Canadian Confederation
This is an excerpt from the paper...
Northrop Frye refers in his "Conclusion" to The Literary History of Canada to a dominant tendency towards conservatism in Canadian thought. He is not referring here to political conservatism, and he refers instead to the idea of revolving around the question of what it is necessary or important to conserve. In social and political terms, Frye finds that this tendency is anti-Marxist (Frye 330). This tendency toward conservatism returns to the original meaning of conservatism, not a certain political stance but a dedication to preserving the best of the past and the best of what exists in the present. In its broadest sense, Frye is also referring to the tendency in Canada to seek the preservation of the environment, the traditions identifying Canadians as Canadians, and the desire to maintain the Confederation for its importance to both political and social forms of conservatism. In some degree, the battle over Confederation and specifically over the desire on the part of the QuTbecois to separate from the Confederation shows how Confederation is a conservative movement. This is so not merely because maintaining the Confederation is conserving the status quo but also because of what is most important to Canadians as an underlying value in their political and social life. Pierre Berton tells a story about the clash of values between an American gunfighter and the Canada of the era and shows how the maintenance of order is given top priority in the Canadian context. B
. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
Taylor Canadian, History Canada, Charles Taylor, Canada America, Preserving Canadian, America Canadian, English French, Confederation Canadian, Railway Berton, Canadian Taylor, manifest destiny, confederation conservative movement, political social, conservative movement, confederation conservative, political culture, taylor believes, canadian life, shared values, literary history canada, conclusion literary history, worth preserving, toronto press,
Approximate Word count = 1054
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page)
More Essays on Canadian Confederation
|