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Visibly Canadian : imaging collective identities in the Canadas, 1820-1910 / Karen Stanworth.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Stanworth, Karen, 1955- author.
Series:
McGill-Queen's/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation studies in art history.
McGill-Queen's/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation studies in art history ; [15]
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Art and society--Québec (Province)--History--19th century--Case studies.
Art and society.
Art and society--Ontario--History--19th century--Case studies.
Popular culture--Québec (Province)--History--19th century--Case studies.
Popular culture.
Popular culture--Ontario--History--19th century--Case studies.
Group identity--Québec (Province)--History--19th century--Case studies.
Group identity.
Group identity--Ontario--History--19th century--Case studies.
Québec (Province)--Social life and customs--19th century--Case studies.
Québec (Province).
Ontario--Social life and customs--19th century--Case studies.
Ontario.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (485 p.)
Distribution:
Ottawa, Ontario : Canadian Electronic Library, 2014.
Place of Publication:
Montreal [Quebec] ; Kingston [Ontario] : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2014]
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Spectacular, scientific, and educational cultural practices were used to establish and define public identities in the British colonies of nineteenth-century Canada. In Visibly Canadian, Karen Stanworth argues that visual representations were the era's primary mode of expressing identity, and shows how the citizenry of Quebec and Ontario was - or was not - represented in the visual culture of the time. Through nine case studies, each representing key moments of identity formation and contestation, Stanworth investigates how a broad range of cultural phenomena, from fine arts to institutional histories to public spectacles, were used to order, resist, and articulate identities within specific social and economic contexts. The negotiation and planning underpinning civic culture are evident in rare moments of compromise such as the surprising proposal from the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society to merge their annual parade with the celebration of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897. Equally astounding is the scale of nineteenth-century public spectacles; reenactments of Victorian scenes of war often attracted crowds of upwards of 10,000 people. Illustrated with over fifty images, many unseen for over a century, Visibly Canadian establishes the extraordinary significance of artwork and public spectacles in cutting across language, religion, and class to tell stories of nationhood, belonging, and difference.
Contents:
Introduction: Visual Culture: Practices and Methodologies
Part one Visibly Ordered: Mid-Nineteenth-Century Museums and the Colonial Order of Things. A Picture of Quebec: Artifacts of Civilization
A Laboratory of Learning: The Educational Museum, Visual Culture, and Citizenship in Canada West
Whose Lessons? Subjects of the Colonial Archive
Part Two Visibly Public: Spectacularizing Social Identities in Victorian Canada. Staging a Siege: Or, the Cultural Politics of Re-Producing Modern History
Bilingual Memories: A Souvenir of the Diamond Jubilee in Quebec City, 1897
"The Body Corporate Gets a Wriggle On": The Civic Parade in Montreal, 1897
Part Three Visibly Related: Small Group Portraiture and the Display of the Social Self. "Born with a Silver Spoon and Fork": Photographic Testimonies of Acculturation, Montreal, 1873
The Family Portrait: Portrait of the Artist as a Successful Man
Visual Rhetoric: Storytelling, History, and Identity in a Portrait of Three Friends
Postscript.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 417-448) and index.
ISBN:
0-7735-9693-3
OCLC:
1100362132

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