William R. Eakin Lecture in Canadian Studies - "Race and the First Leftists in Twentieth-Century Canada: An Imperial Working Class?" - Ian McKay
Ian McKay has taught Canadian History at Queen's since 1988. Ian McKay’s research interests lie in Canadian cultural history, in the economic and social history of the Atlantic Region of Canada in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and in the history of Canada as a liberal order. "For a Working-class Culture in Canada: A Selection of Colin McKay’s Writing on Sociology and Political Economy, 1897-1939" (St. John’s, 1996), "The Quest of the Folk: Antimodernism and Cultural Selection in Twentieth-Century Nova Scotia" (Kingston & Montreal, 1994) and "Rebels, Reds, Radicals: Rethinking Canada's Left History" (Toronto: BTL, 2005) are some of his recent publications. He is presently working on books about memory and the public past, the history of Canadian socialism, and the life and times of Maurice Spector, Canada’s pre-eminent Marxist thinker of the 1920s and 1930s.