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Books for development : Canada in the late twentieth-century world / Jody Mason.
Van Pelt Library Z1003.5.C3 M37 2026
By Request
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Mason, Jody, 1976- author.
- Series:
- Rethinking Canada in the world ; 15.
- Rethinking Canada in the world ; 15
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Economic assistance, Canadian--Africa--History--20th century.
- Economic assistance, Canadian.
- Books and reading--Economic aspects--Canada--History--20th century.
- Books and reading.
- Books and reading--Social aspects--Canada--History--20th century.
- Genre:
- Ottawa authors, musicians, etc.
- Physical Description:
- xiv, 347 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Montréal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen’s University Press, [2026]
- Summary:
- "Canadian book culture has served, in both domestic and international contexts, to underpin a moralizing rhetoric of enlightened liberal tolerance for difference. Between 1945 and the end of the 1970s the book – as object, as symbol, as idea – was used within the context of the development paradigm to express solidarity with newly decolonized nations, to argue for the importance of Canadian leadership in the new international order, and to secure settler liberal rule at home. The confluence of books and a national brand was shaped during the post-war decades by a liberal internationalism that privileged the book, and the associated skill of literacy, as a tool of development. Jody Mason analyzes how governmental and non-governmental actors deployed books as instruments of development in various parts of the Third World, how African decolonization movements shaped the nationalisms of Canadian writers who travelled to Africa as part of the burgeoning NGO movement, how late twentieth-century developmentalist ideologies shaped book-centric initiatives aimed at Indigenous communities in Canada, and how Indigenous activists and writers responded to, reframed, and sometimes rejected outright the premises of book development. This rich interdisciplinary study brings the work of Canadian historians into conversation with book history, literary studies, and settler-colonial studies to encourage a critical assessment of the values that supported developmentalist thinking, and the goals of development itself, at home and abroad."-- Provided by publisher.
- Contents:
- “Famine of Books”: Late Colonial Book Development and Margaret Wrong in Africa (1929–48)
- The Department of External Affairs and Postwar Uses of the Book, 1945–59
- “Not Even Bread Itself ”: Nongovernmental Book Development in Late Twentieth-Century Canada
- Developing Africa and Late Twentieth-Century Anglophone Settler Nationalism
- The Fourth World Challenge to Developmentalism.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Other Format:
- Online version: Mason, Jody, 1976- Books for development.
- ISBN:
- 9780228027010
- 0228027012
- OCLC:
- 1526691805
- Publisher Number:
- 90104535244
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