University of Manitoba Press
Unbecoming Nationalism
About this book
Author / Editor information
Helene Vosters is an artist-activist-scholar. She holds a PhD in Theatre and Performance Studies from York University, an MFA in Queer and Activist Performance from the New College of California, and is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow and Project Coordinator with Transforming Stories, Driving Change, a research and performance initiative at McMaster University.
Reviews
"As its enigmatic title proclaims, Vosters’s monograph sets out to problematize all facets of the propaganda that buttress our notions of 'white Canadian settler-colonial nationalism' ... As a performer-activist-researcher, she wants us to participate in unravelling the deadly historic injustices committed against the Indigenous populations that continue to be glossed over in the official versions promoted in the celebrations connected to Canada 150 in 2017."
Tyler Cline:
"By investigating the role that government-funded museums, cultural depictions and memorializations of the military, and the Canadian sesquicentennial celebrations in 2017 play in the inculcation of civic, militarized, and settler-colonial nationalisms, Vosters challenges Canadians to both reflect and act upon the constructed narratives upon which their nation was built. […] At a time when the interrelationship between commemoration, history, and nationalism are at the forefront of many people’s minds, Vosters offers an important exploration of these vital themes. Well-written and passionately argued, Unbecoming Nationalism provides both scholars and the general public with an engaging, forceful study of the power and mutability of nationalism."
Jill Scott:
“Unbecoming Nationalism critiques the ways in which Canadian military history is commemorated and celebrated as a way to establish favourable national mythologies and to silence uncomfortable truths about our past and our present. It also takes on narratives around white settler-colonialism and asserts that Canadians are less inclined to take responsibility for this national reality and asks what real redress would mean.”
Wes D Pearce, Rosalind Kerr, Cam Culham, judges:
"Vosters book challenges the status quo, highlights contemporary performances and sites of performance that offer a counter-narrative to the official performed narrative, furthers recent explorations of architecture as performance, but most importantly challenges, no, insists, that we all do better.”
P. LeClerc:
"Using examples from the Canadian War Museum, the Human Rights Museum, the Highway of Heroes, and the celebration of Canada’s 150th anniversary, Vosters challenges the existing definitions and inclusion/exclusion of Canadian memories and memorials."
Sylvie Vranckx:
“Examines how performance-based genres expose the myths of Canadian innocence and peaceful settlement. Committed to truth-telling, it strives to decolonize Eurocentric binaries between public and private, mind and body, theory and practice, and research and activism.”
Topics
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Front Matter
i -
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Contents
v -
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List of Illustrations
vi -
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Lest we Forget
1 -
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Beyond the Highway of Heroes
29 -
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The Canadian War Museum
70 -
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Unbecoming Canadian Militarism’s Forgetful Narratives
120 -
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The Canadian Museum for Human Rights
154 -
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Unbecoming Canada 150
192 -
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Acknowledgements
219 -
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Notes
223 -
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Bibliography
239 -
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Index
255