Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage

In the 1920s Canadian colonialism became domesticated; a political and economic change was publically presented and mystified through the creation of a professedly nationalist landscape mythology. In the words of A.Y. Jackson, Canada needed “a new, modern landscape art tradition, for a new modern na...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anderson, Daryl
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Laurentian University of Sudbury 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2567
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spelling ftlaurentian:oai:zone.biblio.laurentian.ca:10219/2567 2023-08-20T04:07:36+02:00 Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage Anderson, Daryl 2015-06-15 application/pdf https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2567 en eng Laurentian University of Sudbury https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2567 Canadian landscape art politics Northwest Passage internal colonization cultural tourism eco-tourism Thesis 2015 ftlaurentian 2023-07-31T10:21:04Z In the 1920s Canadian colonialism became domesticated; a political and economic change was publically presented and mystified through the creation of a professedly nationalist landscape mythology. In the words of A.Y. Jackson, Canada needed “a new, modern landscape art tradition, for a new modern nation.” According to Jonathan Bordo, such colonial myths of origins have served to supplant aboriginal peoples by establishing a precolonial belief of “ terra nullius,” which was later enforced by the removal of visual and cultural references to aboriginal cultures and peoples, rendering their historic and contemporary presence invisible to colonizers. In Canada, however, a second modern art tradition interceded. Even as the Group of Seven’s interpretation of the Canadian landscape became definitive, Robert Flaherty’s Nanook of the North rose to acclaim as well. Flaherty’s devotion to the idea (also borne of Europe) that morally uncorrupted pre-modern landscape essentialist communities existed in protective isolation would re-implant certain aboriginal peoples back into the Canadian landscape imaginary, but on particularly disadvantageous terms. Farley Mowat’s mid-Century reconfiguration of these two landscape art traditions as rhetoric continues to define Canadian understandings of the political relations between aboriginal and non-aboriginal peoples, as well as the Canadian understanding of political claims and relations between mainstream Canadians and their government(s) and internally colonized peoples. Since the closure of the two historic economic engines along the Northwest Passage, sealing and the cod fishery, in the mid 1980’s and early 1990s respectively, the turn to cultural and eco-tourism based economies has resulted in the wide promotion of images founded in Mowat’s reimagined history of Inuit and Newfoundlanders. Cultural and eco-tourism have, in turn, led to a drive to conformity with Mowat’s visions in Northwest Passage communities, which have resulted in both processes of cultural selection, and ... Thesis inuit Northwest passage LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University Canada Farley ENVELOPE(-152.500,-152.500,-86.583,-86.583) Northwest Passage
institution Open Polar
collection LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University
op_collection_id ftlaurentian
language English
topic Canadian landscape
art politics
Northwest Passage
internal colonization
cultural tourism
eco-tourism
spellingShingle Canadian landscape
art politics
Northwest Passage
internal colonization
cultural tourism
eco-tourism
Anderson, Daryl
Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
topic_facet Canadian landscape
art politics
Northwest Passage
internal colonization
cultural tourism
eco-tourism
description In the 1920s Canadian colonialism became domesticated; a political and economic change was publically presented and mystified through the creation of a professedly nationalist landscape mythology. In the words of A.Y. Jackson, Canada needed “a new, modern landscape art tradition, for a new modern nation.” According to Jonathan Bordo, such colonial myths of origins have served to supplant aboriginal peoples by establishing a precolonial belief of “ terra nullius,” which was later enforced by the removal of visual and cultural references to aboriginal cultures and peoples, rendering their historic and contemporary presence invisible to colonizers. In Canada, however, a second modern art tradition interceded. Even as the Group of Seven’s interpretation of the Canadian landscape became definitive, Robert Flaherty’s Nanook of the North rose to acclaim as well. Flaherty’s devotion to the idea (also borne of Europe) that morally uncorrupted pre-modern landscape essentialist communities existed in protective isolation would re-implant certain aboriginal peoples back into the Canadian landscape imaginary, but on particularly disadvantageous terms. Farley Mowat’s mid-Century reconfiguration of these two landscape art traditions as rhetoric continues to define Canadian understandings of the political relations between aboriginal and non-aboriginal peoples, as well as the Canadian understanding of political claims and relations between mainstream Canadians and their government(s) and internally colonized peoples. Since the closure of the two historic economic engines along the Northwest Passage, sealing and the cod fishery, in the mid 1980’s and early 1990s respectively, the turn to cultural and eco-tourism based economies has resulted in the wide promotion of images founded in Mowat’s reimagined history of Inuit and Newfoundlanders. Cultural and eco-tourism have, in turn, led to a drive to conformity with Mowat’s visions in Northwest Passage communities, which have resulted in both processes of cultural selection, and ...
format Thesis
author Anderson, Daryl
author_facet Anderson, Daryl
author_sort Anderson, Daryl
title Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
title_short Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
title_full Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
title_fullStr Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
title_full_unstemmed Visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the Canadian Northwest Passage
title_sort visual art discourses as rhetoric: exploring the colonial creation of the canadian northwest passage
publisher Laurentian University of Sudbury
publishDate 2015
url https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2567
long_lat ENVELOPE(-152.500,-152.500,-86.583,-86.583)
geographic Canada
Farley
Northwest Passage
geographic_facet Canada
Farley
Northwest Passage
genre inuit
Northwest passage
genre_facet inuit
Northwest passage
op_relation https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/2567
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