History Wars Memory, Politics, and Dark Chapters in Our Past

History Wars Memory, Politics, and Dark Chapters in Our Past

Emily M. Keeler on the literature of overwork PAGE 13 $6.50 Vol. 25, No. 7 October 2017 M MM R H History Wars Memory, politics, and dark chapters in our past PLUS A E The jihad economy G F The mytho- constitutional Quebec universe ALSO IN THIS ISSUE: + Dennis Duffy on a sociology of CanLit + Anne Kingston on doctors, patients, and cash Publications Mail Agreement #40032362 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to + Donna Bailey Nurse on the vision of David Chariandy LRC, Circulation Dept. PO Box 8, Station K + Stephen Smith on P.K. Subban and hockey-dad memoirs Toronto, ON M4P 2G1 New from University of Toronto Press The Constitution in a Hall of Mirrors Canada at 150 by David E. Smith Canada’s Odyssey In this book, David E. Smith analyzes A Country Based on Incomplete the interconnectedness of Canada’s Conquests parliamentary institutions and argues by Peter H. Russell that Parliament is a unity comprised of three parts and any reforms made to one In Canada’s Odyssey, renowned scholar branch will, whether intended or not, Peter H. Russell provides an expansive, affect the other branches. accessible account of Canadian history from the pre-Confederation period to the present day. Something’s Got to Give Balancing Work, Childcare and Eldercare by Linda Duxbury and Christopher Making a Global City Higgins How One Toronto School Embraced Something’s Got to Give provides Diversity practical advice to managers and policy- by Robert Vipond makers about how to mitigate the effects of employee work-life conict, Making a Global City celebrates one of retain talent, and improve employee the world’s most multicultural cities and engagement and productivity. shows how education plays a vital role in shaping and integrating immigrants in liberal democracies. Homelands and Empires Indigenous Spaces, Imperial Fictions, and Competition for Territory in Northeastern An Exceptional Law North America, 1690–1763 Section 98 and the Emergency State, by Jeffers Lennox 1919-1936 This book highlights how Indigenous by Dennis G.Molinaro peoples, imperial forces, and settlers competed for space in northeastern This book highlights how the North America before the British emergency law used to repress labour conquest in 1763. activism during the First World War became normalized with the creation of Section 98 of the Criminal Code, following the Winnipeg General Strike. Also available as e-books at utorontopress.com Literary Review of Canada First Canadian Place 100 King Street West, Suite 2575 P.O. Box 35 Toronto, ON M5X 1A9 email: [email protected] reviewcanada.ca : -- Vol. 25, No. 7 • October 2017 Charitable number: 848431490RR0001 To donate, visit reviewcanada.ca/support EDITOR IN CHIEF Sarmishta Subramanian [email protected] 3 Rites of Passage 15 Luminaire MANAGING EDITOR A letter from the editor A poem Michael Stevens S S J F T ASSISTANT EDITOR 4 History’s Ghosts 18 Institutionalized Bardia Sinaee M MM A sociology of CanLit ASSOCIATE EDITOR Beth Haddon R H D D POETRY EDITOR 6 In Shanghai 22 Lives of a Brother Moira MacDougall A poem Love, hope, and death in Scarberia COPY EDITOR M P D B N Patricia Treble CONTRIBUTING EDITORS 8 Undeclaring a language war 24 The Money Trap Mohamed Huque, Andy Lamey, Molly A Montreal academic confronts the ‘mytho- Big Pharma’s bid to woo doctors, patient groups, Peacock, Robin Roger, Judy Stoman constitutional Quebec universe’ journalists, and the rest of us ONLINE EDITORS G F A K Jack Mitchell, Donald Rickerd, C.M. PROOFREADER 10 Praise God—but First, the Market 28 Bigger Than the Team Tyler Willis Why some jihadist groups rise to power A dad’s-eye view of the NHL’s most polarizing RESEARCH A E gure Rob Tilley S S 11 Who Says April is the Cruelest? DESIGN A poem 32 Letters James Harbeck, for the last time A M A A, J B, C ADVERTISING/SALES D Michael Wile 13 Trompe Le Toil [email protected] Identity capitalism and the modern conundrum DIRECTOR, OPERATIONS of overwork Michael Booth E M. K ADMINISTRATOR Christian Sharpe PUBLISHER Mark Lovewell [email protected] BOARD OF DIRECTORS George Bass, Q.C., Don McCutchan, Trina McQueen, O.C., Jack Mintz, C.M., Jaime Watt ADVISORY COUNCIL Michael Adams, Alan Broadbent, C.M., Chris Ellis, Carol Hansell, Donald Macdonald, P.C., C.C., Grant Reuber, O.C., Don Rickerd, C.M., Rana Sarkar, Mark Sarner, Bernard Schi, Reed Scowen Poems in this issue are inspired by Sue Goyette’s poem “You Know This”: POETRY SUBMISSIONS For guidelines, please see reviewcanada.ca. is is how it begins, this part of winter. Its hands, clawed LRC design concept by Jackie Young/ and chapped, undo the safety net over your ears. Once that’s gone F P.A. D you hear things you shouldn’t. Whispers. e LRC is published 10 times a year by the Literary Review of Canada Charitable Organization. ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Individuals in Canada $56/year plus GST/HST. (Libraries and institutions in Canada $68/year plus Cover art and pictures throughout the issue, unless otherwise indicated, by Ally Jaye Reeves. GST/HST.) Outside Canada, please pay $86/year for Ally Jaye Reeves is a Toronto based illustrator and a graduate of Sheridan College’s illustration program. She enjoys individuals, or $98 for libraries and institutions. reading children’s books, petting golden retrievers and thinking about adopting a house plant. SUBSCRIPTIONS AND CIRCULATION Literary Review of Canada P.O. Box 8, Station K, Toronto ON M4P 2G1 [email protected] 416-932-5081 • reviewcanada.ca From time to time, the LRC may allow carefully selected organizations to send mail to subscribers, oering products or services that may be of interest. ©2017 e Literary Review of Canada. All rights, If you do not wish to receive such correspondence, please contact our Subscriber Service department at [email protected], including translation into other languages, are reserved or call --, or mail P.O. Box , Station K, Toronto ON . by the publisher in Canada, the United States, Great Britain and all other countries participating in the Universal Copyright Convention, the International We acknowledge the nancial F A We acknowledge the assistance Copyright Convention and the Pan-American Copyright support of the Government of the OMDC Magazine Fund, Convention. Nothing in this publication may be repro- duced without the written permission of the publisher. of Canada through the an initiative of Ontario Media ISSN 1188-7494 Canada Periodical Fund of Development Corporation. the Department of Canadian e Literary Review of Canada is indexed in the Canadian Literary Periodicals Index and the Canadian Heritage. Index and is distributed by Disticor and Magazines Canada. an Ontario government agency un organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario October 2017 reviewcanada.ca “MARVELLOUS AND COMPELLING.”John Milloy, author of A National Crime Mapmaker: Philip Turnor in Rupert’s Land in the Age of Enlightenment by Barbara Mitchell “Fills a yawning gap in the history of the fur trade and northern exploration… a labour of love.” —Ken McGoogan, author of Dead Reckoning: The Untold Story of the Northwest Passage Examining a family tree, Barbara Mitchell discovered that she was a descendant of the great northern surveyor, Philip Turnor, and his Cree wife. Together they had travelled 15,000 miles by canoe and foot, and his work became the foundation of northern geographic knowledge. Participation made possible through Creative Saskatchewan’s Market and Export Development Grant Program. 2 LRC MAPMAKER ad U of R Press.indd 1 reviewcanada.ca Literary Review2017-09-15 of Canada 3:27 PM LETTER FROM THE EDITOR Rites of Passage - tors is launching an ambitious strategic review of ial risks it takes in publishing a musical work about industry trivia may recall a story from 20 the magazine and its business operations, as well as a train derailment by the composer John Beckwith; Ryears ago, about an enterprising Canadian a serious fundraising campaign. It has also brought or Dennis Duy’s delightfully rangy essay on the author, Sandra Gulland. e author of a trilogy back an LRC stalwart, Mark Lovewell—interim myth of 1812; or Emily M. Keeler’s wonderful, of best-selling books about Josephine Bonaparte, editor, co-publisher, board member, writer, donor; century-spanning consideration of a literature of Gulland hit upon an ingenious scheme to ensure is there a hat Mark hasn’t worn here?—as publisher overwork in this issue; or the audacious yet clear- her sophomore novel disappointed as few of her to help see the magazine through this complex eyed critique of CanLit’s colonial predilections readers as possible: she focus-grouped the manu- transition. Other LRC veterans, including Bronwyn, forthcoming from Stephen Marche in the next. script with an audience committed to close read- have returned to do the same, and recent additions ese days—a small grace note—the LRC has ing (and book buying): book clubs. e technique to the community, such as associate editor Beth won some nods outside of the inner sanctum, too. worked so well she used it again for her third Haddon, have stepped up their involvement. All of ought-provoking articles published in the LRC book. It seemed both a creative way of diusing us believe this work will pave the way for an ener- are nding their way into wider arenas, to the inter- writer’s block, and a curious signal in the business getic new phase. And about that missed September national audiences of Bookforum and Arts & Letters of making and selling books, a symptom of a new magazine—we will instead produce an extra edi- Daily and Architecture Daily. In the spring, two of cultural aversion to risk.

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