Dominion of Capital: The Politics of Big Business and the Crisis of the Canadian Bourgeoisie, 1914-1947

Dominion of Capital: The Politics of Big Business and the Crisis of the Canadian Bourgeoisie, 1914-1947

by Don Nerbas
Dominion of Capital: The Politics of Big Business and the Crisis of the Canadian Bourgeoisie, 1914-1947

Dominion of Capital: The Politics of Big Business and the Crisis of the Canadian Bourgeoisie, 1914-1947

by Don Nerbas

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Overview

In the critical decades following the First World War, the Canadian political landscape was shifting in ways that significantly recast the relationship between big business and government. As public pressures changed the priorities of Canada’s political parties, many of Canada’s most powerful businessmen struggled to come to terms with a changing world that was less sympathetic to their ideas and interests than before. Dominion of Capital offers a new account of relations between government and business in Canada during a period of transition between the established expectations of the National Policy and the uncertain future of the twentieth century.

Don Nerbas tells this fascinating story through close portraits of influential business and political figures of this period – including Howard P. Robinson, Charles Dunning, Sir Edward Beatty, R.S. McLaughlin, and C.D. Howe – that provide insight into how events in different sectors of the economy and regions of the country shaped the political outlook and strategies of the country’s business elite. Drawing on business, political, social, and cultural history, Nerbas revises standard accounts of government-business relations in this period and sheds new light on the challenges facing big business in early twentieth-century Canada.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442662810
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 12/06/2013
Series: Canadian Social History Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 404
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Don Nerbas is an associate professor and the St. Andrew’s Society / McEuen Scholarship Foundation Chair in Canadian-Scottish Studies in the Department of History and Classical Studies at McGill University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Canadian Capital in the Age of Empire

Part One: Big Business from Triumph to Crisis

Chapter One
Provincial Man of Mystery:
Howard P. Robinson and the Politics of Capital in New Brunswick

Chapter Two
Charles A. Dunning:
A Progressive in Business and Politics

Chapter Three
The Dilemma of Democracy:
Sir Edward Beatty, the Railway Question, and National Government

Part Two: Continentalism and the Managerial Ethic

Chapter Four
Stewardship and Dependency:
Sam McLaughlin, General Motors, and the Labour Question

Chapter Five
Engineering Canada:
C.D. Howe and Canadian Big Business

Conclusion
Après le déluge

Endnotes

What People are Saying About This

Gregory P. Marchildon

Dominion of Capital makes a significant empirical contribution to our knowledge of twentieth-century Canadian history. The scholarship is solid and up-to-date and the narrative case studies are a joy to read. ”

Craig Heron

Dominion of Capital is a fresh, innovative, and exciting study that makes use of an extensive and diverse range of sources to provide a much richer and deeper analysis of business-state relations from the 1920s to the 1940s than we have previously had. Adding a great deal of new information to earlier work, Don Nerbas takes the discussion of business-state relations to new levels of analytical sophistication. His book will doubtless be appreciated by scholars in political, economic, business, labour, and social history. Thanks to its highly engaging biographical approach, non-academic readers will also find it quite interesting.”

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