Looking Back and Ahead: Exploring Uniquely Canadian Cultural Narratives - Debrecen University Symposium, 2024

 

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24 October, 2024

Daniel Béland
Director, McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, McGill University
“The Partisan Politics of Immigration in the United States and Canada”
Immigration is a crucial aspect of the current U.S. presidential race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, who has both exacerbated and exploited the sense of insecurity stemming from issues of border control and immigrant settlement. Meanwhile, in Canada, the post-pandemic increase in the number of temporary foreign students and workers, the ongoing housing affordability crisis, and concerns about the treatment and territorial distributions of asylum seekers have trigged a major debate about the country’s immigration policies. In this brief presentation, I will compare and contrast current U.S. and Canada immigration debates as they relate to electoral competition among political parties.

Daniel Béland is Director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada and James McGill Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University. A student of politics and public policy, Professor Béland has published more than 20 books and 200 articles in peer-reviewed journals and his work has been cited more than 16,000 times. In addition to his academic work, Professor Béland has participated in numerous training sessions for civil servants, provided policy advice to federal and provincial officials, and testified in front of the Saskatchewan Federal Electoral Boundaries Commission, Standing Senate Committee on National Finance, and the Standing Committee on Finance of the House of Commons (Canada). Moreover, he is very frequently asked to comment on key policy and political issues by Canadian and international media outlets.

 

Endre Farkas
Montreal-based poet, novelist and playwright
“SZERBUSZ” (poetry reading)
One of my Muses, inspirations/demons during my writing life has been Hungary, my birthland but not my homeland. Due to the nature and circumstances of my leaving Hungary, I have felt a longing and anger for and towards this country. These poems have been triggered by this complex love-hate relationship.

Endre Farkas is a poet, author and playwright living in Canada. He has published 13 books of poetry, 2 novels and had three plays produced. He has toured, read and performed across Canada, United States, Europe and South America. He has been an editor, publisher, one of the founders of Quebec Writers Federation and president of the Quebec English Language Publishers Association.
 

Dennis Gruending
Journalist, former MP
A Communist for the RCMP: A Police Informant and the Canadian Security State
Canadians think of their country as a bastion of “peace, order and good government,” but Canada’s history also contains darker counter-narratives.  One example is the massive surveillance conducted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). The force’s Security Service opened files on over eight hundred thousand individuals and organizations in Canada between 1919 and 1979. The RCMP justified these intrusions as necessary to combat communism.  The most effective way of doing that was to use paid informants to infiltrate the Communist Party. 

In a new book titled A Communist for the RCMP: The Uncovered Story of a Social Movement Informant, author, and former Member of Parliament Dennis Gruending tells the story of one such informant. In 1906, Frank Hadesbeck emigrated to Canada as an infant from Hungary. His family encountered great hardship, and Hadesbeck became an itinerant farm worker during the Great Depression. He was recruited by the RCMP as an informant in 1941. For the next thirty-five years, he provided information, not only on members of the Communist Party, but also on hundreds of non-communist progressives.

Defying warnings from his RCMP handlers, Hadesbeck kept notes describing his life as an informant and interactions with his handlers. He died in 2006, and in 2019 Gruending obtained his unpublished papers from a third party. The ensuing book uses resources such as Ancestry, Canadian census reports, family documents, and interviews to create a profile of Hadesbeck’s early life and struggles. Hadesbeck’s secret notes are key to describing his career, but are complemented in the book by other academic, journalistic, and archival sources. Library and Archives Canada holds the records of the Security Service, and the book makes extensive use of material obtained under Canada’s Access to Information Act.

One academic reviewer described the book as “ground-breaking.” Another wrote: “A Communist for the RCMP provides stunning insights into the nuts and bolts of the force’s infiltration campaigns.”

Dennis Gruending is an Ottawa-based writer, a former Member of Parliament and author of the blogs Great Canadian Speeches and Pulpit and Politics.  He has worked as a print and television journalist, as a CBC Radio host, and has written or edited nine books. The most recent, released in June 2024, is A Communist for the RCMP: The Uncovered Story of a Social Movement Informant. He has produced two books about political speeches (Speeches That Changed Canada and Great Canadian Speeches). His book Pulpit and Politics: Competing Religious Ideologies in Canadian Public Life, examined the growing competition between religious progressives and conservatives for power and influence in Canadian politics. He is a member of The Writers’ Union of Canada and of the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians.
 

Mapping Montreal Panel
The panel introduces an international collaboration started at the end of 2023 with the participation of the Consulate General of Hungary in Montreal, the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling (COHDS) at Concordia University, and the University of Debrecen. The aim of the research project is to explore and preserve the history and heritage of Hungarians in Montreal through a combination of archival research, oral history interviews, and a digital mapping solution. As part of the collaboration, numerous interviews have been conducted in the summer of 2024, materials have been digitized, and the first version of the planned interactive map has been developed. This panel outlines how the collaboration was established and how it expanded (with talks from Consul General Helga Pritz and COHDS Co-director Barbara Lorenzkowski), and introduces some of its first results, including a publication on the history of the Hungarian St. Stephen’s Ball in Montreal and the interactive map of the city showcasing organizations and venues related to the Hungarian diaspora (presented by Balázs Venkovits, UD). With a talk by Sonya di Sclafani (COHDS) we also highlight another ongoing research project related to the Hungarian diaspora in Montreal.

Dr. Barbara Lorenzkowski was born in Germany where she studied journalism at the TU Dortmund and history at the Ruhr-University Bochum. She worked for a wide range of print media and broadcasting institutions, graduating in 1995 with a Diploma in Journalism (MA equivalent). A one-year “adventure” as an international student at the University of Ottawa turned into a life-long love for the study of history. She went on to obtain her MA in History (1996) and PhD in History (2002), both from the University of Ottawa, winning the Pierre Laberge Prize for an outstanding dissertation in the humanities. She found her voice as a teacher at the University of Nipissing, where she was hired in 2002, and joined Concordia’s Department of History in 2008. As both an oral historian and a teacher, Dr. Lorenzkowski seeks to explore the ways in which global processes of migration, displacement, and violence have shaped small people’s lives in outsized ways.

Helga Katalin Pritz, a career diplomat, started working at the Africa Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs after her graduation, then served at the embassies in Moscow and Nigeria. She was later appointed Deputy Head of Department for North Africa and the Mediterranean Union, later First Officer and then Interim Chargé d'Affaires at the Embassy of Hungary in Paris. She was Hungary's ambassador to Algeria and Mali for five years and is currently head of the Hungarian Consulate General in Montreal. The mother of two children, she speaks French, English and Russian.

Balázs Venkovits is associate professor of American Studies at the University of Debrecen, Hungary. He is the director of the Institute of English and American Studies and the Canadian Studies Centre at the university. He earned his Ph.D. in 2014 and completed his habilitation in 2021. Among others, he is the recipient of OTKA (2022-26) and Jedlik (2013-14) grants, a JFK Research Fellowship (2013) and a Fulbright (2010-2011). His academic interests include travel writing studies, migration studies, Hungarian immigration to North America, with a special emphasis on Hungarians in Canada in and after the 1920s.
 

Mélissa-Anne Ménard
Concordia University
“Voices in the Field: A Critical Approach to Reusing Archived Oral History Interviews” 
While there exists a plethora of studies that engage with the ethics, theory, and methodology of oral history interviewing, there exists only a handful about working with existing oral history collections we have not conducted ourselves. Sometimes considered second to conducting one’s own interviews, as April Gallwey has demonstrated, reusing existing material offers immense possibilities, not the least of which is gaining precious insight into lived experience from long-gone narrators. Additionally, reuse can be a way of ensuring these stories live on and, to borrow Dr. Steven High’s term, are “activated” after their telling. In other words, when done ethically, reuse can be a way of honouring narratives entrusted to researchers even after the moment or archival. With the countless collections and interviews currently in existence – often lying dormant– it is imperative to develop approaches and tools to explore interviews for which the context often eludes us.

I argue that understanding the various layers of context in which interviews and collections are created – administrative, conceptual and experiential to name a few considerations – is key to the ethically, effectively and sustainably reusing archived oral history interviews. Using the Forgotten Australians and Former Child Migrants Oral History Project collection as a case study, I propose one such approach by gaining robust, albeit always partial, insights into the project’s creation process through my own interviews with the collection’s project manager, Dr. Joanna Sassoon, and with several interviewers involved with the project. I will also touch on the importance of metadata and the role and responsibility of archives and libraries in contextualizing sources and thus facilitating reuse.

Mélissa-Anne Ménard is an oral historian whose main research interests center on the history of childhood and emotions, stories of migration, and the production of archives. She first encountered oral history during an undergraduate seminar in childhood history. Mélissa-Anne holds a master’s degree in history from Concordia university, partially funded by a Concordia University Merit Scholarship. Her thesis explored the ethical and methodological ramifications of reusing archived oral history interviews conducted by other researchers to develop frameworks and protocols to allow us to engage with countless oral history collections that often lie dormant in archives.

 

Anna Porter
Hungarian-born Canadian author and publisher
“Falling in Love with Canada (one book at a time)”
I was born in a land of stories: Hungary, and fell in love with another land of stories: Canada. I arrived here in 1968 with a small blue suitcase that contained all of my belongings. I was fortunate to have landed a job in publishing, where I met and worked with some of the best writers in this country, Margaret Laurence, Irving Layton, Al Purdy, Leonard Cohen, Michael Ondaatje, Margaret Atwood, Richard Gwyn, Farley Mowat, Sylvia Fraser, W.O. Mitchell. I started my own publishing company some 15 years later and worked with Josef Skvorecky, my fellow central European DP, Prime Ministers Jean Chretien and Joe Clarke, Arctic storyteller Fred Bruemmer, the extraordinary Basil Johnston, whose Indian School Days blew the top off Canada’s residential schools, and Dennis Lee, and George Jonas, a fellow Hungarian refugee, whose memoir, Beethoven’s Mask, is a riveting tale of our last horrendous century.

Anna Porter’s non-fiction books include Buying a Better World: George Soros and Billionaire Philanthropy, The Ghosts of Europe, winner of the Shaughnessey Cohen Prize for Political Writing, Kasztner’s Train, the True Story of Rezso Kasztner, Unknown Hero of the Holocaust, winner of the 2007 Writers’ Trust Non-Fiction Award and of the Jewish Book Award for Non-Fiction. She has also written six novels, a memoir, and numerous articles. Her most recent novel is Gull Island. Anna Porter is co-founder of Key Porter Books, a company with a wide-ranging  list that included Farley Mowat, Joan Barfoot, Fred Bruemmer, Norman Jewison, Hume Cronyn, George Jonas, Margaret Atwood, The Right Honourable Jean Chretien, Sylvia Fraser, Modris Eksteins, John Keegan, Martin Gilbert, Irving Abella, Josef Skvorecky, Italo Calvino, William Trevor, Conrad Black and Janet Lunn. She sold majority interest in the company in 2004. She is an Officer of The Order of Canada and has been awarded the Order of Ontario.

 

David Staines
University of Ottawa
“Contemporary Canadian Fiction: Forty Years On”
In 1984 Debrecen launched a Canadian Studies programme, years ahead of other European universities. And the situation in Canada and its fiction in 1984 was relatively solid. In the intermittent forty years, much has changed, the worlds of Canadian fiction have much altered and expanded, and contemporary fiction suggests new ways of approaching and reacting to these major developments.

David Staines is a professor of English at the University of Ottawa. Formerly dean of the Faculty of Arts for eight years, he is internationally respected as a scholar of medieval literature and Canadian literature and culture. The author and/or editor of more than 20 books in these fields, he is also the translator of The Complete Romances of Chrétien de Troyes. In 1998, he received the Lorne Pierce Medal, awarded by the Royal Society of Canada, for outstanding contributions to Canadian criticism. In 2006, he published The Letters of Stephen Leacock, which was listed as one of the 100 best books of the year by the Globe and Mail. In 2011, he was invested into the Order of Ontario and into the Order of Canada. In 2021, he published A History of Canadian Fiction. 
 

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