{"id":4127,"date":"1954-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1954-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1954-vol-35-no-9-a-culture-for-canada\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:35:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:35:31","slug":"september-1954-vol-35-no-9-a-culture-for-canada","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1954-vol-35-no-9-a-culture-for-canada\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1954 &#8211; Vol. 35, No. 9 &#8211; A Culture for Canada"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Some persons think culture is something                     one has, rather than something one is. Others think of culture                     as being divided, as culture of the cultured, culture of the                     masses, culture of the educated, culture of the cloistered,                     and so on. To still others culture is fragmented into music,                     poetry, sculpture, painting, and many other arts and crafts.<\/p>\n<p> A culture for Canada will include arts, crafts and customs,                     reinforced by tradition and beliefs. It will take into account                     our material resources, our scientific knowledge, our religious                     practices, our family and social systems and our government:                     the practical things of life as well as the graces. Culture                     is a pattern of all these and the other ingredients of living                     expressing the present day life force of our people.<\/p>\n<p>We can&#8217;t be &#8220;cultured&#8221; now and again, when we get specially                     fixed up for it. Culture is a constant state of becoming.                     We Canadians have not yet (and we are glad of it) reached                     our fullest development in art, religion, education, and intellectual                     growth. There is, for a nation which takes the beaver as its                     emblem, more satisfaction in working toward something than                     in merely possessing something.<\/p>\n<p>If Canada is to endure as a nation of consequence our cultural                     progress cannot be looked upon as something incidental, something                     that takes second place in importance to any of its ingredients.<\/p>\n<p>One of the fascinating things about culture is that it is                     indefinable. It partakes too much of the spirit of a people                     to be put in wordy chains.<\/p>\n<p>Attempts to analyse the ultimates of life like faith, love,                     patriotism, religion and beauty always fail, because these                     components of culture cannot be reduced to terms lower than                     themselves.<\/p>\n<h3>Culture is not fixed<\/h3>\n<p>Culture cannot be accepted as a fixed code by which to live.                     It is not stagnant, but dynamic. It gives us wide realms to                     explore. There would be nothing noble about Canadian culture                     if we could say: &#8220;This is it; this is our absolute and accepted                     scale of culture; by this we shall live.&#8221; Culture is not,                     as some conceive it, an eternal resting on a throne to which                     we have been elevated by our forefathers, but is something                     to be hourly achieved and realized at the very peril of losing                     it.<\/p>\n<p>Our culture is the outcome of our social experience. It                     includes invention and discovery, the accumulated results                     of human effort, our philosophical explanations of thought                     and action, the institutions we have devised to make society                     a working reality, our sentiments and attitudes. All the past                     of humanity enters into culture, as well as the more recent                     contributions of the people of all nations who discovered,                     settled and developed Canada.<\/p>\n<p>There must, however, be some fundamental features in culture                     &#8211; features of which art, music, sculpture, literature, philosophy,                     science, family life, and social custom are some of the symbols.<\/p>\n<p>Basic to a lasting culture is the search for truth. Culture                     is opposed to bigotry, and no one has a right to call himself                     cultured who cannot listen to both sides of an argument, who                     refuses to tolerate things merely because they are distasteful                     to him personally.<\/p>\n<h3>Understanding life<\/h3>\n<p>Intelligence is a part of culture. When we start to understand                     the meaning, purpose and conditions of life we are at the                     beginning of intelligence. We develop in cultural intelligence                     in the degree in which we use it and accept responsibility                     for consequences.<\/p>\n<p>Intelligence restrains our innate violent and unsocial impulses,                     prompts us to seek higher than animal pleasures, and gives                     us the ability to see things in their proper connections.                     At the same time, while enabling us to learn all about the                     sun and the atmosphere and the earth, it leaves us free to                     enjoy the radiance of the sunset.<\/p>\n<p>Intelligence of this sort does not depend upon formal education.                     It is not at all rare to come upon comparatively unlettered                     people who have struck profound depths of thought and have                     reached the poetry of things. And there are highly educated                     people, capable of performing clever antics with their minds,                     who have no deep sense of the worthwhileness of living.<\/p>\n<p>Much of culture is simply unbroken tradition. Each of us                     is born into a society with a more or less fixed system of                     relationships. From the immemorial past have come down to                     us ways of getting a livelihood and approved patterns of family                     and social conduct.<\/p>\n<p>Without the starting point provided by these traditions,                     development would be inconceivable. The culture of today in                     Canada rests upon the preservation of the accomplishments                     of all who have gone before us in contributing to the building                     of this country, and the culture of tomorrow depends upon                     what we of today add to that heritage, not so much in the                     way of habits and customs, but in ways of thinking.<\/p>\n<h3>A shifting world<\/h3>\n<p>However, the compulsion of tradition has somewhat lost its                     force in this shifting world. The rising generation is abandoning                     in some measure the old established standards in many areas                     of life, as well as the traditional manner of music and dancing                     and painting and sculpture.<\/p>\n<p>Arnold J. Toynbee says in <em>A Study of History<\/em>: &#8220;The                     prevailing tendency to abandon our artistic traditions is                     not the result of technical incompetence; it is the deliberate                     abandonment of a style which is losing its appeal to a rising                     generation because this generation is ceasing to cultivate                     its aesthetic sensibilities on the traditional Western lines.&#8221;                     It may be that young people today rebel against respect for                     tradition because they perceive in it a worship of conventions.<\/p>\n<p>Unrest may not be altogether a bad thing. Every custom of                     today began as a broken precedent in some past day. Without                     occasional emotional shakeups we might run the risk of having                     life become desolately empty. Progress would cease and culture                     would wither.<\/p>\n<p>We are not quick to accept changes. The existing pattern                     is more comfortable than any novelty offered us. A new material                     fact, such as a tool, a gadget for the kitchen, an electronic                     calculator for the office, is readily incorporated into life.                     Its efficiency is demonstrable. There is no sentiment involved,                     hence no emotional resistance is stirred up. But in the realm                     of thought and personal life the new makes its way slowly.<\/p>\n<p>Some who protest the modern trend in the arts do so on the                     ground that today&#8217;s aesthetic taste is lower than that of                     past ages. But standards of taste vary from age to age and                     from continent to continent. What was in the best of taste                     in the Athens of Pericles, in the Golden Age of France, in                     the British Isles last year; is not necessarily to the taste                     of Canadians today.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Taste,&#8221; said Ruskin in <em>The True and the Beautiful<\/em>,                     &#8220;is the instinctive and instant preferring of one material                     object to another without any obvious reason.&#8221; And that comes                     as the end result of all our past, expressing itself in a                     new environment.<\/p>\n<h3>The two cultures<\/h3>\n<p>When we set up a Royal Commission in 1949 to examine Canada&#8217;s                     cultural life we did not call it a commission on culture,                     but &#8220;The Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts,                     Letters and Sciences.&#8221; The outcome, a report of more than                     500 pages, provides an interested reader with a record of                     the present state of the cultural arts in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>The first paragraph of the intention of the Commission mentions                     the ingredients of a nation&#8217;s culture: &#8220;It is desirable that                     the Canadian people should know as much as possible about                     their country, its history and traditions; and about their                     national life and common achievements.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This objective leads naturally to consideration of the ideal                     presented by Dr. A. R. M. Lower, Professor of Canadian History                     at Queen&#8217;s University, in his book <em>Canada, Nation and                     Neighbour<\/em>. Dr. Lower writes: &#8220;The new nation Canada will                     not be built on oblivion of the past, but on its incorporation                     into two living traditions which may some day, without losing                     their own, come to share one common culture.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canada is, in the words of another writer, Bruce Hutchison,                     &#8220;like a youth starting out on his path, glancing over his                     shoulder at the ancient glories of his home in Britain or                     France and, when he looks ahead, dazzled by the glitter of                     the United States.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For the health of a national culture two things are needed:                     that it should be unique, and not modelled slavishly after                     that of one or other of its chief contributors, and that the                     different cultures woven into one should recognize their relationship                     to one another, both what they bestow and what they embrace.<\/p>\n<p>Ours is not an uncommon situation. Many other nations have                     travelled the same road toward integration of apparently conflicting                     ideals and unity in a common design. There is not yet, but                     there will come, a commonly accepted symbol of Canadian oneness,                     and there will develop traditions that will bind our people                     together in a permanent union.<\/p>\n<p>The only impediment to this development would be our allowing                     ourselves to harden into watertight compartments. We must                     preserve our freedom to put out our hands and help ourselves                     to what is best in the culture of all the nationalities that                     make up our population.<\/p>\n<p>As was said picturesquely by a writer about Utopia: &#8220;A genuine                     culture will borrow steadily from other cultures; but it will                     go to them as the bee goes to the flower for pollen, and not                     as the beekeeper goes to the hive for honey.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If one section of Canada&#8217;s people finds really insoluble                     differences of thought, action or beliefs with another section,                     then increased association and sincere desire will combine                     to develop mutual respect and honourable compromise.<\/p>\n<p>Expressions of goodwill are right and good, but a national                     culture cannot be built on an exchange of compliments. There                     are differences which cannot be disregarded, and these go                     far beyond the bounds of language. George J. Lavere said in                     his article in the Summer issue of <em>Culture<\/em>: &#8220;It is                     in value judgments that the real difference lies.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>People from other parts of Canada have come to respect the                     standard of values of the people of Quebec, particularly their                     ideal of the family as the essential unit in our society.                     For their part, the French-Canadians admire the new ways                     of thought and action, the inventiveness and diversity of                     talent, shown by British-Canadians and newcomers of many                     diverse cultures.<\/p>\n<h3>Too unsophisticated?<\/h3>\n<p>Canadian culture has not yet reached a point where it can                     be called native, but it is developing out of inherited and                     borrowed thought something that is distinctively new world.<\/p>\n<p>We are unsophisticated, say some; we are still too close                     to nature. These critics would have our artists and our poets                     and our story tellers rush pell-mell from contemplation                     of the forest and the mountains, the prairies and the tundra,                     into more artful portrayal of what is loosely called &#8220;the                     soul&#8221; of the country. But these forests and mountains and                     prairies and the land of little bushes are at the foundation                     of Canadian life. They are lauded by economists and by corporation                     presidents as the backbone of our economy, the reason for                     existence and the preservation of our way of life.<\/p>\n<p>Nature put up a grim resistance to settlement of Canada                     by the French and British adventurers, and that is so recent                     in our history that it would be surprising if we had already                     developed into a gay and careless people, unmindful of our                     beginnings and heedless of the present foundation and support                     of our prosperity. It may be that out of our unsophistication                     there will develop a rare culture, quite different from the                     cultures that are made up of myths and legends, the histories                     of battles, pageantry and conquest.<\/p>\n<p>Our forefathers were skilful, and their skills had to have                     survival value in a rigorous land; we have progressed to relative                     comfort in a society based materially upon invention and adaptation.                     If we learn to mingle with our respect for the past and our                     appreciation of the present something of the poetry of it                     all, we may find ourselves well on the way toward the distinctive                     culture we seek.<\/p>\n<p>Haste is unnecessary and would be unwise. We did not demand                     that the Articles of Confederation or the provisions of the                     Statute of Westminster should automatically and swiftly promote                     us from adolescence to maturity.<\/p>\n<p>There is, says Mr. Lavere, a true intellectual and artistic                     life in Canada on both the professional and amateur levels.                     This cultural vitality is of very excellent quality and is                     sufficiently self-critical to seek improvement promising                     an even better future. Canadians are writing good books and                     good music, and are beginning to create good theatre and good                     ballet; we have distinguished painters; our film making has                     won international recognition; our radio is uncovering talented                     artists. &#8220;We need,&#8221; says the introduction to Robert Weaver&#8217;s                     article in the 60th anniversary issue of <em>Queen&#8217;s Quarterly<\/em>,                     &#8220;no longer be apologetic about &#8216;our lively arts&#8217;.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There are, indeed, areas in which we seem to tolerate bad                     influences. We suffer literature, plastic art and music to                     be freely displayed which are a humiliation to any man or                     woman of taste. All that can be hoped for or desired in matters                     of taste is that toleration will allow the bad to work itself                     out of our system and that patient effort wisely directed                     will bring about an infusion of the desirable.<\/p>\n<p>There is no essential stability in a civilized way of life.                     Whenever civilization stagnates, something like nomadism steps                     in and stirs it to new efforts. A living culture is constantly                     changing and increasing in volume and complexity through the                     addition of new items. This is a natural phenomenon that must                     be accepted, though we may determine, perhaps rightly, that                     certain basic articles in our culture must be kept intact                     despite the hundred magnets that pull us away from them.<\/p>\n<p>Determination of this sort was displayed by the Athenians                     of 404 B.C. Athens was in the throes of a life and death war.                     But, strict to their culture, the Athenians presented, at                     public expense, what had been judged to be the best comedy                     of the year. It did not matter that the play was violently                     antimilitarist, ridiculing the army and flaying leaders of                     the democracy. Says Clive Bell in <em>Civilization<\/em>: &#8220;I                     can recall nothing in history that manifests more brilliantly                     a public sense of values.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The family<\/h3>\n<p>By far the most important channel of transmission of culture                     is the family. The meagre furniture of a native hut becomes                     immensely significant because it is grouped around the hearth,                     symbol of the intimate personal relationship of family life.<\/p>\n<p>The general stock of ideas, prejudices and sentiments picked                     up by the hearthside impinge on thought and actions throughout                     life. Statesmen and financiers, educators and artisans, men                     and women in all activities of life, are influenced in their                     decisions and actions by the intangibles absorbed in home                     life.<\/p>\n<p>Culture develops from the intimacy of the home through the                     community, the province and the nation. The nation is described                     by St. Augustine as an association of reasonable beings bound                     together by a common agreement as to the objects they love.                     Opposed to culture is barbarism, and barbarians are people                     who insist on doing what they please, without submitting to                     any rule.<\/p>\n<p>Cultured people are distinguished by the superiority of                     their thoughts, their enjoyment of beauty, their effort to                     improve themselves and their environment, and their willingness                     to look at something new.<\/p>\n<p>Of all these qualities none is more vital to culture than                     the last. A person, however well-informed, is not cultured                     unless he can look at a thought or an event or a belief from                     at least two sides. To enjoy life perfectly a man must be                     free from taboos, prudery, superstition and prejudice. He                     will recognize all degrees of shadings between those who agree                     with him and the people who don&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<p>Broadmindedness is one pillar of culture. Another is a sense                     of values. Clive Bell says (in <em>Civilization<\/em>) that                     the cultured person has intellectual curiosity that is not                     only boundless but fearless and disinterested. He is tolerant,                     liberal and unshockable. If he is not always affable and urbane,                     at least he is not truculent, suspicious or overbearing. He                     distinguishes between ends and means, brushes aside all cant                     about &#8220;rights&#8221;, and pricks the frothy bubbles of moral indignation                     with the sharp point of his sense of values.<\/p>\n<h3>On being what we are<\/h3>\n<p>Perhaps the best recipe for a culture for Canada is just                     to have the courage to be what we are. We must be free intellectually                     to deal with whatever comes our way. A book of Canadian essays,                     published this year by The Ryerson Press, Toronto, edited                     by Malcolm Ross, Professor of English Literature at Queen&#8217;s                     University, is happily entitled <em>Our Sense of Identity<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>We need not fret about the results of our efforts nor about                     the importance of our individual contributions so long as                     we act sincerely according to our sense of values. Our lives,                     individually, are links in the chain, and what we do has national                     and universal significance.<\/p>\n<p>A culture for Canada is not a culture for today only. People                     with a sound sense of values are capable of sacrificing obvious                     and immediate goods to the more subtle and remote. They give                     up comfort for beauty; they prefer a liberal education, one                     that teaches how to live maturely, rather than one that teaches                     how to gain. They desire the richest and fullest life obtainable,                     a life which contains the maximum of vivid and exquisite experience                     and contributes something to the future.<\/p>\n<p>If Canadians individually make the most of their sense of                     values, that will prevent the country&#8217;s culture from evolving                     into a sophisticated m\u00e91ange of gaudy trappings gathered                     near and far.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot plan culture as we do political change and resource                     development. Culture can never be wholly conscious. But if                     we wish to give meaning to life &#8211; perhaps even a special meaning                     to Canadian life &#8211; then we must take steps to put ourselves                     in the way of experiences and projects which contribute to                     and develop our culture.<\/p>\n<h3>No one need live meanly<\/h3>\n<p>No one need live meanly in Canada except by choice. Those                     who overvalue physical comforts, the material things of the                     world, and ease of work, are living a sparse cultural existence,                     and cannot be rated high in an appraisement of civilization.                     There is no need to live the rigorous life of our forefathers,                     but if we banish it from memory we are depriving ourselves                     of the best, most logical and most thrilling base for our                     culture.<\/p>\n<p>One of the first terrestrial plants known to man was found                     in the Gasp\u00e9 Peninsula. It is a poor little plant,                     a foot high, without leaves. Sir John William Dawson discovered                     it about the time of Confederation. It preceded the luxuriant                     and elegant trees and flowers of the carboniferous period                     by some seventy-five million years.<\/p>\n<p>There seems to be a lesson in this discovery for those who                     are impatient for displays of cultural progress in Canada.                     It will not take so long for our culture to develop as it                     did for Sir John&#8217;s spindly little plant to grow into our vast                     forests, but it will take time. Culture is not any more magically                     manufactured than are trees and flowers.<\/p>\n<p>We are seeking a harmony of culture that will bind together                     four qualities, truth, beauty, adventure and art, and this                     harmony, exclusive as it is of egotism, self-seeking                     and immediacy, can be attained only as a process of growth                     extended in time.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[34],"class_list":["post-4127","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-34"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1954 - Vol. 35, No. 9 - A Culture for Canada - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1954-vol-35-no-9-a-culture-for-canada\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1954 - Vol. 35, No. 9 - A Culture for Canada - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Some persons think culture is something one has, rather than something one is. 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