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Full Description
Death in the Peaceable Kingdom is an intelligent, innovative response to the incorrect assumption that Canadian history is dry and uninspiring. Using the "hooks" of murder, execution, assassination, and suicide, Dimitry Anastakis introduces readers to the full scope of post-Confederation Canadian history. Beginning with the assassination of Thomas D'Arcy McGee, Anastakis recounts the deaths of famous Canadians such as Louis Riel, Tom Thomson, and Pierre Laporte. He also introduces lesser-known events such as the execution of shell-shocked deserter Pte. Harold Carter during the First World War and the suicide of suspected communist Herbert Norman in Cairo during the Cold War. The book concludes with recent Canadian deaths including the suicides of Amanda Todd and Rehtaeh Parsons as a result of cyberbullying. Complementing the chapters are short vignettes-"Murderous Moments" and "Tragic Tales"-that point to broader themes and issues. The book also contains a number of "Active History" exercises such as activities, assignments, and primary document analyses. A timeline, 24 images, and further reading suggestions are included.
Contents
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Timeline of Canadian History Introduction Part One: Our Violent, Bloody Confederation 1. Thomas D'Arcy McGee, Assassinated, Ottawa, 1868: Terror and Invasion in Confederation-Era Canada Murderous Moment: Patrick James Whelan, Executed, Ottawa, 1869 2. Thomas Scott, Executed or Murdered? Fort Garry, Winnipeg, 1870: The Red River Resistance and the Politics of Westward Expansion Murderous Moment: Elizabeth Workman, Executed, Sarnia, Ontario, 1873 3. George Brown, Assassinated, Toronto, 1880: Dreams of an Emerging Canada 4. Louis Riel, Executed, Regina, 1885: Open Rebellion and the Fate of the Canadian West Tragic Tales: The Frog Lake Massacre and the Execution of Eight First Nations Warriors, Fort Battleford, Present-Day Saskatchewan, 1885 Murderous Moment: Killing the French Fact Outside of Quebec-Ending Separate (French) Schooling in New Brunswick, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Ontario, 1871-1912 Part Two: A Nation Forged in Blood? Murderous Moment: William C. Hopkinson, Immigration Officer and Secret Agent, Murdered, Vancouver, 1914 5. Private Harold Carter, Executed, France, 1917: The Tragedy and Heroism of the First World War, 1914-18 Tragic Tales: Collateral Damages-The Burning of Parliament Hill's Centre Block (1916) and the Halifax Explosion (1917) 6. Four Rioters Killed by the Canadian Military, Quebec City, Easter 1918: Conscription and the Politics of the Great War at Home 7. Michael Sokolowiski and Steven Skezerbanovicz, Murdered, Winnipeg, 1919: Capital and Labour Collide in Industrializing Canada Murderous Moment: Theatre Impresario Ambrose Small, Murdered? Toronto, 1919 8. Tom Thomson, Murdered? Canoe Lake, Ontario, 1917: Art, Nationalism, and Americanization in the Interwar Period Murderous Moment: William Lyon Mackenzie King Commits Regicide by (Mostly) Killing the British Constitutional Connection to Canada, 1920s 9. Filumena Lassandro, Executed, Edmonton, 1923: Women, the Roaring Twenties, and the Law Murderous Moment: Qallanaaq (White Man) Richard Janes, Killed by Inuit Hunters, Baffin Island, 1920 Murderous Moment: Coalminer William Davis, Killed by Company Police, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, 1925 10. Peter Markunas, Nick Nargan, and Julian Gryshko, Murdered, Saskatchewan, 1931: Labour, the Great Depression, Regional Alienation, and State Response Tragic Tales: Two Killed as Police and Mounties Break up the On-to-Ottawa Trek, Regina, Dominion Day (July 1), 1935 11. Eleven Canadian Soldiers, Murdered by the Nazis, France, 1944: Canada's War? Part Three: Postwar Canada-Peaceable, Prosperous, Yet Deadly Murderous Moment: John Dick, Murdered, Hamilton, 1946 12. Death by Car: 2,921 Canadians Killed in Motor Vehicle Accidents, 1953: Cars, Consumption, and Postwar Canadian Society Murderous Moment: King Car Kills the Street Railway in Canada, ca. 1955 13. Herbert Norman, Suicide, Cairo, Egypt, 1957: Cold War Diplomacy, Repression, and Relations with the United States Murderous Moment: Marguerite "Madame le Corbeau" Pitre, Conspirator in the 1949 Canadian Pacific Flight 108 Bombing, Last Woman Executed in Canada, Montreal, 1953 14. Ronald Turpin and Arthur Lucas, Executed, Toronto, 1962: The Death Penalty, Diefenbaker, Pearson, and Social Change in Postwar Canada Tragic Tales: "To Kill the Indian in the Child"-Charlie Wenjack, Died in 1966 as Did over 3,000 Aboriginal Children in Indian Residential Schools, 1870s-1990s 15. Pierre Laporte, Assassinated, Montreal, October 1970: Quebec, the Quiet Revolution, and the FLQ Murderous Moment: Victims, Police, Politicians, and Terrorists: What Happened After the October Crisis? 16. Rochdale College's Cindy Lei Commits Suicide, Toronto, 1975: The Counterculture and the Sixties Revolutionary Moment in Canada Murderous Moment: Paul Joseph Chartier, Killed While Attempting to Blow up the House of Commons, 1966 17. Three Employees of the Quebec National Assembly, Murdered, Quebec City, 1984: The Constitutional Wars Turn Deadly 18. "Leap of Faith": Brian Mulroney (and Ronald Reagan) Kill the National Policy, 1989: Trade Policy and Postwar Economic Development Murderous Moment: Shidane Arone, Murdered by Canadian Troops, Somalia, 1993 19. Fourteen Quebec Women, Murdered, Montreal, December 6, 1989: Women in Postwar Canada and Violence Tragic Tales: Tracy Latimer, "Mercy Killing," Saskatchewan, 1993 20. Dudley George, Murdered, Ipperwash, Ontario, 1995: Aboriginal Rights and Resistance in Postwar Canada Tragic Tales: Sue Rodriguez, Death by Assisted Suicide, British Columbia, 1994 21. The 329 People on Air India Flight 182, Murdered over the Atlantic Ocean, 1985: Challenges to Immigration and Multiculturalism in an Age of Terror Tragic Tales: Amanda Todd and Rehtaeh Parsons, Suicide, 2012 and 2013 Conclusion: Canada, a Nation of Hope Index