from issue 30

Books

Death So Noble: Memory, Meaning, and the First World War

Stephen Osborne

Jonathan F. Vance

UBC Press

In the social stud­ies class­rooms that I remem­ber, the story was that Canada achieved “nation­hood” by send­ing thou­sands of men to their deaths in the trenches of World War I. How the trans­for­ma­tion occurred was never explained; instead we were given pious obser­va­tions of the har­di­ness of Canadian shock troops and the mel­liflu­ous­ness of “In Flanders Fields,” a poem sup­posed on its own mer­its to be evi­dence enough that Canada had “grown up” dur­ing that war. Only now, eighty years after the war, are we given the expla­na­tion of that process of trans­for­ma­tion, in the pages of Death So Noble: Memory, Meaning, and the First World War, by Jonathan F. Vance (UBC Press). Vance tells the story of a tiny coun­try of eight mil­lion peo­ple trau­ma­tized by the slaugh­ter of 60,000 (25 times the American death rate in the Vietnam war) and the maim­ing of 160,000 of its cit­i­zens. Five per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion served in France and Belgium, and more than half of them were wounded or killed. Half the fam­i­lies in the coun­try suf­fered casu­al­ties. And when it was all over, not a sin­gle corpse was returned to Canada for bur­ial. A great empti­ness had appeared at the cen­tre of Canadian life. Vance’s book is an account of how that empti­ness was cov­ered over by waves of ceno­taph build­ing and the con­struc­tion of “mean­ing” through fan­tasies of “vic­tory,” “sac­ri­fice” and “redemp­tion” won in a cause that was no cause at all. This was the con­test for mem­ory that car­ried on into the six­ties when the last ceno­taphs were finally com­pleted, a process that mar­gin­al­ized the Quebecois, Native peo­ple and every iden­ti­fi­able “immi­grant” group in the coun­try. The nation of Canada cre­ated by World War I was a col­lec­tion of bro­ken frag­ments whose sep­a­ra­tion from each other had only begun. This is a great book and the story it tells is utterly com­pelling. There is also a Web page filled with mate­ri­als that couldn’t be fit­ted into the fin­ished vol­ume. Check it out: www.ubcpress.ubc.ca.