DIVERSE
COMMUNITIES

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COMMUNITY
STORIES

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ORAL HISTORY
INTERVIEWS

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MAPS &
PLACES

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SOCIETY &
CULTURE

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WORKING
LIFE

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RESOURCES
& TOOLS

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Jim Selby is a lifelong labour activist and author of left-wing publications. He was research and communications director at the Alberta Federation of Labour for ten years and subsequently research director for fifteen years.

His interview describes growing up in Jasper Place, after his family moved from Devon in 1965.

He discovered a regular, working-class place much like Devon, with its own rules, boundaries and mythological heroes, dispelling rumours that it was a dangerous place.

Hillcrest Junior High

He completed his schooling, first in Hillcrest Junior High, situated in a relatively wealthy enclave, which he contrasts with the working-class culture in Jasper Place Composite High School. He critically analyzes the classification system in the school which differentiated vocational stream students from academic stream students.

The area around the Meadowlark Shopping Centre as construction began in 1962. The Starlite Drive-in is visible in the lower right corner.
Courtesy of the City of Edmonton Archives, 1962Aerial_Line12_No.488-13.

Selby discusses his part-time jobs, first at Agnew-Surpass and then the Starlite Drive-In, both supplying spending money needed by a working-class teenager.

He describes the public transit system he used daily, as well as the relatively affordable access to university at that time.

Jasper Place trolley bus. Courtesy of the City of Edmonton Archives, EA-773-1

Selby discusses his early attraction to radical political thought, including the trade union movement, and its growth while living in a co-op house where the alternate newspaper Poundmaker was published.