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Reflections of a Siamese Twin: Canada at the End of the Twentieth Century by John Ralston Saul
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Reflections of a Siamese twin: Canada at the end of the twentieth century

by John Ralston Saul

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86None71,836 (3.41)1
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Viking (1997), Hardcover

Member:gordsellar
Collections:Your libraryRating:****1/2
Tags:Canada, politics, economics, history, culture
Recently added byClio12, Kershaw, Nedrin, jhcarleton, spoonn, haddeni, private library, Spiritual_Alien, RhodesBrown
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Epigraph
Ce fut un Vaisseau d'or, dont les flancs diaphanes revelaient des tresors que les marins profanes, Degout, haine et Nevrose, entre eux ont disputes. -- Emile Nelligan, Le Vaisseau D'or

Dedication
To the memory of my brother Anthony
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Canada, like other nation-states, suffers from a contradiction between its public mythologies and its reality.
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Book description
Canada is often seen as perhaps one of the most boring countries in the world. John Ralston Saul goes deeply into the Canadian experience - it's history, ideas, institutions, and personalities - to find a highly complex, unusual, and fascinating experiment. Canada is one of the few countries that was founded on reconciliation and flexibility, and that has survived through compromise and consensus. Through a number of wide-ranging positions on topics such as nationalism, aboriginal peoples, myth, ideology, and democracy, he brings profound thoughts that have changed the way people discuss Canada.

Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0140259880, Paperback)

In Reflections of a Siamese Twin, Saul turns his eye from a reinterpretation of the Western world to an examination of Canada itself. Caught up in crises-political, economic, and social-Canada continues to flounder, unable to solve or even really identify its problems. Instead, we assert absolute differences between ourselves: we are English or we are French; Natives or Europeans; early immigrants or newly arrived, from the east or from the west. Or we bow to ideologies and deny all differences in the name of nationalism, unity, or equality. In a startling exercise in reorientation, John Ralston Saul makes sense of Canadian myths-real, false, denied-and reconciles them with the reality of today's politics, culture, and economics.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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