5 results on '"Scott W. See"'
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2. The Intellectual Construction of Canada’s 'Peaceable Kingdom' Ideal
- Author
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Scott W. See
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Ideal (set theory) ,05 social sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,Mythology ,050601 international relations ,0506 political science ,Nationalism ,060104 history ,Kingdom ,Political economy ,Political science ,0601 history and archaeology - Abstract
The linkages between myth, public memory, and the construction of nationalism are profound. Since the nineteenth century, historians, intellectuals, and politicians have reflected, critiqued, and shaped the enduring notion that Canadians have constructed a “peaceable kingdom” in North America. Although the subject matter and thrust of their efforts varied dramatically, the ease in which the peaceable kingdom became embraced suggests that by the early twentieth-first century the ideal is firmly entrenched as part of Canada’s cultural and scholarly orientation. Its persistence can be explained to a great degree because it has proven to be remarkably elastic; its appeal reaches across ideological and cultural divides. This article explores two intriguing paradoxes related to these developments. First, the peaceable kingdom ideal often chafes against the country’s narrative because from the earliest moments of European contact with Indigenous peoples through to the recent past with the country’s participation in the Afghanistan war, Canadians have engaged in violent episodes and armed conflict. Second, even historians and other scholars who argue against the substance of the peaceable kingdom idea are prone to using the myth as a popular reference to draw attention to their work or frame their research.
- Published
- 2018
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3. 'An unprecedented influx': Nativism and Irish Famine Immigration to Canada
- Author
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Scott W. See
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Population ,Psychological nativism ,Historiography ,language.human_language ,Power (social and political) ,Politics ,Irish ,Law ,language ,Economic history ,Western world ,Famine ,Sociology ,education ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
During the dreadful famine summer of 1847, as thousands of indigent Irish streamed from floating "coffin ships" to meet their fate in the cities and countryside of British North America, a growing number of people vociferously expressed fears that had been simmering for well over a decade. Disquieted members of Canada's House of Assembly, for example, unanimously agreed to address Queen Victoria with their "apprehensions" concerning the "unprecedented influx of Emigrants from Great Britain and Ireland in a state of destitution, starvation, and disease, unparalleled in the history of this province." [1] Genuine concern for the condition of the immigrants was swiftly tempered, and then virtually disappeared, as native-born and immigrant Protestants considered the possible ramifications that the accelerated introduction of large numbers of Irish Catholics would have on British North American society. Within a decade, the same Toronto newspaper that had once greeted the famine migration with humanitarian appeals for aid had hardened its opinion into a nativist resolve to bar further Irish-Catholic emigration entirely. In response to news from the United States that thousands of "unenlightened and bigoted Romanists" might slip northward across the border, the Globe predicted "a great calamity, dangerous to our civil and religious liberty, a calamity which every true patriot, Protestant as well as Roman Catholic, should endeavour, by all means in his power, to avert." [2] The first clear episode of nativism--the emphatic rejection of immigrants because of their foreign identification--in pre-Confederation Canadian history was triggered by the events of the late 1840s. Strikingly, this response to the famine Irish, which was fueled by a mixture of Protestant anxiety over the global spread of Roman Catholicism and an antipathy to Celtic peoples, has to date received little historiographical attention. [3] Yet the Canadian experience coincided with nativism in the United States, a more widely recognized phenomenon that became an integral component of nationalism and political-party formation. Canada's nativism may even have matched America's in fervor during the mid-nineteenth century, although its manifestations were certainly different. This study seeks to identify and explain the nativist response to the famine Irish who made their way to Canada. British North American nativism was complex and varied, depending on economic, demographic, and social themes in various provinces, yet its disparate elements may be characterized by several interrelated themes. The first might be understood as a critical mass dynamic, which suggests that a dramatic number of Irish-Catholic immigrants rapidly surpassed an acceptable "threshold" when they settled among or near native-born and immigrant Protestants. The international context of anti-Catholicism, a pervasive impulse in the Western world of the nineteenth century, represents another basic principle at work. The third addresses chronology, suggesting a confluence of events as this immigrant cohort altered and was in turn shaped by British North America's political, economic, and social landscapes. Nativism was one of the tremors that rippled across North America as powerful ethnoreligious plates collid ed in the mid-nineteenth century. This event will be best understood by first considering the theoretical and historiographical contexts of nativism, and then by focusing on the themes just described. Nativism has been a recurrent social and political force in the last two centuries of American history. John Higham, who concentrated his energies on American movements, defined nativism as the "intense opposition to an internal minority on the ground of its foreign... connections," or a "defensive type of nationalism." Though Higham cautioned that the word "nativism," of nineteenth-century derivation, over time assumed pejorative connotations, his definition provides a durable intellectual device for analyzing a host population's reaction to immigrants. …
- Published
- 2000
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4. Polling Crowds and Patronage: New Brunswick's ‘Fighting Elections’ of 1842–3
- Author
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Scott W. See
- Subjects
History ,Crowds ,Religious studies ,Advertising ,Polling - Published
- 1991
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5. Nineteenth-Century Collective Violence: Toward a North American Context
- Author
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Scott W. See
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,History ,Industrial relations ,Ethnology ,Context (language use) ,Sociology ,Humanities - Abstract
The study of collective violence has generally reinforced national stereotypes that Canada is a "Peaceable Kingdom" and that the United States is extraordinarily violent. This article assesses the historiography of collective violence since the1960s and offers specific suggestions for further exploration into Canada's riotous experiences. Scholars often assume that Canada's collective violence has been infrequent and less destructive than American episodes. Future research — with a focus on nativism, the social legitimacy of the crowd, religious and ethnic conflict, the entrenchment of powerful state institutions, and vigilantism —might prove otherwise. Regardless, Canadian collective violence will be better understood if it is conceptualized in a North Atlantic context. Resume L'etude des manifestations de violence collective a generalement contribue a renforcer les stereotypes nationaux selon lesquels le Canada serait un «royaume pacifique» et les Etats-Unis un pays extremement violent. Le present article jette un regard critique sur l'historiographie de la question depuis les annees 1960 et suggere des avenues specifiques en vue d'une analyse plus approfondie des experiences accumulees par le Canada en matiere d'emeutes. Les chercheurs presument souvent que les manifestations de violence collective au Canada ont ete rares et moins nefastes que celles survenues aux Etats-Unis. De plus amples recherches sur le nativisme, sur la legitimite sociale des foules, sur les conflits religieux et ethniques, sur l'avenement de puissantes institutions etatiques, et sur le phenomene des vigies privees, pourraient demontrer le contraire. Les manifestations de violence collective au Canada seront neanmoins mieux comprises lorsqu'elles seront articulees dans un perspective nord-atlantique.
- Published
- 1997
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