Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art

Hockey is a symbol for inclusivity, exclusivity, and subsequently Canadian identity in Canadian art. In this proposal, which draws from my research for the upcoming exhibition at the Art Gallery of Windsor, Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art, I will consider a postco...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship at UWindsor 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/racesportsymposium/rscday2/sep28/3
_version_ 1821514875133755392
author Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr.
author_facet Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr.
author_sort Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr.
collection University of Windsor, Ontario: Scholarship at UWindsor
description Hockey is a symbol for inclusivity, exclusivity, and subsequently Canadian identity in Canadian art. In this proposal, which draws from my research for the upcoming exhibition at the Art Gallery of Windsor, Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art, I will consider a postcolonial and feminist investigation into the sport, and the culture that the sport perpetuates. Embedded within my research on cultural diversity and the feminist body, this paper will draw upon hockey as a metaphorical and mythological connotation for the ways in which a national identity is constructed and understood in Canadian popular culture. In keeping with Benedict Anderson’s 1983 claim that nations are social constructions that perpetuate "imagined communities," hockey, in Canada has come to perpetuate an imagined national identity. Through works of art by Canadian contemporary artists, such as Judy Anderson, Jim Logan, Lisa Lipton, Clifford Maracle, Brian Jungen, Robert Bozak, Diana Thorneycroft, Wanda Koop, Aganetha Dyck, and Barrie Jones, the many myths surrounding hockey will be the subject of critical debate. With reference to the sport's history, spirituality in First Nations communities and culture, and the notion that hockey represents an imperialist conquest, artists will offer new perspectives on the sport; its history of exclusivity, and its misconceived contributions to Canadian identity. Through a feminist lens, the inherent patriarchy that continues to frame hockey will be destabilized through material investigations of hockey equipment, representations of the game and portraits of hockey icons. After all, let's not forget that women play hockey too!
format Text
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
geographic Benedict
Canada
Clifford
geographic_facet Benedict
Canada
Clifford
id ftunivwindsor:oai:scholar.uwindsor.ca:racesportsymposium-1004
institution Open Polar
language unknown
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.585,-66.585,-66.157,-66.157)
ENVELOPE(-63.167,-63.167,-70.467,-70.467)
op_collection_id ftunivwindsor
op_relation https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/racesportsymposium/rscday2/sep28/3
op_source Telling the Stories of Race and Sports in Canada
publishDate 2018
publisher Scholarship at UWindsor
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwindsor:oai:scholar.uwindsor.ca:racesportsymposium-1004 2025-01-16T21:56:33+00:00 Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr. 2018-09-28T17:15:00Z https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/racesportsymposium/rscday2/sep28/3 unknown Scholarship at UWindsor https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/racesportsymposium/rscday2/sep28/3 Telling the Stories of Race and Sports in Canada History Kinesiology Social History text 2018 ftunivwindsor 2023-05-06T19:06:44Z Hockey is a symbol for inclusivity, exclusivity, and subsequently Canadian identity in Canadian art. In this proposal, which draws from my research for the upcoming exhibition at the Art Gallery of Windsor, Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art, I will consider a postcolonial and feminist investigation into the sport, and the culture that the sport perpetuates. Embedded within my research on cultural diversity and the feminist body, this paper will draw upon hockey as a metaphorical and mythological connotation for the ways in which a national identity is constructed and understood in Canadian popular culture. In keeping with Benedict Anderson’s 1983 claim that nations are social constructions that perpetuate "imagined communities," hockey, in Canada has come to perpetuate an imagined national identity. Through works of art by Canadian contemporary artists, such as Judy Anderson, Jim Logan, Lisa Lipton, Clifford Maracle, Brian Jungen, Robert Bozak, Diana Thorneycroft, Wanda Koop, Aganetha Dyck, and Barrie Jones, the many myths surrounding hockey will be the subject of critical debate. With reference to the sport's history, spirituality in First Nations communities and culture, and the notion that hockey represents an imperialist conquest, artists will offer new perspectives on the sport; its history of exclusivity, and its misconceived contributions to Canadian identity. Through a feminist lens, the inherent patriarchy that continues to frame hockey will be destabilized through material investigations of hockey equipment, representations of the game and portraits of hockey icons. After all, let's not forget that women play hockey too! Text First Nations University of Windsor, Ontario: Scholarship at UWindsor Benedict ENVELOPE(-66.585,-66.585,-66.157,-66.157) Canada Clifford ENVELOPE(-63.167,-63.167,-70.467,-70.467)
spellingShingle History
Kinesiology
Social History
Meloche, Jaclyn A, Dr.
Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title_full Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title_fullStr Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title_full_unstemmed Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title_short Deicing/Decolonizing: Hockey Histories in Canadian Contemporary Art
title_sort deicing/decolonizing: hockey histories in canadian contemporary art
topic History
Kinesiology
Social History
topic_facet History
Kinesiology
Social History
url https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/racesportsymposium/rscday2/sep28/3