The Rights Revolution, CBC Massey Lectures 2000
I think the audio is also available. I'd thought it was available at amazon.com, but on a quick check, didn't see it .. and I have to go watch West Wing!
Since the proclamation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, rights have become the dominant language of the public good around the globe. In Canada, rights have become the trump card in every argument from family life to Parliament Hill. But the notorious fights for aboriginal rights and for the linguistic heritage of French-speaking Canadians have steered Canada into a full-blown rights revolution. This revolution is not only deeply controversial here, but is being watched around the world. Are group rights — to land and language — jeopardizing individual rights? Has the Charter of Rights empowered ordinary Canadians or just enriched constitutional lawyers? When everyone asserts their rights, what happens to responsibilities? Michael Ignatieff confronts these questions head-on in The Rights Revolution, defending the supposed individualism of rights language against all comers.
Michael Ignatieff is a Canadian-born writer and historian. His books include the trilogy Blood and Belonging, The Warrior’s Honour, and Virtual War. He is the biographer of the liberal philosopher Isaiah Berlin, and this year delivered the Tanner Lectures in Human Values at Princeton University. In September 2000, he will be a visiting professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.
Sounds esoteric, but it's about the very foundational aspects of Canadian society. I only caught part of it on TV and have never got around to ordering the book ... but I plan to!
Also along that line, George Grant's "Lament for a Nation". An oldie, the book on *Canadian* conservatism.
On the net, check out things like
http://www.healthcoalition.ca for a *Canadian* perspective on major Canadian social/political issues, the health care system, in that case -- i.e. critique based on Canadian values, rather than from a US perspective. I'm not sure how
http://www.straightgoods.ca is doing these days, but it's got good reads.
And just browse
http://cbc.ca -- it has all sorts of archives to get into. The Halifax Explosion (a munitions ship blew in Halifax Harbour in WWI, worst single non-natural disaster in history) is coming up as a special documentary on CBC TV, and there's stuff on the website, for instance.
For the poop on the
crown prince Prime Minister apparent, Paul Martin Jr., check
http://www.cbc.ca/disclosure/archives/030401_csl/main.html -- you can watch the CBC exposé on video there too.
Alice Munro is the queen of short stories. Margaret Atwood is consistently (and yet varyingly) a good read. Austin Clarke and a whole host of other first-generation immigrants ... . Ah, here's an easy one:
http://www.thegillerprize.ca/ -- I haven't gone into the site, but I assume it has lists of previous years' winners and nominees for fiction.
Happy to try to answer about anything more specific too!
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