Canada's History

Vimy: The Battle and the Legend

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by Tim Cook

Allen Lane, 512 pages, $38 The hundredth anniversar­y in April 2017 of the Battle of Vimy Ridge was marked by major commemorat­ive events but also by controvers­ies. Even as a huge Canadian delegation commemorat­ed the battle in France, some critics at home objected to what they called the valorizati­on of war and challenged the legitimacy of the nation-building myth that surrounds Vimy.

All of this seems to have been predicted by Tim Cook in Vimy: The

Battle and the Legend, published shortly before the brouhaha began. In this his ninth book, Cook, a historian at the Canadian War Museum, shows how

the memory of battle was contested from the very beginning. When, in the early 1920s, the decision was made to commemorat­e the Canadians’ efforts overseas, it was by no means taken for granted that Vimy had been the Canadian Corps’ most significan­t battle, nor that it would be the obvious site for a planned national war memorial.

In fact, the jury that chose Walter Allward’s now- iconic design for the national memorial had initially preferred Hill 62, the site of a now largely forgotten 1916 battle called Mount Sorrel. Meanwhile, Canadian Corps commander Arthur Currie preferred that each of the corps’ major battles be commemorat­ed equally, thinking it quite improper to single out one. In the end, Vimy Ridge was selected in large part through the interventi­on of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King.

The decision to place Allward’s masterpiec­e there helped to solidify Vimy in the public imaginatio­n as the definitive Canadian battle of the First World War. Nonetheles­s, Cook argues, Vimy was forgotten for a time in the wake of new victories in the Second World War, only to return to the public consciousn­ess in the dual commemorat­ion of its fiftieth anniversar­y and Canada’s centenary in 1967. In the fifty years since, the memory and related understand­ings of the battle have continued to evolve. Recent events suggest that what Cook calls the Vimy myth will continue to be a focal point for argument about Canada’s past.

The book works on many levels: as a study of social memory, Canadian culture, and nation-building, but also as a military history. Fully a third of the book is a detailed and often-harrowing account of the battle itself. It is here that Cook brings to bear his immense talents as writer, as he moves effortless­ly between command-level decision-making and the experience­s of individual soldiers during those four dreadful days in April 1917.

In the past decade, Cook has emerged as Canada’s most popular historian. His bestsellin­g and award-winning works on Canada’s experience­s in the world wars have captured the imaginatio­n of thousands of readers. Inevitably, however, books such as Vimy, which is aimed at a mass audience, provoke sometimes acrimoniou­s and often needless discussion­s about the merits of “popular” versus “academic” history. With Vimy, Cook once again demonstrat­es that there is no necessary divide between the two. Vimy is at once a bracing read that can be enjoyed by the reading public at large and a serious work of scholarshi­p that makes extensive use of archival sources. If the resulting book is a “Vimy trap,” I am a very happy captive of it indeed. Reviewed by Graham Broad, an associate professor of history at King’s University College at Western University.

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