This book corrects an imbalance in Canadian political literature through offering a conservative account of Canadian political thought.
Across 15 chronologically organized chapters, and with a mixture of established and rising scholars, the book offers an investigation of the defining features and characteristics of Canadian conservative political thought, asking what have Canadian conservative political thinkers and practitioners learned from other traditions and, in turn, what have they contributed to our understanding of conservative political thought today?
Rather than its culmination, Canadian Conservative Political Thought will be the beginning of conservative political thought's recovery and will spark debates and future research. The book will be a great resource for courses on Canadian politics, history, political philosophy and conservatism, Canadian Studies, and political theory.
Across 15 chronologically organized chapters, and with a mixture of established and rising scholars, the book offers an investigation of the defining features and characteristics of Canadian conservative political thought, asking what have Canadian conservative political thinkers and practitioners learned from other traditions and, in turn, what have they contributed to our understanding of conservative political thought today?
Rather than its culmination, Canadian Conservative Political Thought will be the beginning of conservative political thought's recovery and will spark debates and future research. The book will be a great resource for courses on Canadian politics, history, political philosophy and conservatism, Canadian Studies, and political theory.
"Using a history-of-ideas approach, the editors have woven together several strands of Western Canadian conservative political thought. The focus, chiefly on the thinkers of Laurentian Canada, is well executed. Even Canadians will find these accounts stimulating!"
Barry Cooper, Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary
"The conventional story of Canada is that its Fathers of Confederation founded a conservative nation to guard against its plebiscitarian southern neighbor. In the twentieth century, this regime was replaced by a leftist, "Laurentian" liberalism. The triumphalism of "Laurentian" liberalism has led Canadians and foreign observers to neglect Canada's conservative intellectual sources, including those that have contested liberal triumphalism. Trepanier and Avramenko have assembled a fine volume of essays that bring those sources back to life by engaging them with the perennial questions that confront Canadians. With essays on John A. MacDonald, George Grant, Charles Taylor, Marshall McLuhan, Indigenous anti-colonialism, and even the Schitt's Creek television series, the authors demonstrate the variety of thought in Canadian conservatism."
John von Heyking, Professor of Political Science, University of Lethbridge
"There has come to be, sadly so, in the last few decades, a paper thin and reactionary notion of Canadian conservatism. Gratefully so, this bounty of a book by fine scholars digs yet further and deeper into the historic and mother lode of a heritage that has been caricatured and almost forgotten - a beauty of a remembering book worthy of many a read."
Ron Dart, Professor of Political Science, University of the Fraser Valley
"This book is witness to the fact that there is a rich legacy of conservative intellectual thought connected to Canada, and the life of the mind goes on. Canadians have lost representative government to an administrative state, yet they still attempt to work out their freedom in local communities, they are aware of the dangers of globalization, and so this book adds to a larger body of conservative thought about the fate of the liberal west which is still emerging in light of current events."
Roberta Bayer, Patrick Henry College, Front Porch Republic
"Lee Trepanier and Richard Avramenko have edited a welcome new volume devoted to Canadian Conservative Political Thought . . . This recent collection of essays is similar in its embrace of variety, and does not shy from the "philosophically contradictory," which grants readers the latest invitation into some of the tensions or competing claims in and of conservative thought in Canada."
Trevor Shelley, Voegelin View
Barry Cooper, Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary
"The conventional story of Canada is that its Fathers of Confederation founded a conservative nation to guard against its plebiscitarian southern neighbor. In the twentieth century, this regime was replaced by a leftist, "Laurentian" liberalism. The triumphalism of "Laurentian" liberalism has led Canadians and foreign observers to neglect Canada's conservative intellectual sources, including those that have contested liberal triumphalism. Trepanier and Avramenko have assembled a fine volume of essays that bring those sources back to life by engaging them with the perennial questions that confront Canadians. With essays on John A. MacDonald, George Grant, Charles Taylor, Marshall McLuhan, Indigenous anti-colonialism, and even the Schitt's Creek television series, the authors demonstrate the variety of thought in Canadian conservatism."
John von Heyking, Professor of Political Science, University of Lethbridge
"There has come to be, sadly so, in the last few decades, a paper thin and reactionary notion of Canadian conservatism. Gratefully so, this bounty of a book by fine scholars digs yet further and deeper into the historic and mother lode of a heritage that has been caricatured and almost forgotten - a beauty of a remembering book worthy of many a read."
Ron Dart, Professor of Political Science, University of the Fraser Valley
"This book is witness to the fact that there is a rich legacy of conservative intellectual thought connected to Canada, and the life of the mind goes on. Canadians have lost representative government to an administrative state, yet they still attempt to work out their freedom in local communities, they are aware of the dangers of globalization, and so this book adds to a larger body of conservative thought about the fate of the liberal west which is still emerging in light of current events."
Roberta Bayer, Patrick Henry College, Front Porch Republic
"Lee Trepanier and Richard Avramenko have edited a welcome new volume devoted to Canadian Conservative Political Thought . . . This recent collection of essays is similar in its embrace of variety, and does not shy from the "philosophically contradictory," which grants readers the latest invitation into some of the tensions or competing claims in and of conservative thought in Canada."
Trevor Shelley, Voegelin View