
Rhetorical and real threats to Canadian sovereignty pose a tough question to critics of the Canadian state: Do we align with liberal nationalists in defense of the Canadian project or do we remain skeptical?
In this episode Team Advantage traces a brief history of Canadian nationalisms, including earlier attempts at imagining a socialist national project, in order to better understand the current moment of rising nationalist sentiment. We ask if it’s even possible to extricate a good Canadian nationalism from the history of colonial land theft and genocide that undergirds this state, revisit the one time Canada was actually cool, and offer trenchant critiques of Canadian civic statuary.
Works Cited
- Really Existing Nationalisms: A Post-Communist View from Marx and Engels – Erica Benner
- Lament for a Nation: The Defeat of Canadian Nationalism – George Grant
- Canadian capital and secondary imperialism in Latin America – Todd Gordon and Jeffery Roger Webber
- La tentation québécoise de John F. Kennedy – Jean-François Lisée
- Responding to Donald Trump with a popular democratic project for Canada – Marcel Nelson
- Silent Surrender: The Multinational Corporation in Canada – Kari Polanyi
- Becoming Native in a Foreign Land; Sport, Visual Culture, and Identity in Montreal, 1840-85 – Gillian Poulter
- Mohawk Interruptus – Audra Simpson
- Louis Riel – Thee Headcoats
Related Episodes
- Imagined Alberta: Western Canadian National Fantasies
- The Waffle, the NDP, and Full Breakfast Socialism