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50 Canadians Who Changed the World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Using the successful format of How the Scots Invented Canada, Ken McGoogan takes the reader on a compelling journey through the lives of 50 accomplished Canadians born in the 20th century who have changed—and often continue to change—the great wide world.

McGoogan profiles an astonishing array of activists, humanitarians, musicians, writers, comedians, visionaries, scientists and inventors, all of them transformative figures who have made an impact internationally. From Jane Jacobs, Deepa Mehta, Marshall McLuhan, Stephen Lewis and Romeo Dallaire to Samantha Nutt, David Suzuki, Margaret Atwood, Oscar Peterson, Leonard Cohen and forty others, McGoogan shows us why and how Canadians have made their mark globally as initiators and agents of progressive change.

Cutting-edge Canada, the focus of this book, is uniquely pluralistic—multicultural, multi-ethnic, and multinational. The diversity that emerges in these pages defines who we are as citizens, enabling and encouraging individuals to make a difference. Two thirds of the people celebrated in this spirited, accessible work are alive and thriving today, a demonstration of how 20th-century Canada continues to transform the 21st century.

Say hello to 50 Canadians who are shaping the future.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 18, 2013
      McGoogan, author of How the Scots Invented Canada, sets out to combat Canadian modesty by highlighting 50 notable Canadians, limiting himself to Canadians born in the 20th century and whose efforts had global impact. To demonstrate the breadth of endeavors, McGoogan looks at six fields: activists such as Kenneth Galbraith, Romeo Dallaire and Maude Barlow; visionaries such as Marshall McLuhan and Jane Jacobs; artists such as Alice Munro and Margaret Atwood; humanitarians such as Craig Kielburger and Stephen Lewis; performers such as Russell Peters, and Leonard Cohen; and finally pure and applied scientists such as John Polanyi, David Suzuki and Mike Lazaridis. A limited page count forces brevity; none of the figures are discussed in any depth. The author takes this even farther when he crams graphic novelists Joe Shuster, Dave Sim and Chester Brown into one chapter and stem cell researchers into another while wasting space on the inanimate robotic spacearm. Unfortunately, the author also focuses only on the positive aspects of the figures; readers unfamiliar with the people profiled get no hint of Sim's repellent misogyny and only passing references to RIM's meltdown under Lazaridis. Canada's great figures are grand enough to warrant a more in-depth and critical approach.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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