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Copyright University of Victoria.
$Date: 2020-12-03 12:33:56 -0800 (Thu, 03 Dec 2020) $
$Id: hale_1_21.xml 1043 2020-12-03 20:33:56Z mholmes $
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      <titleStmt>
        <title> <name reg="Armfelt, Richard M.">Armfelt, Richard M.</name>, compiler. <title
          level="m">All I Need Now Are Some Chickens, a Cow, and a Wife</title>. </title>
        <author><name reg="Hale, Christopher" key="hale_christopher">Christopher
          Hale</name></author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Marked up by </resp>
          <name key="holmes_martin" reg="Holmes, Martin">Martin Holmes</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>

      <publicationStmt>
        <p> Marked up to be included in the Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal</p>
      </publicationStmt>

      <sourceDesc>
        <biblStruct>
          <analytic>
            <title level="a"><name reg="Armfelt, Richard M.">Armfelt, Richard M.</name>, compiler.
              <title level="m">All I Need Now Are Some Chickens, a Cow, and a Wife</title>.</title>
            <author><name reg="Hale, Christopher" key="hale_christopher">Christopher
              Hale</name></author>
          </analytic>
          <monogr>
            <title level="j">Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal / Études scandinaves au Canada</title>
            <imprint>
              <biblScope type="vol">21</biblScope>
              <biblScope type="start-page">191</biblScope>
                          <biblScope type="end-page">193</biblScope>
              <date value="2013">2012-2013</date>
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    <profileDesc>
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        <classCode>review</classCode>

        <keywords>
          <list>
            <item>Canadian West</item>
            <item>Delblanc, Sven</item>
            <item>Denmark</item>
            <item>Great Depression</item>
            <item>immigration</item>
            <item>letters</item>
            <item>Sandemose, Aksel</item>
          </list>
        </keywords>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>

    <revisionDesc>
      <list>
        <item> MDH: started markup <date value="2013-01-16">16th January 2013</date> </item>
        <item> MDH: added keywords and one correction from editor <date value="2013-01-25">25th January 2013</date> </item>
        <item>
          MDH: entered editor's proofing corrections 
          <date value="2014-05-23">23rd May 2014</date>
        </item>
      </list>
    </revisionDesc>
  </teiHeader>

  <text>
    <front>
      <docTitle n="All I Need Now Are Some Chickens, a Cow, and a Wife">
        <titlePart type="Main"> <name reg="Armfelt, Richard M.">Armfelt, Richard M.</name>, compiler.
          <title level="m">All I Need Now Are Some Chickens, a Cow, and a Wife</title>. </titlePart>
        <titlePart type="ReviewedBook"> <listBibl>
          <bibl><author><name reg="Armfelt, Richard M.">Armfelt, Richard M.</name></author>, compiler. 
            <date value="2009">2009</date>.
          <title level="m">All I Need Now Are Some Chickens, a Cow, and a Wife</title>.
            <pubPlace>Victoria</pubPlace>: <publisher>Island Blue/Printorium Bookworks</publisher>.
            <biblScope type="pages">368 pages</biblScope>.
            <note type="ISBN">ISBN: 978-0981070605.</note>
          </bibl>
          </listBibl> </titlePart>
      </docTitle>

      <docAuthor><name reg="Hale, Christopher" key="hale_christopher">Christopher Hale</name> is
        Professor of Scandinavian Languages and Literature in the Department of Modern Languages and
        Cultural Studies at the University of Alberta and is head of the Scandinavian Program there.
        Regularly he teaches courses in Norwegian language and Scandinavian philology, literature
        and culture and civilization. He has published books and articles on Norwegian place names,
        Icelandic onomastics, the Norwegian/Danish writer Aksel Sandemose and Danish, Icelandic and
        Swedish immigration to Canada. <!--E-mail: <xptr to="not@yet" type="email"/>.   --> </docAuthor>
      <titlePart type="short_affil">University of Alberta</titlePart>
    </front>

    <body>
      <div0>
        <p>The book is primarily a series of letters written from Canada by a Dane, Hans Armfelt, to
          members of his family in Denmark from the late 1920s to World War II and compiled by his
          son, Richard M. Armfelt. These letters had been saved by Hansʼs sister Ella and brought to
          Canada in 1985, later to come into the possession of Richard. According to the Preface at
          the beginning of the book it took fifteen years to have them translated from Danish into
          English. They chronicle the period that began several years before Hans left Denmark in
          1928 and continued through the Great Depression in the 1930s when he lived near the town
          of Athabasca in northern Alberta.</p>

        <p>Itʼs not stated specifically why Hans went to Canada, although at the time Canada was the
          only place in North America open to immigration after the United States started closing
          its doors in 1921. In addition, the railway companies such as the Canadian Pacific Railway
          were heavily promoting Canada in Denmark as the best place to immigrate, especially the
          western part.</p>

        <p>Hans started working for various farmers in the Penhold area of Alberta and then became a
          house painter in Calgary. During the summer of 1929 he travelled around the province a bit
          and even joined the Canadian army for twelve days. After making a little money doing
          harvest work in southern Alberta, he used what he had earned to drive with his friend Alex
          up to the Peace River region of Alberta and British Columbia. In Edmonton Hans and Alex
          talked to some Swedes who had a farm near Athabasca and said there was still homestead
          land to be had there. In October 1929 they both moved up to Athabasca where Alex
          immediately bought a homestead. On July 12, 1930 Hans wrote home to his parents that he
          too had acquired a homestead. The letters go on to talk about his building a house in the
          wilderness, getting married to his wife Helen, the birth of his first son (the compiler of
          the letters) in 1934 and his second son in 1938. By December 1939 Hans had finally become
          a Canadian citizen. The last letter to his family in the series was written on January 8,
          1940, several months before the German invasion of Denmark on April 9, 1940. </p>

        <p>There follow three notes from Albert Svane, Ellaʼs husband, written on Danish Red Cross
          forms, as well as the notes that Hans wrote in reply on the reverse sides. These contain
          primarily platitudes as they had to pass through censors both to and from Denmark. One
          note from Albert, dated March 31, 1942, has at least two words excised from it. A final
          note, this one not by Hans, answers request from Ella to the Danish Red Cross concerning a
          search for her brother. This informs her that the Canadian Red Cross has received a
          message stating that everything is fine with him and his family. Then there is a short
          account of the experiences of Bode Armfelt, Hansʼs brother, in the Danish resistance
          during World War II. The book closes with an Epilogue that comprises a brief update to the
          history of Hans Armfelt up until his death in 1985, followed by a short biographical
          sketch of Dick Armfelt, the son of Hans and compiler of this volume. Interspersed
          throughout the text are photographs of family and friends taken by Hans over the years
          which had been sent to his family in his letters to Denmark.</p>

        <p>Probably the most interesting aspect of the letters comprising this book is the picture
          they give of life in northern Alberta during the Great Depression of the 1930s. They show
          that to survive in northern Alberta at that time a person had to live off the land. In the
          southern part of the province it was extremely dry during these years with frequent crop
          failures, and to survive off the land there was virtually impossible. But in the Athabasca
          district where Hans lived the situation was quite different. There was no drought there.
          In spite of its location in the far northern part of the province, conditions were in fact
          very favourable for agriculture during the 1930s. To be sure there was no wealth, as such,
          but no one went hungry. If a person grew his own crops he would have more than enough food
          to live on, and he could build his own shelter.</p>

        <p>The book is somewhat reminiscent of the works of two other Scandinavian writers who deal
          with Canada—Aksel Sandemose and Sven Delblanc. Sandemose kept a detailed day-by-day diary
          of his experiences in the country from his arrival in Montreal at the beginning of
          September 1927 to his departure from Halifax in February of 1928. Travelling through
          Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, he visited primarily Danish settlements on the
          prairies during his trip. He used a lot of material from his diary both for articles he
          wrote for <title level="j">Berlingske Tidende</title> and other periodicals and in his
          first novel set in Canada, <title level="m">Ross Dane</title>.</p>

        <p>Some of what Hans describes about prairie Canada in his letters written before the onset
          of the depression mirrors Sandemoseʼs experiences. Upon arrival in Canada it appears as
          though Hans, like Sandemose, discovered the only place where there was a real need for
          workers was on farms in the spring, summer and especially in the fall during the busy
          harvest season. Hans comments on the food on the Canadian farms as being good and most
          ample. Sandemose does so as well. Both men describe the hard work and the long working day
          from four or five in the morning to nine or later in the evening. The howling of the
          coyotes is also mentioned by both and the intense cold during the winter. They each talk
          about hunting muskrats. </p>

        <p>There are also similarities in the book to the experiences of the two main characters,
          Fredrik and Maria, in Sven Delblancʼs <title level="m">Kanaans land</title>, set during
          the depression. As in Sandemoseʼs articles the bitter cold winters are described in both
          Delblancʼs novel and Hansʼs letters with Hans even drawing pictures of thermometres in
          both Celsius and Fahrenheit marked for comparison. The drop in grain prices during the
          depression is followed quite regularly in both Hansʼs letters and Delblancʼs account in
          his novel. Delblanc describes the migration of people from the south escaping the drought,
          and Hans does the same, while also including pictures he has taken of the migrants. </p>

        <p>Unlike Maria and to a certain extent Fredrik, Hans is very optimistic. He accepts life
          and his situation as it is, almost never complaining. In fact it appears that he is very
          happy and contented during the whole of the depression up to the start of World War
          II.</p>

        <p>For this reason I feel the book contributes to a realistic understanding of what everyday
          life was like in Northern Alberta in the 1930s. It also gives a picture of the period
          during the Great Depression from a different perspective than is usually done, not
          stressing the negative aspects of the hard times. Thus I would recommend anyone interested
          in the history and culture of Alberta and the Canadian west to read this informative
          collection of letters. </p>

      </div0>

    </body>

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