This article revisits Jane Urquhart's 2001 novel The Stone Carvers in light of the Conservative Party of Canada's reframing of national identity, particularly its emphasis on Canada's military and its privileging of Vimy Ridge as a hallowed site of national identity formation. Rereading The Stone Carvers in light of a number of aspects of the Conservative Party's rebranding of Canadian identity, including the prospective building of a companion memorial to the Vimy Memorial that figures so prominently in The Stone Carvers, the article offers a reassessment of Urquhart's portrayal of the battle of Vimy Ridge and of the Vimy Memorial and its architect, Walter Allward
The article is a comparative analysis of The Stone Carvers (2001) by Canadian author Jane Urquhart a...
Public history poster on Canada’s military past about Vimy Ridge by students Minh Huynh, Christian T...
Amelia Lubowitz received her BA and MA from the University of Ottawa and is currently a PhD candidat...
The approach of the centennial of World War I (1914-1918) has marked an increase in domestic and int...
The 75th anniversary of the battle of Vimy Ridge is also the 56th anniversary of the dedication of t...
This article explores the significance of the 1936 Vimy Pilgrimage. More than 6,200 Canadian veteran...
Public history posters on Canada’s military past about the April 9 - 12, 1917 battle of Vimy Ridge b...
This work on local responses to Canada's Great War examines public perceptions of the war overseas t...
Over the past two decades, expressions of Canadian national identity have become increasingly milita...
This paper examines the environmental history of the 250-acre Vimy Ridge Memorial in Northern France...
Early Canadian cultural history is punctuated by a series of battlefields that define not only the D...
This essay focuses on the efficacy of Walter Allward’s immense Canadian National Vimy Memorial built...
Vimy Ridge is the iconic Canadian battle in the public mind, a triumph of courage, and the creator o...
Review of The Vimy Trap: Or, How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Great War by Ian McKay and...
Commemorating historical events is an intimately political phenomenon. What nations choose to commem...
The article is a comparative analysis of The Stone Carvers (2001) by Canadian author Jane Urquhart a...
Public history poster on Canada’s military past about Vimy Ridge by students Minh Huynh, Christian T...
Amelia Lubowitz received her BA and MA from the University of Ottawa and is currently a PhD candidat...
The approach of the centennial of World War I (1914-1918) has marked an increase in domestic and int...
The 75th anniversary of the battle of Vimy Ridge is also the 56th anniversary of the dedication of t...
This article explores the significance of the 1936 Vimy Pilgrimage. More than 6,200 Canadian veteran...
Public history posters on Canada’s military past about the April 9 - 12, 1917 battle of Vimy Ridge b...
This work on local responses to Canada's Great War examines public perceptions of the war overseas t...
Over the past two decades, expressions of Canadian national identity have become increasingly milita...
This paper examines the environmental history of the 250-acre Vimy Ridge Memorial in Northern France...
Early Canadian cultural history is punctuated by a series of battlefields that define not only the D...
This essay focuses on the efficacy of Walter Allward’s immense Canadian National Vimy Memorial built...
Vimy Ridge is the iconic Canadian battle in the public mind, a triumph of courage, and the creator o...
Review of The Vimy Trap: Or, How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Great War by Ian McKay and...
Commemorating historical events is an intimately political phenomenon. What nations choose to commem...
The article is a comparative analysis of The Stone Carvers (2001) by Canadian author Jane Urquhart a...
Public history poster on Canada’s military past about Vimy Ridge by students Minh Huynh, Christian T...
Amelia Lubowitz received her BA and MA from the University of Ottawa and is currently a PhD candidat...