Awards & Winners

George Ramsay Cook

Date of Birth 28-November-1931
Place of Birth Alameda
(Canada, Saskatchewan, Division No. 1, Saskatchewan)
Nationality Canada
Also know as Ramsay Cook, George Ramsay Cook
Profession Historian
George Ramsay Cook, OC, FRSC, is a Canadian historian and general editor of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography. He was professor of history at York University for 25 years until 1996. Through his championing of so-called "limited identities", Cook contributed to the rise of the New Social History, which uses "class, gender and ethnicity" as its three main categories of analysis. Cook's conception of "limited identities" was famously formulated in an article in the International Journal in 1967, Canada's centenary year, reviewing the state of contemporary scholarship on Canadian nationalism: After six new books on the great Canadian problem — our lack of unity and identity — are we getting any nearer the source of the problem? Undoubtedly something is achieved: if nothing else one can wonder if the search is worth the effort. Certainly we should continue to try to understand ourselves; an unexamined nation is not worth living in. But it may be that the frame of reference is wrong. Perhaps instead of constantly deploring our lack of identity, we should attempt to understand and explain the regional, ethnic and class identities that we do have. It might just be that it is in these limited identities that "Canadianism" is found, and that except for our over-heated nationalist intellectuals,

Awards by George Ramsay Cook

Check all the awards nominated and won by George Ramsay Cook.

1985


Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction
Honored for : The Regenerators

Nominations 1985 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction The Regenerators