New Books Network

Elliot B. Hanowski, "Towards a Godless Dominion: Unbelief in Interwar Canada" (McGill-Queen’s UP, 2023)

Mar 9, 2026
Dr. Elliot B. Hanowski, an academic librarian and historian of Canadian unbelief, explores militant secular movements in 1920s–30s Canada. He traces public lectures, newspapers, street activism, trials, and regional clashes from Montreal to Vancouver. The conversation highlights organized anti-religious campaigning, legal fights over blasphemy, and tensions between secularists and dominant Christian forces.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Unbelief Intertwined With The Left

  • In interwar Canada unbelief often overlapped with leftist politics, producing activists who mixed rationalism with socialism or communism.
  • Many activists saw religion as a product of material conditions and believed social change would render it irrelevant.
ANECDOTE

Marshall Gauvin's Showman Attack On Religion

  • Marshall Gauvin became a professional free-thought lecturer who moved his family to Winnipeg in 1926 to found the Winnipeg Rationalist Society.
  • He drew working-class audiences of hundreds and sometimes thousands by staging debates and mocking sermons with charismatic oratory.
ANECDOTE

Ernest Sterry's Blasphemy Trial And Media Circus

  • Ernest Victor Sterry, a Toronto rationalist, was arrested in 1927 for blasphemous libel after distributing a sarcastic rationalist paper.
  • His trial became a media spectacle, inspired defenses of free speech, and prompted a failed parliamentary attempt to abolish the blasphemy law.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app