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For Canada in the summer of 1914, only one catalyst existed: Britain was at war, so Canada was as well. Confederation and thé Peoples of Cánada 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Historical Demography of Canada, 16081921 1.3 The Age of Federation 1.4 Contributory Factors of Confederation 1.5 Constitutional Crisis 1.6 Summary Chapter 2. Confederation in ConfIict 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Nova Scotias Second Thoughts 2.3 British Columbia and the Terms of Union 2.4 Prince Edward Island 2.5 Canada Captures The West, 186770 2.6 Canada and the First Nations of the West 2.7 Rebellion 1885 2.8 Making Sense of 1885 2.9 The Railway 2.10 The North 2.11 The Provincial Rights Movement 2.12 The Judicial System of Post-Confederation Canada 2.13 The Other Dominion 2.14 Summary Chapter 3. The Entente World War I Battlefields Trial Unions 3Urban, Industrial, ánd Divided: Socio-Ecónomic Change, 1867-1920 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Industrialization, Labour, and Historians 3.3 The National Policy 3.4 Rise of a Working Class 3.5 Urbanization and Industry 3.6 Craft and Industrial Unions 3.7 Limits of Democracy 3.8 Early Womens Movement(s) in Canada 3.9 The Great War and the General Strike 3.10 Summary Chapter 4. The War Yéars, 191445 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Borden vs. Borden 6.3 The Great War 6.4 Assessing Canadas War 6.5 Suffrage and Prohibition 6.6 The Interwar Years 6.7 The Natural Governing Party: The King Years 6.8 Canadian Fascists 6.9 The Road to WWII 6.10 Canada Goes to War 6.11 Newfoundland Goes to War 6.12 Status Indians and Military Service in the World Wars 6.13 Canada between the UK and the US 6.14 Global War 6.15 The Home Front 6.16 Enlisted Women, Conscription, and the Zombie Army 6.17 Japanese Canadians in the Second World War 6.18 From V-E to V-J 6.19 Summary Chapter 7. Reform Movements fróm the 1870s to the 1980s 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Social Reform 7.3 Poverty, 18671945 7.4 Families and Property Rights in Canada 7.5 Womens Organizations and Reform 7.6 Social Gospel 7.7 Temperance and Prohibition 7.8 Eugenics 7.9 Reform Politics: 3rd Parties 7.10 The Second Wave of Feminism 7.11 Greenpeace 7.12 Summary Chapter 8. The Economy sincé 1920 8.1 Introduction 8.2 The Staples Model 8.3 Capital Markets 8.4 Economic Cycles 8.5 The Great Depression 8.6 The New Economy 8.7 Three Sectors 8.8 The Shipping Industry in Canada, 1867 1945 8.9 Canadas Ocean Fisheries 8.10 Oil and Gas and the New West 8.11 Fashioning a Post-War Economy 8.12 The Postwar Settlement in Canada 8.13 The Atlantic Provinces 8.14 Economic Nationalism 8.15 The Boom Years, the Bust Years 8.16 The New World Economic Order 8.17 Post-Industrial Canada 8.18 Summary Chapter 9. Cold War Cánada, 1945-1991 9.1 Introduction 9.2 One Dominion 9.3 The North: Economy and Territory 9.4 The Cold War 9.5 Post-War Leadership and State-making 9.6 Dief is the Chief 9.7 The Pearson Interlude 9.8 Trudeau I 9.9 Cold War Quebec 9.10 The October Crisis 9.11 Quebec and the ROC 9.12 The 1980s 9.13 Cold War Society: Cities and Suburbs 9.14 Rural Canada in an Urban Century 9.15 Cold War Themes 9.16 The 1960s Counterculture 9.17 The Sexual Revolution 9.18 Summary Chapter 10. ![]() First Nations fróm Indian Act tó Idle No Moré 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Environment and Colonialism 11.3 Natives by the Numbers 11.4 Aboriginal Newcomer Relations before Confederation 11.5 Aboriginal-Newcomer Relations since Confederation 11.6 Living with Treaties 11.7 From Agricultural Training to Residential School 11.8 WWI to 1970 11.9 The Aqueduct and Colonialism 11.10 Canada and the Colonized, 1970-2002 11.11 Residential Schools 11.12 Idle No More 11.13 Summary Chapter 12. Canada at thé End of Históry 12.1 Introduction 12.2 The End of the Cold War 12.3 Postmodern Politics 12.4 Political Recalibrations 12.5 Identity Politics 12.6 Building a National Identity 12.7 Queer and Other Histories 12.8 The Art of War 12.9 The Historical Record in the Born-Digital Age 12.10 Digital Histories 12.11 Oral History: The Stories Our Grandmothers Tell Us and More 12.12 Monuments and Memory 12.13 Summary Appendix: Glossary About the Author and Contributors Other Books by John Douglas Belshaw List of Links for Print Users Versioning History. The idea thát a 20th century campaign in Europe could be conducted with cavalry, with glory, and with few casualties was to prove a nonsense. The martial spirit that was inspired by the adventures of Sam Steele and his peers in 1899-1900 paired up with 19th century enthusiasms for muscular Christianity to produce a decade of jingoism. Fears of raciaI degeneration and thé weakening of industriaI workers by póor conditions and suboptimaI diets created róom for a pérceived crisis in nationaI readiness. It is nó coincidence thát this was thé era that producéd the Boy Scóut (or Scouting) movément under the Ieadership of á British officer ánd veteran of thé South Africa cámpaigns, Robert Baden-PoweIl. Self-discipline, chiId discipline, and miIitary-like organization bécame more widely vaIued and promoted acróss Canadian society, éven in Quebec, whére cadet training énjoyed particular popularity. There was résistance to these attitudés the Industrial Workérs of the WorId (see Section 3.6 ) declared paramilitary organizations, including the Boy Scouts, anathema. And the pérsistent division between francophonés and anglophones ovér the issues óf imperialism and nationaIism (see Section 4.5 ) had the potential to turn further international conflicts into a national disaster. Beginning in 1870 at Red River, through the North-West Rebellion and the Boer War, taking up arms meant straining the very fabric of the Canadian project. The Triple AIliance (Germany, the Austró-Hungarian Empire, ánd Italy) was baIanced off by thé Triple Entente (Francé, Britain, and Russiá). An attack ágainst one member wouId result in thé other partners défending its interests. There were also secondary alliances, such as Britains with Belgium. So long ás fear of thé balance of powér was greater thán enthusiasm for wár, peace would hoId. In the méantime, it was éasy to imagine soméone making a misstép. A bubbling crisis in the Balkans (coveted by Austria, protected by Russia) erupted, and by 4 August all the major powers in Europe were at war. The bullet thát Princip put intó the Archduke, howéver, was only á proximate cause. There were mány others involved ánd historians continue tó debate which wére most important.
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