Can Canada Survive?
Canada’s media has collapsed, along with Canadians pride in their country and sense of identity. What can be done about it?
CIC-VI Branch: Luncheon Speaker Event
Can Canada Survive?
Trump wants to make Canada the 51st state. He has taken out Maduro in Venezuela. He has failed to support Ukraine. He threatens Greenland and Colombia. Will Canada resist if attacked?
A country’s will to defend itself depends on whether its citizens think it is worth protecting and defending – whether its national identity is strong, which is also forged through its media. And when a country’s media presence is weak, its identity falters. Indeed, it is through its books, newspapers, films, magazines, TV shows and social media that citizens come to know their history, each other, their common stories, and hopes for the future.
While in the last part of the 20th century, Canada’s media presence was strong, and Canadians were proud of their country. But by the end of the first quarter of the 21st century, its media had collapsed, along with Canadians pride in their country and shared sense of identity.
How did this happen? What can be done about it?
Date: Thursday, April 9, 2026 (12-2 PM)
Location: Yates Memorial, Allsbrook Room | Doors Open at 11:30 AM
Address: 1000 Allsbrook Road, Parksville, V9P2A9
Cost: $30.00 each. A light lunch and refreshments will be served followed by our speaker. For special dietary or seating requests email vancouverisland@thecic.org.
Canada’s media has collapsed, along with Canadians pride in their country and sense of identity. What can be done about it?
CIC-VI Branch: Luncheon Speaker Event
Can Canada Survive?
Trump wants to make Canada the 51st state. He has taken out Maduro in Venezuela. He has failed to support Ukraine. He threatens Greenland and Colombia. Will Canada resist if attacked?
A country’s will to defend itself depends on whether its citizens think it is worth protecting and defending – whether its national identity is strong, which is also forged through its media. And when a country’s media presence is weak, its identity falters. Indeed, it is through its books, newspapers, films, magazines, TV shows and social media that citizens come to know their history, each other, their common stories, and hopes for the future.
While in the last part of the 20th century, Canada’s media presence was strong, and Canadians were proud of their country. But by the end of the first quarter of the 21st century, its media had collapsed, along with Canadians pride in their country and shared sense of identity.
How did this happen? What can be done about it?
Date: Thursday, April 9, 2026 (12-2 PM)
Location: Yates Memorial, Allsbrook Room | Doors Open at 11:30 AM
Address: 1000 Allsbrook Road, Parksville, V9P2A9
Cost: $30.00 each. A light lunch and refreshments will be served followed by our speaker. For special dietary or seating requests email vancouverisland@thecic.org.
About our Speaker
Richard Stursberg has spent his career exploring the relationship between media and national identity. He was the Executive Director of Telefilm Canada, the government’s film financing corporation, head of English services at the CBC, and Chairman of The Canadian Television Fund. His book on the CBC, The Tower of Babble, was named one of the best books of the year by the Globe and Mail. His next book, The Tangled Garden, documented the destruction of Canada’s media businesses, and what to do to save them. It was short-listed for the Donner prize for the best book on public policy written by a Canadian. His new book, Lament for a Literature: The Collapse of Canadian Book Publishing was released on 27 January 2026.
Good to know
Highlights
- 2 hours
- In person
Refund Policy
Location
Yates Memorial Services
1000 Allsbrook Road
Parksville, BC V9P 2A9
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