Harold Adams Innis : portrait of a scholar

by Donald Creighton

On This Page

Description

Harold Adams Innis died a quarter century ago. At the time of his death in 1952 he was Canada's pre-eminent scholar in the field of the social sciences. His reputation was based on his monumental contributions to Canadian economic history and the role of the means of communication in shaping history. As so often happens, his ideas were not greatly followed up, except by Marshall McLuhan, for some years after his death, but there is no growing recognition among Canada's scholars of the depth show more of his perceptions and the fruitfulness of his thought for understanding of Canada's and of world history. A close friend of Innis at the University of Toronto was Donald G. Creighton, who wrote this memoir of his life in the summer of 1953. To this paperback edition of that work, Professor Creighton has added a new introduction on its origins in the university conditions of its time. A personal tribute, the book is written in Creighton's distinctive and elegant style; it is a skilful biography which will serve well to introduce the career, character, and thought of Harold Adams Innis to a new audience. Donald Creighton himself is recognized as one of the outstanding scholars of his time. Like Innis, he has reinterpreted Canadian history in his many books and this finely crafted memoir reveals the gifts of both the biographer and his subject. show less

Tags

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

24+ Works 407 Members
Raised in a book-filled Toronto home, Donald Creighton acquired an all-consuming taste for literature. After studying both literature and history at the University of Toronto, he pursued graduate work in European history at Oxford University. In 1927 he joined the University of Toronto faculty and soon came under the influence of Harold Innis. show more Abandoning European history, he devoted most of his life to an amplification of the Laurentian-St. Lawrence River-based interpretation of Canadian history. By the 1960s, Creighton came to be considered Canada's foremost historian by many. His scholarship can be divided roughly into two phases. During the first phase, he focused on the creative role of the post-Conquest Montreal English-speaking merchant community that erected a transcontinental economy along the St. Lawrence river basin. His 1937 work, The Commercial Empire of the St. Lawrence, has been compared to a theatrical performance. In the first act, the merchants take over the French fur trade but are thwarted by the American Revolution. In the second act, they reconstruct a staples trading system based on lumber and wheat, only to be frustrated by internal political disturbances. During the third act, these conflicts explode into a shortsighted farmers' rebellion that dooms the merchants' vision. Early in the second phase of his scholarship, Creighton produced a magisterial biography of the first prime minister of Canada, John A. Macdonald. Told from the subject's perspective, it is the story of a man who triumphed over a succession of personal and political obstacles. During the remainder of his career, Creighton, celebrated for the elaboration of the Laurentian interpretation, focused intently on the enemies of the Laurentian vision. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Economics, Biography & Memoir, History, Literature Studies and Criticism
DDC/MDS
330.092Society, government, & cultureEconomicsJobs & Careers>Biography And HistoryBiography
LCC
HB121 .I6 .C7Social sciencesEconomic theory. DemographyEconomic theory. DemographyHistory of economics. History of economic
BISAC

Statistics

Members
8
Popularity
2,504,704
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3