Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Business & Economics Public Finance

Economics, Enlightenment, and Canadian Nationalism

by (author) Robert W. Wright

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Aug 1993
Category
Public Finance, General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773563797
    Publish Date
    Aug 1993
    List Price
    $115.00

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Orthodox economics has played a role in the gradual narrowing of the concept of man from a being involved with the fullness of life to "economic man" an efficiently functioning mechanism within present-day technological society. The current subservience to economic and technological efficiency has produced a spiritual malaise that Wright believes must be challenged. He argues that the reconstruction of "economic man" involves the recuperation of both "universal" knowledge from the past and "local" knowledge from within one's own culture. Citing the Bible as the text for universal knowledge for the West, Wright examines the work of Blake, Kierkegaard, and Tillich as representative figures who have challenged the narrow scientism of the "idea of progress" and "economic man." For local knowledge, he turns to the work of Margaret Atwood, Harold Innis, and Alex Colville representative figures who speak to the dissonant tensions that lie at the heart of Canadian culture. Each has identified the main features of Canadian existence and potential and, in spite of the diversity of their intellectual orientation, shares the view that we are burdened with bias and domination men over women, civilization over nature, space over time, foreign control over nationalism, and centre over margin. Wright believes it is imperative to have a positive theory of Canadian nationalism available if the free-trade agreement begins to collapse, and argues that Canadians would recognize the enormously privileged position of their country if they could only summon the political will to go beyond the narrow confines of "economic man" and abandon their acceptance of the debilitating pursuit of the "idea of progress." The book includes six paintings by Alex Colville reproduced in black and white.

About the author

Editorial Reviews

"Wright has written an enormously important book ... It should be on the shelf along side documents like The Turning Point by Fritjof Capra, The Politics of the Solar Age by Hazel Henderson, and A Planet for the Taking by David Suzuki. Wright cares not only about the continuance of Canada but about the resuscitation of the western world." Peter Harcourt, School for Studies in Art and Culture, Carleton University.