Alberta Formed - Alberta Transformed

Table of contents

 

Volume One

Acknowledgements
Introduction

13001 Years Ago: Human Beginnings in Alberta
John W Ives

The Day the Dry Snow Fell: The Record of a 7, 627–year–old Disaster
Alwynne B. Beaudoin and Gerald A. Oetelaar

Buffalo and Dogs: The Prehistoric Lifeways of Aboriginal People on the Alberta Plains, 1004–1005
Trevor Peck and J. Rod Vickers

The Never–Ending Journey of Anthony Henday
Eldon Yellowhorn

"With Tears, Shrieks and Howlings of Despair": The Smallpox Expidemic of 1781–1782
Ted Binnema

Fatal Quarrels and Fur Trade Rivalries: A Year of Living Dangerously on the North Saskatchewan 1806–7
Gerhard J. Ens

"Economy Must Now Be the Order of the Day": George Simpson and the Reorganization of the Fur Trade to 1826
Heather Devine

"On the Edge of the Great Transformation 1857–58
Frits Pannekoek

&1879: A Year of Violence and Change
Hugh A. Dempsey

"A Better Life with Honour": Treaty 6 (1876) and Treaty 7 (1877) with Alberta First Nations
Sarah Carter and Walter Hildebrandt

Too Many Sacred People: Alberta and the 1885 North–West Rebellion
Bill Waiser

1899 and the Political Economy of Canada’s North–West: Treaty 8 as Compact to
Share and Peacefully Co–Exist
Brain Calliou

1904–1905: Alberta Proclaimed
David Hall

Contributors

Volume Two

The Dance of the Grizzly Bear: Boom to Bust, 1912–13
David C. Jones

Enthusiasm to Embattled: 1916 and the Great War
Duff Crerar

1919: "A year of Extraordinary Delight"
David Bright

From Idealism to Pragmatism: 1923 in Alberta
Bradford J. Rennie

1929: "Things Are Seldom What They Seem"
Donald B. Smith

1935: The Social Credit Revolution
Alvin Finkel

1945: Ghosts and Dreams
Patricia Myers

1947: The Making of Modern Alberta
David Breen

1951—Celebrating Together, Celebrating Apart: Albertans and their Golden Jubilee
Frances Swyripa

1967: Embracing the Future . . . At Arm’s Length
Max Foran

Alberta’s Quiet Revolution: 1973 and the Early Lougheed Years
James H. Marsh

1980: Duel of the Decade
Tammy Nemeth

1986: The Bloom Comes Off the Wild Rose Province
Herb Emery

1996—Two Albertas: Rural and Urban Trajectories
Roger Epp

Looking Back on Alberta History: Reflections in a Rear–View Mirror
Michael Payne, Donald Wetherell, and Catherine Cavanaugh

Contributors
Index

 

Description

 

To celebrate Alberta's centennial, the University of Alberta Press and the University of Calgary Press are proud to introduce Alberta Formed – Alberta Transformed, a two–volume set spanning a remarkable 12,000 years of history and showcasing the work of thirty–four of Alberta's most respected scholars.

Volume 1 sets the stage, from human beginnings in Alberta to the eve of Alberta's inauguration as a province in 1905, while Volume 2 takes readers through the twentieth century and up to the 2005 centennial. Edited by provincial historian Michael Payne, along with Donald Wetherell and Catherine Cavanaugh, Alberta Formed – Alberta Transformed consists of thirty distinctive and richly illustrated essays representing a wide range of voices and points of view.

Moving beyond straightforward commemorative history, Alberta Formed – Alberta Transformed tackles contentious issues and questions previous, more conventional approaches and assumptions. Each essay represents a snapshot in time, focusing on a person, a trend, or an event that has played a significant part in shaping the vibrant, often surprising and sometimes raucous, story of Alberta.

Awards

  • Short-listed, Book Publishers Association of Alberta Book Illustration Award 2007
  • Short-listed, Book Publishers Association of Alberta Book Scholarly Book of the Year Award 2007
  • Winner, Book Publishers Association of Alberta Book Design Award 2007
  • Winner, Article of the Year, Petroleum History Society 2007
  • Short-listed, BPAA Alberta Book Publishing Award for Book Design 2007

Reviews

".[A] must have for every person who is interested in the 13 000 year history of the province. Students, educators, libraries, newcomers and Canadians in general will be pleased to discover that the final product delves deep into the past to bring Canadians a truly remarkable resource. Alberta Formed-Alberta Transformed is a nonfiction title, filled with many good stories and lots of excitement, and provides an excellent and accurate insight into what really happened over the last 13 millennia. This is the book that Albertans have been waiting for, one that is accurate, up to date and inclusive of the important role Aboriginal peoples have played in the development of the nation and the province." John Copley, Alberta Native News, July, 2006.

"Alberta Formed Alberta Transformed takes readers on a journey from the earliest traces of human activity at the tail end of the Ice Age through modern booms, busts and political rivalries. Authors were each given a specific year to discuss and the task of arguing why they were watershed periods in our province's history.... So chapters range from a volcanic eruption that covered parts of north-central Alberta with ash more than 7,000 years ago, to 1980's volcanic showdown between Pierre Trudeau and Peter Lougheed over oil revenue. Stops on the journey include chapters on Alberta's early aboriginal experiences (1004), small-pox epidemics (1781), fur-trade rivalries (1806) and the rise of the Social Credit party (1935) among other jumping off points for discussion." Eric Volmers, Calgary Herald, May 11, 2007

"Written by a team of 30 historians, the two-volume edition traces the archeological evolution of the province. You'll meet the major movers and shakers who helped build the province and become a walking, talking Alberta know-it-all." Candace Korchinsky, Edmonton Life, July 2006.

"After the fireworks, the Alberta provincial centennial has yielded a more lasting legacy in the form of an elegant two-volume overview of human habitation in the area now known as Alberta..Trying to avoid 'the typical popular, celebratory or comprehensive history usually written to mark events such as centennials,' the editors chose to produce 'a thought-provoking portrait of Alberta,' consisting of a series of thematic essays which hinge on a crucial watershed date in our history..What emerges is 'intended more as a broad conversation about history than as a lecture.' This goal has largely been realized in this splendid set of historical accounts." Ken Tingley, the Edmonton Journal, May 28, 2006.

"Alberta Formed-Alberta Transformed is an enormous project, a project that reflects Alberta's great history." Paula E. Kirman, Prairie Books NOW, fall/winter, 2005.

"[Alberta] has this fine and carefully edited, two volume collection of historical essays that reflects the diversity of both Alberta's history and its historians. This weighty and impressive collection, its thirty essays totaling almost eight hundred pages, takes an unusual approach for a centennial history. There is no attempt to force the multi-authored effort into a single conceptual or narrative frame..As with Volume I, the second set of contributions are uniformly strong in their capacity to entertain and enlighten. Each of the authors moves beyond the specific topic of their chapter to incorporate issues of ethnicity, rural development, and social change. Moreover, the chapters consistently marry analysis and narrative, resulting in a series of insightful and engaging commentaries on turning points in Alberta's history..There is excellent representation from the strong regionalists who gave focus to western Canadian history in the 1970s, but considerable space is also given to younger scholars, who are taking the provincial historiography in new directions. Alberta Formed-Alberta Transformed is also a handsome and well-illustrated book, clearly designed to reach audiences beyond academia. This collection deserves a wide readership." Ken Coates, University of Waterloo, Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 76, No. 1, Winter 2007

This year, the award goes to a book that reveals a skilled mind making difficult design choices to organize many levels of complex information. With the tasteful presentation of colour, understated typography, and archival images on beautiful paper, the designer's invisible hand marries a strong visual impact with a practical, readable and timeless design.

"[Alberta Formed-Alberta Transformed is] the long awaited history of the province in honour of its centennial. It's worth the wait. The work, which carries readers from 13 000 years ago to modern Alberta, is handsomely designed, cleverly illustrated and accessibly written by some of the leading Western Canadian historians. Even at a relatively pricey $100, Alberta Formed, Alberta Transformed is an investment with a payoff on every page..The 32 writers took a different approach to history as well. Rather than a strict chronology, they were each asked to focus on a specific year and use it as a point of reference for their reflections on what it meant-and means- to be an Albertan." Marc Horton, The Edmonton Journal. May 21, 2006.