Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

History Post-confederation (1867-)

Rural Life

Portraits of the Prairie Town, 1946

by (author) James P. Giffen

edited by Gerald Friesen

Publisher
University of Manitoba Press
Initial publish date
Oct 2004
Category
Post-Confederation (1867-), Rural
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780887559761
    Publish Date
    Oct 2004
    List Price
    $25.00
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780887556777
    Publish Date
    Oct 2004
    List Price
    $19.95

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

In the 1940s, the Manitoba Royal Commission on Adult Education investigated directions for the modernization of the province in the post-war era of change. It was charged particularly with looking at rural Manitoba’s cultural, educational, and leadership opportunities in the wake of new technologies, dwindling populations, and altered political and social affiliations. The commission engaged Jim Giffen, then a young sociologist from the University of Toronto, to undertake a detailed field study of three rural Manitoba towns in this context.Giffen’s extensive study examined the towns of Carman, Elgin, and Rossburn, all significantly different in terms of their ethnic makeup and level of political and organizational sophistication. He remained in the province for a year and a half, at the end of which his report, an analysis of “education for leadership,” was considered “too revealing” for public release. It remained in the Ontario Legislative Library until it was retrieved, 50 years later, by well-known historian Gerald Friesen, who has written an extensive postscript to the report.As a snapshot of rural agricultural life in prairie Canada at a time of great change, the study is invaluable. Despite the differences in the three towns, they retain some common characteristics that define a particular socio-cultural view of the larger world. Giffen looks at characteristics such as leadership in the community, ethnic differences, hierarchy of roles, participation in organizations, and aims and activities of young people. Friesen’s postscript provides a wider context to this study, and an assessment of what these differences and commonalities meant to the province.

About the authors

P.J. Giffen is a noted sociologist and criminologist. The author of many reports on criminal justice, he taught for three decades at the University of Toronto.

James P. Giffen's profile page

Gerald Friesen taught Canadian history at the University of Manitoba from 1970–2011. He has written several books, including The Canadian Prairies: A History and Citizens and Nation, and is co-author of Immigrants in Prairie Cities. Former president of the Canadian Historical Association, he was an advisor on CBC-Radio Canada’s television series Canada: A People’s History. He lives in Winnipeg.

Gerald Friesen's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“ … Giffen’s work remains a priceless portrait of post-war small town society on the Canadian prairie.”

Journal of the West, 2006 vol. 45, No. 3

“… a remarkable picture of rural Manitoba in the first years of peace following the Second World War….Dr. Gerald Friesen and the University of Manitoba Press are to be congratulated for finding, editing and publishing Dr. Giffen’s study and for this valuable addition to our understanding of the history of rural Manitoba."

Manitoba History

“Readers will choose their own response to Giffen’s work. For some it will mark an ethnography of mid-twentieth-century rurality, rich enough perhaps to help reinvigorate Canada’s languishing rural historiography. Others will see a philosophically charged, timely treatise on the nature of cultural citizenship. Most will see it as much more than its original intent, that is, as a background study for the architects of an adult education program. All, certainly, will see it as a text worthy of rescue from the obscurity of a provincial vault.”

University of Toronto Quarterly, vol. 76.1, 2007

Other titles by