Living the Authentic Life at "The Far East of the Western World": Edward Riche’s Rare Birds

As the tourist industry becomes Newfoundland's primary source of income, the identity of Newfoundlanders grows increasingly attached to what Daniel J. Boorstin calls "pseudo-events": i.e., events of dubious validity performed for the benefit of tourist and host, recallsing Jean Baudri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chafe, Paul
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of New Brunswick 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/SCL/article/view/11235
Description
Summary:As the tourist industry becomes Newfoundland's primary source of income, the identity of Newfoundlanders grows increasingly attached to what Daniel J. Boorstin calls "pseudo-events": i.e., events of dubious validity performed for the benefit of tourist and host, recallsing Jean Baudrillard's theorization of the simulacrum. Such "cultural performances," in James Overton's sense, are linked to stereotypes of Newfoundland rusticity and endurance perpetuated by writers like Sandra Gwyn, Patrick Kavanagh, and R.J. Needham. Newfoundland's most subversive writer, Edward Riche, deconstructs this aspect of Newfoundland identity in his work. In particular, his Rare Birds (1997) is an investigation of the pseudo-event and the chaos, dependence, and self-loathing that it fosters within those who stage it.