A History of Canadian Culture

From Dorset sculpture to traveling circuses to the Barenaked Ladies, award-winning historian Jonathan Vance reveals a storyteller's ear for narrative. In a country of unparalleled diversity, "culture" has many different shades of importance and meaning. A stranded Innu woman found by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vance, Jonathan F.
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship@Western 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/historypub/154
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spelling ftunivwestonta:oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:historypub-1309 2023-10-01T03:53:55+02:00 A History of Canadian Culture Vance, Jonathan F. 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/historypub/154 unknown Scholarship@Western https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/historypub/154 History Publications Canada Culture Society History book 2009 ftunivwestonta 2023-09-03T07:15:26Z From Dorset sculpture to traveling circuses to the Barenaked Ladies, award-winning historian Jonathan Vance reveals a storyteller's ear for narrative. In a country of unparalleled diversity, "culture" has many different shades of importance and meaning. A stranded Innu woman found by eighteenth-century explorers in the wind-swept Arctic took the time to decorate her clothing with rich designs. The explorers were taken aback; but Vance informs us that the Inuit word meaning "to make poetry" is the same as the word for "breathe"; and both derive from the word for "the soul." Unsurprisingly, Aboriginal culture began to change with the arrival of more Europeans (who brought their own ideas about culture) in one of the many complicated and intertwined tales that Vance weaves together to explore Canada's cultural history. Vance considers other key issues. Where, for example, is the divide between "culture" and mass entertainment? He describes plays created by sailors trapped in an ice-bound ship through the Arctic winter; "occasionally lewd" tavern music; an early version of Macbeth with a Monty Pythonesque twist--in Canada, so-called high and low culture have coexisted uneasily, and intermingled creatively. Vance reveals that the hot-button cultural issues we all know and love--government funding for the arts, the cultural brain drain, the drive to preserve distinctly Canadian forms of expression, concerns over copyright protection, the economic impact of cultural industries--can be traced back to previous centuries. Taking into account both the past and modern developments, such as the thriving culture of Quebec and the evolution of the CBC, Vance addresses one of the quintessential anxieties of Canadians--where, and what, is our culture? Book Arctic inuit The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western Arctic Canada Vance ENVELOPE(-139.567,-139.567,-75.467,-75.467)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
op_collection_id ftunivwestonta
language unknown
topic Canada
Culture
Society
History
spellingShingle Canada
Culture
Society
History
Vance, Jonathan F.
A History of Canadian Culture
topic_facet Canada
Culture
Society
History
description From Dorset sculpture to traveling circuses to the Barenaked Ladies, award-winning historian Jonathan Vance reveals a storyteller's ear for narrative. In a country of unparalleled diversity, "culture" has many different shades of importance and meaning. A stranded Innu woman found by eighteenth-century explorers in the wind-swept Arctic took the time to decorate her clothing with rich designs. The explorers were taken aback; but Vance informs us that the Inuit word meaning "to make poetry" is the same as the word for "breathe"; and both derive from the word for "the soul." Unsurprisingly, Aboriginal culture began to change with the arrival of more Europeans (who brought their own ideas about culture) in one of the many complicated and intertwined tales that Vance weaves together to explore Canada's cultural history. Vance considers other key issues. Where, for example, is the divide between "culture" and mass entertainment? He describes plays created by sailors trapped in an ice-bound ship through the Arctic winter; "occasionally lewd" tavern music; an early version of Macbeth with a Monty Pythonesque twist--in Canada, so-called high and low culture have coexisted uneasily, and intermingled creatively. Vance reveals that the hot-button cultural issues we all know and love--government funding for the arts, the cultural brain drain, the drive to preserve distinctly Canadian forms of expression, concerns over copyright protection, the economic impact of cultural industries--can be traced back to previous centuries. Taking into account both the past and modern developments, such as the thriving culture of Quebec and the evolution of the CBC, Vance addresses one of the quintessential anxieties of Canadians--where, and what, is our culture?
format Book
author Vance, Jonathan F.
author_facet Vance, Jonathan F.
author_sort Vance, Jonathan F.
title A History of Canadian Culture
title_short A History of Canadian Culture
title_full A History of Canadian Culture
title_fullStr A History of Canadian Culture
title_full_unstemmed A History of Canadian Culture
title_sort history of canadian culture
publisher Scholarship@Western
publishDate 2009
url https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/historypub/154
long_lat ENVELOPE(-139.567,-139.567,-75.467,-75.467)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Vance
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Vance
genre Arctic
inuit
genre_facet Arctic
inuit
op_source History Publications
op_relation https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/historypub/154
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