Jody Perrun. The Patriotic Consensus: Unity, Morale, and the Second World War in Winnipeg.
Hogenbirk, Sarah
Jody Perrun. The Patriotic Consensus: Unity, Morale, and the Second
World War in Winnipeg. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2014. Pp.
292. Illustrations, photographs, maps. ISBN: 978-088755-749-1.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
During the Second World War, Winnipeg's fault lines were many:
political, religious, racial, and ethnic divides threatened wartime
cohesion. As Perrun notes in his nuanced analysis of community
relationships between and within various groups on the home front,
Winnipeg had a significant Ukrainian community whose political and
religious division meant they "spent as much effort and rhetoric
opposing each other as they did the common Axis enemy" (11). Yet,
Perrun argues, most Winnipeggers shared in the "patriotic
consensus," though this "consensus was far from total"
(43). Social pressure and propaganda fostered this consensus that was
unforgiving of those regarded as slacking or as threats to national
security.
Perrun also questions the view that the federal government was the
major factor in how the war effort was conducted and experienced by
Canadians. He asserts there is "an important distinction ...
between the non-state institutions of civil society and those of the
state itself" and that majority of people's everyday lives,
interactions, contributions and defining memberships are in the realm of
civil society (11). According to Perrun, it was the local community
relations that provided the parameters by which national and
international events of the war were felt and lived by Canadians. He
emphasizes how the local initiatives of Individuals and of the non-state
institutions of civil society--especially families, voluntary
associations, clubs, and community groups that they belonged
to--modified and in many cases influenced the direction of national
policy. For instance, he contends that Winnipeg's "If
Day," which featured a staged Nazi invasion as a means of
persuading ordinary Winnipeggers and Manitobans to donate, emerged as a
local response to a nationwide Second Victory Campaign under the
federally created National War Finance Committee. From discussion of how
Winnipeg newspapers willingly participated in federal government
attempts at controlling information to denial of civil liberties of
Japanese Canadians to women's volunteer work, Perrun situates
Winnipeg in larger trends while paying attention to local peculiarities.
The interrelated concepts of unity and morale underline
Perrun's exploration of how Winnipeggers accepted, built, rejected,
and were pressured into the patriotic consensus that reflected values of
the white Anglo-Saxon elite. Unity and morale, as he recognizes, are
difficult to measure. They can, however, be ascertained to some extent
through assessing responses to calls for participation in armed forces,
in providing services for military personal and their families, in
salvage and other campaigns, and in people's to shared wartime
hardships such as housing shortages, war rationing, and familial
separations. For example, Perrun makes a convincing case that there was
a high degree of unity in Winnipeg because, although led by middle-class
women, people from all sorts of class, religious, ethnic, and racial
backgrounds contributed to volunteer activities in support of the war
effort. This degree of support, in turn, promoted high morale, because
those who participated felt and were made to feel "they were making
an important contribution to the nation's war effort" (153).
Perrun's carefully researched work depends largely upon
newspapers, reports, government correspondence, and
volunteer-association records to measure community engagement, morale,
and unity. This reliance, combined with the equation of high morale and
unity with successful participation in what he calls "patriotic
appeals," results in the dominant voices being those of local,
provincial, and federal politicians, bureaucrats, and the business and
social elite. Although the voices of ordinary citizens appear
occasionally, the experiences of ordinary Winnipeggers emerge largely
from what they do, rather than what they say. While the voices of those
who opposed and were pushed out of the patriotic consensus are included
from time to time, the focus on how social cohesion was maintained in
spite of the fault lines overshadows these voices.
Given the extensive discussion on propaganda and wartime familial
separation, the absence of recruitment advertisements seems striking.
Perrun's work would have benefited from a further discussion of the
experiences of military personnel in the Winnipeg area and their
interactions with civilians. Fie briefly mentions the military
personnel's appreciation of and the provisions made to support
those stationed nearby or passing through, but the reader is left
wondering how the increased presence of military personnel changed the
cityscape of Winnipeg. Perrun thus reinscribes boundaries between home
front and war front that he, like previous historians, argued were not
so sharply demarcated In a time of "total war."
These points aside, Jody Perrun's Patriotic Consensus provides
a welcome corrective to the largely nationalistic focus of histories of
Canadians in the Second World War. The illustrations, photographs, and
maps complement the narrative. They provide snapshots of community life
from the common wartime scene of sending off troops to crowds gathered
at Victory Loan events to familiar wartime propaganda. Winnipeg during
wartime comes alive in his masterful narrative that reminds readers that
the domestic experience of the Second World War in Canada was not
unitary, but was built upon and drew together the fragmented voices of
many.
Sarah Hogenbirk
PhD student
Carleton University, Department of History