Drink in Canada

Historical Essays

By Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Categories: Social Sciences
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773511255, 288 pages, October 1993
Paperback : 9780773511262, 280 pages, October 1993
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773564336, 288 pages, October 1993

Description

Through an international comparison, Cheryl Warsh introduces the major themes in both historical and anthropological studies of beverage alcohol use. In a separate essay she describes the stigma attached to female alcoholism, particularly its association with prostitution and child neglect. James Sturgis presents the collective biography of the Rennie brothers, who fell victim to alcoholism while attempting to make their fortunes in the late nineteenth-century boom-bust economies of Canada and the United States. Jim Baumohl recounts attempts to establish institutions for alcoholics on the model of insane asylums. Jan Noel describes the revivals organized by Father Chiniguy, a Catholic evangelist, which swept Lower Canada in the 1840s, unifying a French-Canadian populace threatened by the rapid influx of anglophone settlers. Glenn Lockwood pursues a similar theme in his essay, concluding that Ottawa Valley temperance lodges solidified loyalist American opposition to immigrant competitors for regional dominance. Jacques Paul Couturier analyses the regulation of prohibition in a mixed anglophone/Acadian community. Ernest Forbes demonstrates that Canadian and American prohibition provided vital economic opportunities during the prolonged Maritime depression. Finally, Robert Campbell surveys the post-prohibition experience of state monopoly as a means of liquor control. Each author brings new sources and new research techniques to the discussion of alcohol, posing methodological and public policy challenges for the future as well as a solid survey of the past.

Reviews

"The appearance of such a study is welcome, as the historical literature on patterns of beverage alcohol use in Canada and efforts at control is sparse ... The essays are all based on extensive research in primary sources, and all display awareness of their historiographical context." Jack Blocker, Department of History, Huron College, University of Western Ontario.