CANADIAN SOCIAL STUDIES
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| Characters such as David Thompson are all too rare in the annals of a nation. So long as honour is due to great men, his memory deserves to be enshrined in the hearts of his countrymen; and his high qualities should be a model to those who inherit the Dominion which he did so much to make. (Cochrane, 1924: 171). |
There is something anachronistic is thus seeing Thompson as a maker of the Dominion of Canada, but as the book made clear, Thompson's "high qualities" included bravery, persistence, determination, and integrity. Reviewers of the book praised its clarity and its strong narrative line and endorsed its portrayal of Thompson as a role model for modern times.
For Cochrane, Thompson's greatest contribution to Canada, outside of his significance as an exemplar of Canadian virtues, lay in his mapping, but he also took the opportunity to pay tribute to his respect for the First Nations. Taking a condescending but not altogether unsympathetic attitude to Aboriginal society that was typical of the 1920s, Cochrane described Aboriginals as people with their own traditions and ways of life that served them well enough but that did not equip them to deal with change and novelty and that did not fit with European values and assumptions. As Cochrane put it:
| It is difficult for Europeans to associate with savages without misunderstandings more or less serious. The savage governs his life by an elaborate ritual which he has inherited from his ancestors. His code is sufficient to cover his dealings with his fellows; but it fails to guide him in his relations with the strange new beings who burst in upon him from what is in truth a different world. The white man, unless he is gifted with unusual tact and sympathy, treats with contempt and scorn the customs of the natives and seldom attempts to understand their ways. Worse still, he feels himself freed from the restraints which bind him in civilized life, and frequently gives rein to the basest passions of his nature. Thus mutual misunderstanding too often breeds hatred, and results in the shedding of blood. (Cochrane,1924 168) |
This not so implicit portrayal of civilization as a thin veneer covering our primal appetites and thereby saving us from barbarism is consistent with the worries voiced in the 1923 Report that contemporary society had lost its way and had abandoned traditional values and standards for the embrace of materialism. It is perhaps not too far-fetched to wonder if Cochrane and Milner worried that modern men and women, like fur traders in the wilderness, might not throw off the restraints of civilization and abandon themselves to their appetites. The fur trade had shown what could happen when commercial competition reigned unchecked. People such as Peter Pond, for example, had hands "stained with the blood of their competitors," not to mention the use of liquor, sharp trading practices, and intimidation, all of which "taught the Indians evil ways." (Cochrane, 1924: 169) One wonders if Cochrane saw in the triumph of capitalist values in the 1920s, promoted as they were by the mass advertising that so alarmed his colleague, Milner, the possibility of a similar state of affairs arising, albeit in an obviously different form
More directly, Cochrane obviously ignored the possibility that the shedding of blood could easily arise, not so much from misunderstanding, but from objective differences of interest (after all the Aboriginals had the land and the Europeans wanted it) and he went on to paint a picture of innocent primitives corrupted by European misconduct: "The Indians had learned that the Great Spirit hates to see the ground reddened with blood. But when they saw thuggery and murder flourish, how could they preserve their simple faith?" (Cochrane, 1924: 169) In this sad story Thompson stood out as a shining exception: "Wherever he came in contact with the natives, he easily won their admiration and respect. This was due to the insight with which he studied their customs and to the sympathy with which he regarded their way of life. For Thompson was infinitely more than a trader: he had the mind of a scientist and the soul of a poet." (Cochrane, 1924: 170)
The interest of passages such as this lies in part in the way they exemplify the stance that Cochrane took in the 1923 Report to the effect that history should be presented to the young as "a body of accepted truths," and in part in the way they belie his insistence that history should not be turned into a vehicle of moral education and that the historian's task was not to judge. In his scholarly writing (Cochrane 1929 & 1940), Cochrane stuck to these precepts, but in writing for the young he largely abandoned them. It is difficult not to to see his portrayal of Thompson; for example, as a sustained exercise in what in 1923 he dismissed as patriotic propaganda.
In 1926 he coauthored a civics text, revised in 1931, in which he gave more concrete expression to the ideas presented in the 1923 Report. For the most part, the text was a straightforwardly factual presentation of the structure of law and government, prefaced with an overview of the landscape and people of Canada, region by region. The text ended, however, with a description of "the good Canadian" in which Cochrane elaborated on the kind of citizenship he and the National Council of Education, for whom the book was written, had in mind.
He began by emphasizing the distinction made in the 1923 Report between the good person and the good citizen. People who refused to have anything to do with politics or public affairs, he argued, "however estimable they may be in their private characters, are a menace to society." (Cochrane & Wallace: 1931: 163) To be a citizen, he insisted, meant taking an active interest in public affairs: "It is a fundamental mark of the good Canadian that he takes an intelligent and active interest in the government of his country." (Cochrane & Wallace: 1931: 163)
This meant that citizens had to keep informed by reading a "reliable and public spirited" newspaper, and, since newspapers were sometimes sensationalist and usually partisan, ideally more than one: "To subscribe to a newspaper which is unreliable, unbalanced, and sensational is almost an unpatriotic act; and to vote merely as one's newspaper tells one to vote, without studying the questions at issue and forming an independent opinion, is equally unpatriotic." (Cochrane & Wallace: 1931: 164) Being informed, however, was not enough: "The 'arm-chair critic' may be full of knowledge, but unless he backs up his knowledge with action, it is worse than useless." (p. 164)
The highest form of action was to run for office, and below this came the act of voting. It "should be almost a religious duty" to vote at every election. (p.165) In addition, good citizens worked in election campaigns, which was something that even schoolchildren could do, for example in distributing campaign literature or providing basic information: "The important thing is that in an election every one should do what lies in his or her power to forward the cause which he or she thinks is right." (p.165) Beyond this, good citizens should also involve themselves in what we would now call civil society, through the "hundred and one organizations, all which aim at making life in Canada better and finer." (p.165)
Not least, this required Canadians to be tolerant: "In a country so vast and broken as ours, a country which has been settled by so many waves of immigration from so many different lands, we can unite in a common loyalty only if we are willing to recognize and respect our mutual differences." (p.168) The differences between Celt and Saxon, French and English, ran deep but, despite centuries of warfare around the world, were not fundamental, at least in Canada. In pursuit of this argument, Cochrane took some liberties with history, seeing the British conquest of Quebec as a sign of amity more than of division among Canadians: "In Canada, however, where on the Plains of Abraham, a joint monument to Wolfe and Montcalm stands as a symbol of reconciliation and of dedication to the common task of building a great nation, they can afford to regard these differences as superficial." (p.168) In this context, Cochrane came close to calling for the abandonment of history in the pursuit of intercultural understanding: "With our eyes fixed steadily upon the future rather than on the past, we move forward shoulder to shoulder in a common effort to make this Dominion what its founders dreamed it would be." (p.168)
In another sense, however, history was important in this pursuit
of a common future. Canadians had to acknowledge what they owed to
their ancestors. Abandoning the austerely scientific view of history
he had propounded in his 1923 Report, but consistent with his 1924
treatment of David Thompson, Cochrane now advocated an inspirational
approach to the subject, at least in schools: "The heroic example
of our ancestors sets a high standard for us, below which we must
not fall." (p.169) This was especially true in Canada, which
was uniquely the product of its people: "Canada more than other
lands is what the courage and endurance of her people have made her"
As a result of their ancestors' sacrifices, Canadians "have a
great tradition to inspire us." (p. 169)
In a burst of proto-multiculturalism, and an espousal of what we have
since learned to think of as civic nationalism, Cochrane went on to
argue that in this pursuit of a common future, Canadians' cultural
and linguistic differences could be a source of strength, "because
we shall be for ever free from the danger and folly of trying to manufacture
citizens of a single monotonous and standardized type, differing no
more than if they had all been poured out of the same mould."
(p.168)
The moving force behind all this was love of country, "one of the oldest and most universal of all the virtues." (p.166) This did not mean blind nation worship, for true love is never blind: "We should all do our best to see that our country is always right, and if we think she is wrong, we should say so. This is true patriotism. The highest form of love is that which recognizes imperfections, but exists in spite of them, and seeks to remove them." (p.166)
However, the willingness to criticize one's country did not mean flouting the law. Rather, "The good Canadian will obey the laws, and will seek to preserve order, because lawlessness and revolution are things to be avoided." (p.166) Laws should only be changed lawfully and constitutionally. As Cochrane put it, revolutionaries were not patriots, but "enemies of society." (p.166) Echoing the fear of anarchy and bolshevism that is to be found in much Canadian writing on education in the early 1920s, Cochrane concluded: "To upset the whole system of government by force of arms, as revolutionists in other lands have sometimes done, is to inflict evils on one's country which no true patriot can desire." (p.167) Not surprisingly, writers on civics, Cochrane included, never attempted to reconcile this stance with their commitment to the British heritage of constitutional government and individual liberty in which the Civil Wars of the 1640s and the Glorious Revolution of 1688 played such a conspicuous part. Presumably they believed that parliamentary democracy and the rule of law, as they existed in Canada, made revolutionary politics unnecessary.
As is well known, to most educationists in these years, Canadian patriotism extended to the British Empire as a whole. As Cochrane put it: "Loyalty to Canada carries with it loyalty to the British Empire." (p.167) The Empire was without parallel or precedent, "an Empire freer and greater than the world has ever seen-an Empire well described as 'the greatest secular force working for good in the world to-day." (p.167) Moreover, the Empire was the embodiment of the British heritage that was seen at lying at the heart of the Canadian experience, a heritage to which the Canadian citizen "owes, not merely his institutions, but, infinitely more important still, the spirit which will make those institutions work." (p.169) At the same time, membership of the Empire was perfectly consistent with, indeed the foundation of, a broad-minded internationalism: "And, above all, loyalty to Canada and the Empire should be accompanied by loyalty to humanity. Through the League of Nations, and otherwise, we should strive to develop good-will and co-operation among the peoples of the world." (p.169)
Such sentiments were the conventional wisdom of citizenship education and civics in Canada in the interwar years and in espousing them the National Council of Education was more their expression than their creator. In any event, by the early 1930s the National Council had largely run out of steam, and Cochrane's and Milner's vision of a school system devoted to inspiring children with the ideals of citizenship, though commonplace in ministerial speeches and pedagogical writing, were submerged in a wave of more mundane concerns: passing examinations, covering the curriculum, ensuring that children even attended school at all, and, in the hard times of the 1930s, simply surviving. In 1935, an observer noted of Canadian schools: "Somehow many Canadian schools at present seem to succeed in imposing upon the pupil a severe demand for sheer laboriousness with a very low demand for genuine, spontaneous, intellectual effort." (Clarke, 1935: 21) Sheer laboriousness no doubt constitutes a certain type of citizenship, but it is hardly what Cochrane and Milner had in mind.
References
Clarke, F. "Education in Canada - An Impression." Queen's Quarterly, XLII (1935): 309-321.
Cochrane, C.N. David Thompson. Toronto: Macmillan, 1924.
Cochrane, C.N. & W.S. Wallace. This Canada of Ours: An Introduction to Canadian Civics. Toronto: Dent, 1926; revised 1931.
Cochrane, C.N. Thucydides and the Science of History. London: Oxford University Press, 1929.
Cochrane. C.N. Christianity and Classical Culture. Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1940.
Mitchell, T. "'The Manufacture of Souls of Good Quality': Winnipeg's 1919 National Conference on Citizenship, English-Canadian Nationalism, and the New Order after the Great War." Journal of Canadian Studies, 31 (1996-97): 5-28.
National Council of Education. Observations on the Teaching of History and Civics in Primary and Secondary Schools of Canada (Winnipeg: National Council of Education, 1923).