intervening words. 

George Eliot expected her readers to hold on to all that information in the intervening 34-word clause and phrase combined, without losing the connection between "nevertheless" and "he could not yet."  Could she not just as well have had two simple sentences by  starting with "While Sir James..." and moving "nevertheless" to follow "according to nature"?  

"Nature" with a period after it, that is, removing the need for that semi-colon. Suddenly one sees why the semi-colon became semi-obsolete in the twentieth century: Because no one wrote the great, twisting, sprawling sentences that required semi-colons to keep them within some kind of control. Think of the tolerance, the education, the spacious untroubled mind a nineteenth century author could expect her reader to have, in order to work though grammatical Wordles like this on every page?  

And yet... what pleasure for a writer, what a Victorian sense of power and control, of almost architectural planning, in being free to construct sentences that loop and swirl like this one, and finally come home with no loose ends and no grammatical missteps at all. 

Seventy six more chapters of them to come. If I finish Middlemarch able to sail through all the sentences like this one, I may feel newly able to do algebra in my head. 

Eight more chapters in February -- and it's a short month.


 
   

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

History of our embattled southern border

Maybe ... someday

Alex Usher's HESA blog "One Thought to Start your Day" today offers a more trenchant summary of North American geopolitics than most of our news outlets seem able to work out:

A maniac is in possession of our southern border. He wants something from us. It’s not trade concessions; he does not care about softwood lumber or supply management or anything like that. It’s probably not territory (taking territory is one thing, holding it is another). No, it’s more like craven obedience. There is no appeasing this man: the only choice is to resist. Understanding this is key to understanding what our country’s new strategic options are.

Usher goes on to declare we need to re-orient our trade away from the United States. He also laments that "we are bad at selling things abroad.... lazy... timid." He suggests we need better performance from our business schools, whose grads, he says "have left the country with such an anemic business sector."

Okay, he's writing a universities blog, so prodding the business schools make sense. But I'm not sure that's where the blame lies, really. The free trade agreement we signed with the United States in 1988 confirmed what was already evident:  our Canadian business sector is mostly just the American Business Sector (Canada) Ltd.  Who will re-orient our trade away from the United States when vital decisions for most Canadian businesses are taken by head office in the United States? 

It seems to be forgotten that Pierre Trudeau spent much of his time in office trying to diversify Canadian trade away from the United States. His inability to achieve much in that vein set the stage for Brian Mulroney's renewed focus on our American ties. 

Have we a business school that could address that situation? Hmmmm.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

History of Railroads


Most of the new biographies the Dictionary of Canadian Biography is publishing these days are of people who died in the 1930s and 1940s. Today's entry on William Burnie, who 
died in 1902, is an outlier, or maybe a catch-up.

It is a good one and an original contribution to historical knowledge, I should say. William Burnie's claim to be included in the DCB arises from the fact that he was the engineer who drove the Grand Trunk Railway train that ran through an open swing bridge and crashed into the Richelieu River in June 1864, killing 97 people.

The story gives a detailed account of how and why the accident occurred. It focusses mostly on how the extraordinarily careless management of the GTR caused the crash, and how the railway escaped all consequences beyond some inadequate financial compensation payments, while trying to scapegoat Mr Burnie.  

I looked into 1860s railroading a little when I was going deep into the events surrounding the Quebec Conference of 1864 while writing Three Weeks in Quebec City. It was striking how much railroads, though only fifteen years old in Canada then, had already transformed the lives of politicians, businessmen, and other travellers -- and also how crash-prone and delay-plagued railroads were in 1864. 

The whole subject of early railroading and its social and economic impact on British North American society seemed seriously under-researched, so this DCB article stands out. It is signed "John Derek Booth, railway historian, Lennoxville, Quebec." 

Good thing somebody is doing the work.

Monday, January 20, 2025

The deep future and the emergent past: two magazine articles



It's too late for a New Year's review, but I'm still thinking about two articles I read in 2024.

One is about the far future.  It's from the New York Times -- perhaps the only good thing in the Times this past year; what a sad excuse for a "liberal" newspaper it has become. It is a long article about the world's demographic future: "What Happens When the Global Population Peaks?" Here's the link -- it's from 2023, though I only saw it this year.

Short version: the world has already set itself on a course of very rapid depopulation after a peak that will occur as soon as the 2070s.  How big a depopulation? The article speculates that the extension of existing trends could take world population down from 10 billion people to fewer than two billion over a couple of hundred years.

"Current trends" never continue forever. And no one alive will be around to check the accuracy of these predictions -- though some of today's younger people are sure to see the unavoidable beginnings of an absolute decline in world population maybe fifty years from now.

I have to say I see this as an almost unmitigated good thing.  Obviously the GDP of a declining population would have to decline, and our society is geared for constant growth.  But other than that, it all suggests that everyone who wishes to can continue to have children as long as they collectively keep the reproductive rates below 2.0 per woman. And what a relief for the world to have fewer people cramming themselves onto its surface and crowding out every other species  -- and nature itself. Amiwrong?  The same or more resources, and fewer people to consume them with the same or better technologies? What's not to like?  

The other great article I keep thinking of came from the New Yorker: veteran journalist Nicolas Lemann's October article Joe Biden’s Economic Plan Is Investing Trillions of Dollars in America | The New Yorker makes the argument that, all unsold, unnoted, and unappreciated, the Biden administration undertook an unprecedented change in American economic policy. "What would you call these policies?" writes Lemann, "One apt label might be “post-neoliberal."

Lemann argues that the Biden economic projects made a break with the Reaganoid neo-liberal consensus that prosperity was best assured by having the government step back, reduce taxation and regulation and let markets shape and direct the economy.

Biden is the first President in decades to treat government as the designer and ongoing referee of markets, rather than as the corrector of markets’ dislocations and excesses after the fact. He doesn’t speak of free trade and globalization as economic ideals.  .... 

Bidenomics has overturned a number of unwritten rules that you previously had to follow if you wanted to be taken seriously as a policymaker: economic regulation is usually a bad idea; governments should balance their budgets, except during recessions and depressions; subsidizing specific industries never works; unions are a mixed blessing, because they don’t always promote economic efficiency; government should not try to help specific regions of the country or sectors of the economy.

The thing about this: this version of Bidenomics not only sound good, it sounds like a lot of Canadian economic policies over the years. Even during the free trade era that started in 1988, Canadian governments have often invested directly in infrastructure, and even making direct investments to secure automobile production, etc.  

Even more, it seems to describe much of the Trudeau government project since 2015. The Trudeau government has been unapologetic about accepting deficits and investing in electric car and battery plants, buying "the last pipeline," funding infrastructure (in partnership with provinces and cities and businesses), cooperating with unions, assisting specific regions and sectors, and so on. 

Lemann, however, argues Bidenomics relied more on "predistribution" rather than "redistribution"  --meaning it wanted to design the right kind of economy rather than to redistribute support to the needy and neglected. If I understand these things, the Trudeau program -- Child Tax Benefits, pension increases, CERB, expansion of pharma- and denticare, and so on have been broadly redistributive (and successful)

I can see it is odd to celebrating the policies espoused by Biden and Trudeau just as each of them is leaving office more or less in disgrace and humiliation. Lehmann sees to be suggesting that Pete Buttigieg may be the one to revive Biden's economic thought. Who might carry the Trudeau torch?

Who knows?  But I suspect that Trudeau's current unpopularity -- like Biden's -- involves a lot of hysteria and crowd-mania, and that in the not-so-long run their their reputation will begin to rise.  

Thursday, January 16, 2025

History of honours and titles UPDATED

History and historians are well represented in the February 2025 Literary Review of Canada: e.g., Jack Granatstein and Donald Wright (reviewing), Tim Cook and Richard White (reviewed). My fave is Patrice Dutil's lively review of David Roberts' Boosters and Barkers (noted here last March, may I say). It's a study of how Canada financed its immense First World War expenditures -- especially by inventing the concept of war bonds that were not addressed to banks and financial houses but to the great Canadian public as a patriotic duty.  

They were an enormous success. To the surprise of the bonds' inventors, Canada raised some $2.5 billion during the war (when a billion still meant something) from hundreds of thousands of individual Canadians.

Thomas White
Dutil admits reports that the book is an important study but not an "easy read." He focusses on the life and career of  one of its central figures, Thomas White, the Canadian finance minister during the war and the architect of the War Bonds -- and later of the income tax. Dutil, one historian who is unashamedly interested in Canadian politics and politicians of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, observes that White is little known or remembered, and he uses the review to plunge into his life and its oddities: a Liberal and an Empire devotee who became a Conservative but could not stem the rising tide of Canada's ties to the United States. 

I liked it. If you don't read the book, read the review.

A peripheral thought: the article did get me thinking again about retrospective foreign honours. Should Canadian historians routinely note titles held by Canadians that they would not now receive? Dutil notes that White received a knighthood in 1916. No doubt White deserved recognition for his accomplishments as wartime Finance Minister, and "Sir Thomas White" makes the man seem dignified, and importantBut by 1916 knighthoods and other titles had become controversial, even scandalous, in Canada. Joseph Flavelle, a non- politician made a baronet and then dubbed "the bacon baron," was pilloried for accepting the honour. The great corruption that too often surrounded the granting of titles would provoke the 1917-19 Nickle resolution against titles for Canadians, moved by one of White's fellow Conservative MPs.  

Long before then, it had become customary that most Canadian Liberal politicians declined knighthoods, while many minor Conservative luminaries continued to accept them. When historians juxtapose Sir Thomas White (knighted Conservative finance minister) against William Fielding (never knighted Liberal finance minister), are we putting a thumb on the scale by suggesting the former, by accepting a controversial title, was more worthy, more distinguished, than the latter who (according to his DCB biographydeclined all such offers

Update, January 20: Charles Levi responds (and I thought I was the only one who might consider this an issue!)

Saw your post about "Sir Thomas White" and the telling comment "are we putting a thumb on the scale by suggesting the former, by accepting a controversial title, was more worthy, more distinguished, than the latter who declined all such offers."
Yes, we are, and the problem continues to plague the history of the University of Toronto. I've spoken about this before, but this thing has added to the problems of James Loudon, the under-rated first President of the University of Toronto (and third president of University College). He's sandwiched between "Sir Daniel Wilson" and "Sir Robert Falconer", both of whom received late 20th century full biographies and also was highly criticized by Baron Flavelle, so all three of those biographies (by Bliss, Greenlee and a committee) just piled on Loudon while privileging and minimizing the serious errors of all three of the nobles. So Loudon (who had real flaws, to be sure) has not been treated fairly or in context.

James Loudon apparently was never offered a knighthood, so he could not decline it. As far as I recall, neither Sir Daniel or Sir Robert was knighted BECAUSE they were U of T Presidents, but for other reasons. Still, the knighthoods seem to count in their favour and against Loudon.

This Month at Canada's History


The February-March 2025 issue of Canada's History, now reaching subscribers (and newsstands if you can find one) has a terrific blues-tinted cover honouring Oscar Peterson, born one century ago, and a Peterson profile by music journalist Jason MacNeil.  

Also: "Saving Sweet and Sour," a terrific article by history grad student Koby Song-Nichols on the survival and revival of Toronto's downtown Chinatown after two-thirds of it was expropriated and demolished for the building of the new city hall and public square.  Moira Dann on Kathleen, the spendthrift heir to the Dunsmuirs of Victoria.  CH stalwart Nelle Oosterholm celebrates Trinity, Newfoundland, and the Rising Tide Theatre Company that makes it home there. And notes on the history teachers recently honoured in Winnipeg with the Governor-General's History Medals.

Nothing from me in this issue, but I'm working up a feature story for the fall of 2025. Subscribe. 

Sunday, January 12, 2025

History of the border

Did you see the clips of the Fox News spokesthingee saying he was personally insulted that some Canadians might actually not want to be Americans? Personally! You have to laugh. 

So many Americans live on Planet America, oblivious to the universe beyond. They have always heard that the US is the greatest country in the world and that USA is freedom. Who wouldn't want that? Even benign progressive Americans are imbued with this cant, and would vaguely assume the guy has a point: everyone ought to be American if they can.

For his recent column about why Canadians will eventually realize they would be better off as Americans, Ross Douthat, the New York Times commentator, has at least swotted up some information about current Canadian politics. But in the end, his argument just mixes some anti-Trudeau snark into generic Planet American myopia. 

We may be joking that Americans should beg to be the 11th province (the healthcare, rights for women, respect for diversity and immigrants, sane gun laws, better life expectancies...). But for Douthat, all that is just anti-Trumpism and obsolete liberal-democracy talk. All that matters is what happened lately on Planet America, which must be the model for the world.

A month or so ago a wise historian of Canada told me that that the more closely connected to the United States Canada becomes, the more strong the Canadian identity becomes.  Close enough to see what the United States fails to be -- and far enough away to identify what we are seeing. Only Americans can still think the USA is the beacon unto the world, that's harder to grasp.

On the same theme: everyone considers the New York Times the great liberal newspaper in the US.  But glancing at the Times' list of opinion writers (a glance is often enough), a Canadian can't help noticing that in Canada, most of them would be most at home in the National Post.  

 
Follow @CmedMoore