Harold Innis on Peter Pond

Biography, Cultural Memory, and the Continental Fur Trade

By William J. Buxton
Categories: Auto/biography & Memoir
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773558601, 336 pages, February 2020
Paperback : 9780773558618, 336 pages, February 2020
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773559752, February 2020
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773559769, February 2020

A compelling study of Harold Innis's engagement with a remarkable – but largely overlooked – historical figure.

Description

Best known for his writings on economic history and communications, Harold Innis also produced a body of biographical work that paid particular attention to cultural memory and how it is enriched by the study of neglected historical figures. In this compelling volume, William Buxton addresses Innis's engagement with the legacy of the fur trader and adventurer Peter Pond. Harold Innis on Peter Pond comprises eight texts by Innis, including his 1930 biography of Pond as well as his writings on the explorer's myriad activities. The book also features a collection of eight letters exchanged between Innis and Florence Cannon, a descendent of Pond with a strong interest in her ancestor's life and times, and an unpublished 1932 article on Pond's 1773-75 activities as a fur trader on the upper Mississippi, written by Innis's former student R. Harvey Fleming. Situating Innis's writings on Pond in relation to his broader body of biographical work, Buxton interprets what these texts tell us about Innis's intellectual practice, historiography, and the writing of biography. The book explores how Innis's perspectives shifted with changing intellectual and political circumstances and shows that his advocacy of Pond as an unrecognized "father of confederation" challenged conventional views of Canadian nation-building. A critical edition of previously overlooked biographical texts, Harold Innis on Peter Pond traces what these writings disclose about the biographer's character and values even as they discuss their subject.

Reviews

"Buxton has done a great service to illuminate the later stages of Innis fur trade research and re-focus the reader's attention on Peter Pond, as Innis would have wanted. By meticulously collecting and curating Innis's writings on Pond, Buxton has provided a valuable one-stop venue for graduate students and academic historians interested in the 18th century fur trade as seen through the eyes of one of its most prominent historical actors, and also one of its most important historical scholars." Arctic

“Similar to Innis’ efforts to rescue Pond from obscurity, Buxton has drawn attention to the historian’s often-ignored biographical works and has provided not only a detailed picture of Innis’s scholarship on Pond, but more broadly he has demonstrated the interaction between biographical writing, commemoration, and nation-making.” The Canadian Historical Review