John Ralston Saul examines Canada’s role as a middle power

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TORONTO, February 19, 2004 -- His Excellency John Ralston Saul will deliver the annual John W. Holmes Memorial Lecture on Wednesday, Feb. 25 at 7:30 p.m. at York University’s Glendon College Campus.

 

Saul will examine Canada’s role on the world stage as a middle power in an imperial world.

 

Saul has won international recognition for his novels and essays, while animating and enlivening public discourse by challenging Canadians to think anew about themselves and their country.

 

Saul's growing impact on political and economic thought was firmly established with his 1995 Massey Lectures. The resulting book, The Unconscious Civilization, won the 1996 Governor General's Literary Award for Non-Fiction and the Gordon Montador Award for the Best Canadian Non-Fiction Book on social issues (1996). It was the concluding book of a major philosophical trilogy, the first two volumes being Voltaire’s Bastards - The Dictatorship of Reason in the West and The Doubter’s Companion - A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense. In 2001 he drew his conclusions about this trilogy with a new volume: On Equilibrium.

 

John W. Holmes was a Canadian diplomat, scholar and President of the Canadian Institute of  International Affairs (CIIA), who taught international relations at Glendon College at York from 1971 to 1981 and was a strong supporter of the United Nations and multilateralism in world affairs.

 

The lecture will be held in the dining room of Glendon College, York University’s bilingual liberal arts college, located at 2275 Bayview Avenue, Toronto (intersection of Bayview and Lawrence Avenues).

 

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For more information, please contact:

 

Ken Turriff

Media Relations

York University

416-736-2100, ext. 22086

kturriff@yorku.ca     

YU/029/04