The book offered to the reader examines the issue of durability and viability of local Ukrainian ethnicity in Canadian everyday life at the time of the active restoration of transnational ties of Ukrainians at the end of the 20th century. The monograph is based on materials collected by the author over the course of five years (1997—2001) during various ethnographic studies, both in the area of ​​a compact settlement of Ukrainians in the province of Alberta and the village of Manderi in particular, and in the village of Hrytsevolya, Lviv region, which at the beginning of the last century became one of the sources of peasant migration to Mander.Considering from an anthropological point of view the place of local ethnic identity in the life of an average community in a developed society, the author offers the reader a detailed ethnographic excursion into the life of a small town in Western Canada at the end of the 20th century. and invites you to immerse yourself in this environment and experience various aspects of its Ukrainianness. 
    For scientists, students, teachers and everyone who is interested in the contemporary manifestations of Ukrainian culture in the world.