Table of contents

LIST OF TABLES

LIST OF FIGURES

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

INTRODUCTION Canadians and their Pasts

CHAPTER 1 History in Public

CHAPTER 2 Everybody’s Doing It

CHAPTER 3 The Problem of Trust

CHAPTER 4 Family History in a Globalizing World

CHAPTER 5 Collective Remembering in Three Canadian Communities

CHAPTER 6 Places and Pasts

CHAPTER 7 Immigrants and Historical Memory

CHAPTER 8 The Presence of the Past in International Perspective

CONCLUSION Making History

APPENDIX 1 Questionnaire

APPENDIX 2 How We Did the Survey

Contributors

Description

What role does history play in contemporary society? Has the frenetic pace of today’s world led people to lose contact with the past? A high-profile team of researchers from across Canada sought to answer these questions by launching an ambitious investigation into how Canadians engage with history in their everyday lives. The results of their survey form the basis of this eye-opening book.

Canadians and Their Pasts reports on the findings of interviews with 3,419 Canadians from a variety of cultural and linguistic communities. Along with yielding rich qualitative data, the surveys generated revealing quantitative data that allows for comparisons based on gender, ethnicity, migration histories, region, age, income, and educational background. The book also brings Canada into international conversation with similar studies undertaken earlier in the United States, Australia, and Europe.

Canadians and Their Pasts confirms that, for most Canadians, the past is not dead. Rather, it reveals that our histories continue to shape the present in many powerful ways.

Reviews

‘It is safe to conclude that Canada is not facing a national crisis of ignorance when it comes to our history. The authors of Canadians and Their Pasts have done us all a great service by proving that it is time to retire that tedious old cliché.

- Daniel Francis