Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction

Following Jane Tompkins' proposal in West of Everything that the cowboy generates his sense of self by opposing eastern centres as well as migrating across prairie landscape, and Dick Harrison's suggestion in Unnamed Country that Canadian prairie writing has developed no such figure, I cho...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wiebe, Reginald G. D.
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8044
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/8044 2023-06-18T03:40:38+02:00 Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction Wiebe, Reginald G. D. 2008 6672119 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8044 eng eng (Sirsi) a1891624 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8044 open access master thesis 2008 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:44:50Z Following Jane Tompkins' proposal in West of Everything that the cowboy generates his sense of self by opposing eastern centres as well as migrating across prairie landscape, and Dick Harrison's suggestion in Unnamed Country that Canadian prairie writing has developed no such figure, I choose to examine the impact of the (predominantly) American cowboy on Canadian prairie fiction. The conflicting dynamics of Harold Innis' Laurentian Thesis, which states that Canadian culture and identity were imported from the east, and Frederick Turner's Frontier Thesis, arguing that American identity is generated on the new frontier, provide means to interrogate the ways in which the cowboy represents and reveals different aspects of Canadian identity than can be found through the comparable law-making figure of the Mountie. The cowboy opposes the Laurentian Thesis, but, I argue, does not simply translate the Frontier Thesis to Canada. I track the ways the cowboy inflects Canadian prairie life - through the lenses of gender, of national selfhood, and of First Nations identity - by examining the writing of Sinclair Ross, Guy Vanderhaeghe, and Thomas King. Master Thesis First Nations MSpace at the University of Manitoba Canada Sinclair ENVELOPE(-63.883,-63.883,-65.733,-65.733)
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collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
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language English
description Following Jane Tompkins' proposal in West of Everything that the cowboy generates his sense of self by opposing eastern centres as well as migrating across prairie landscape, and Dick Harrison's suggestion in Unnamed Country that Canadian prairie writing has developed no such figure, I choose to examine the impact of the (predominantly) American cowboy on Canadian prairie fiction. The conflicting dynamics of Harold Innis' Laurentian Thesis, which states that Canadian culture and identity were imported from the east, and Frederick Turner's Frontier Thesis, arguing that American identity is generated on the new frontier, provide means to interrogate the ways in which the cowboy represents and reveals different aspects of Canadian identity than can be found through the comparable law-making figure of the Mountie. The cowboy opposes the Laurentian Thesis, but, I argue, does not simply translate the Frontier Thesis to Canada. I track the ways the cowboy inflects Canadian prairie life - through the lenses of gender, of national selfhood, and of First Nations identity - by examining the writing of Sinclair Ross, Guy Vanderhaeghe, and Thomas King.
format Master Thesis
author Wiebe, Reginald G. D.
spellingShingle Wiebe, Reginald G. D.
Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
author_facet Wiebe, Reginald G. D.
author_sort Wiebe, Reginald G. D.
title Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
title_short Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
title_full Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
title_fullStr Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
title_full_unstemmed Crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in Canadian prairie fiction
title_sort crossing the medicine line : the cowboy in canadian prairie fiction
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8044
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.883,-63.883,-65.733,-65.733)
geographic Canada
Sinclair
geographic_facet Canada
Sinclair
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation (Sirsi) a1891624
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/8044
op_rights open access
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