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Social Science Cultural

Improved Earth

Prairie Space as Modern Artefact, 1869-1944

by (author) Rod Bantjes

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Jan 2005
Category
Cultural
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780802087829
    Publish Date
    Mar 2005
    List Price
    $71.00
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442676039
    Publish Date
    Jan 2005
    List Price
    $71.00

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Description

Improved Earth is a history of the making of ‘abstract spaces of modernity’ in the setting of the Canadian prairies, particularly rural Saskatchewan, from 1869 to 1944. Rod Bantjes demonstrates how three interrelated projects – state formation, agrarian class formation, and the transformation of the environment – were conceived in spatial terms and employed competing visions of spatial possibility.

Bantjes proposes that the prairies be thought of as a site of modernity, and makes a case for viewing prairie farmers as ‘modernists’ who not only embraced, but took an active role in the making of modernity. Indeed, many of the questions that excited the imaginations of prairie politicians and reformers are alive today: the ecological and social value of ‘localization’ in agricultural production; the potentials for ‘community’ maintained and linked by transportation and communications technologies; and the possibilities of democratic decentralization within large translocal networks.

The first systematic treatment of the spatial dimensions of the colonization of the prairie west, Improved Earth is a unique and thorough study certain to provoke new debates about the way space and time are imagined.

About the author

Rod Bantjes is Associate Professor in the Sociology and Anthropology Department at St. Francis Xavier University. His areas of expertise are environmental social movements and social geography.

Rod Bantjes' profile page