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Full Description
Behind the Man is a unique biography of Alberta political figure John Lee Laurie, a key proponent of Indigenous rights in the 1940s and 1950s. Before 1961, Indigenous people were allowed to vote in Federal elections only if they agreed to give up their treaty rights and leave behind their homes and families. Laurie was instrumental in securing amendments to the Indian Act which allowed Indigenous people to access the unfettered vote. Ruth Gorman worked tirelessly alongside Laurie during these years, and was herself a major force in mobilizing public opinion. Gorman did not lay claim to these efforts, but remained a passionately vocal supporter of John Laurie. She began work on a book about Laurie but as she neared the end of her life became overwhelmed by the project's scope. She reached out to Dr. Frits Pannekoek to assist her in the book's completion. As Dr. Pannekoek sorted through Gorman's extensive material, he quickly realized that her project was both a biography and an autobiography—the story was as much Gorman's as it was Laurie's. In the tradition of her time, she had taken the position of "the woman behind the man," but in telling Laurie's story she had found a way to tell her own. Behind the Man introduces Ruth Gorman as one of Alberta's fascinating historical figures—a heroine struggling to balance work and home while facing the inequitable gender and power structures that surrounded her and reminding us that there is always more than one view on history. As Dr. Pannekoek began to sort through Gorman's many boxes of material, he quickly realized that this book was both a biography and an autobiography; the story was as much Gorman's as it was Laurie's. In the tradition of her era, Gorman had taken the position of "the woman behind the man," but she was nonetheless proud of her life's work, and found an "acceptable" way of telling her own part in the story. Behind the Man introduces Ruth Gorman as one of Alberta's most interesting female historical figures - a career woman struggling to balance home life and work obligations, overcoming frustrations at her hard work being overshadowed by a more visible figure, and reminding us that there is always more than one point of view when it comes to recording history.
Contents
Acknowledgements Introduction by Frits Pannekoek Notes to Introduction Authorâs Introduction 1. The Mountain 2. The Stars Shone Bright. 3. Strange Omission 4. The Winds of Change Blow across the World 5. An Angry Young Man 6. Laurie Finds the Right Place 7. A Horse Did It 8. Laurie Finds a Family 9. A History Teacher Studies around the Campfire 10. A History Teacher Studies History in Books 11. A Red Métis Meets a White Métis 12. The Department and Enfranchisement 13. The Harsh Reality of Enfranchisement 14. Laurie and the Indians Find Me 15. The Buckskin Curtain 16. Department of Indian Affairs and the IAA 17. New Act and the "Man Behind the Throne" 18. I Take the Case 19. The First Hobbema Hearing, 1951 20. After the Hobbema Hearing / I Go Pubic 21. The Appeal 22. Senatorship 23. Laurieâs Death 24. Laurieâs Funeral 25. Laurieâs Magnificient Record of Chainge 26. The Brief / I Go North 27. I Go to Parliament 28. The Vote Epilogue Appendix I: Timeline of events concerning Ruth Gorman and John Laurieâs involvement with the Aboriginal people of Canada Notes Index



