<p>Canadians have demonstrated a remarkable sense of unity about protection of their "cultural industries" during the continuing national debate over free trade. This study of the effect of American popular culture on Canada is therefore particularly relevant.</p>
Beaver Bites Back?
β Scribed by David H. Flaherty; Frank E. Manning
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 378
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The contributing authors explore three aspects of American culture: its transmission by means of print and broadcast media and through live events in sport, entertainment, religious evangelism, and other public productions; its influence on Canadian popular culture; and the variety of Canadian responses. They suggest that the Canadian version of American popular culture is far more than a copy. Instead, it is frequently a creative response - often parodic in tone and subversive in intent - that gives public expression to Canadian sentiment and sensibility and provides protection from, and resistance to, American domination. Ironically, it may be in responding to American culture that Canadian sovereignty finds its most meaningful and potent articulation. Specialists and scholars from a wide variety of disciplines, the contributors discuss a range of cultural forms and performances. Each example, while "made in Canada," is related to an American alternative but has a large Canadian audience. Taking a rich variety of perspectives on this complex relationship, The Beaver Bites Back? demands that Canadian popular culture be accorded its proper status. The contributors are G. Stuart Adam, Michael M. Ames, Robert Knight Barney, Seth Feldman, Bruce Feldhusen, David H. Flaherty, Reid Gilbert, Andrew Lyons, Harriet Lyons, John MacAloon, Frank E. Manning, Thelma McCormack, Mary Jane Miller, Bernard Ostry, Charline Poirier, Paul Rutherford, Robert A. Stebbins, Michael Taft, Geoffrey Wall, and Andrew Wernick.
β¦ Table of Contents
Frontmatter
Preface (page xi)
Contributors (page xvii)
Abbreviations (page xxi)
1 Reversible Resistance: Canadian Popular Culture and the American Other (FRANK E. MANNING, page 3)
PART ONE COMMUNICATIONS AND CULTURAL PENETRATION (page 29)
2 American Culture in a Changing World (BERNARD OSTRY, page 33)
3 Awakening from the National Broadcasting Dream: Rethinking Television Regulation for National Cultural Goals (BRUCE FELDTHUSEN, page 42)
4 Broadcasting and Canadian Culture: A Commentary (G. STUART ADAM, page 75)
5 A Sweet Hope of Glory in My Soul: Television Evangelism in the United States and Canada (ANDREW LYONS AND HARRIET LYONS, page 88)
6 Inflecting the Formula: The First Seasons of Street Legal and L.A. Law (MARY JANE MILLER, page 104)
PART TWO AMERICAN SPORTS AND CANADIAN SOCIETY (page 123)
7 Popular Cultures of Olympic Sport in Canada and the United States (JOHN J. MACALOON, page 126)
8 Whose National Pastime? Baseball in Canadian Popular Culture (ROBERT KNIGHT BARNEY, page 152)
9 Ambivalence at the Fifty-five-Yard Line: Transformation and Resistance in Canadian Football (ROBERT A. STEBBINS, page 163)
PART THREE STAGE, SCREEN, AND SOUNDTRACK (page 175)
10 Mounties, Muggings, and Moose: Canadian Icons in a Landscape of American Violence (REID GILBERT, page 178)
11 Syncretizing Sound: The Emergence of Canadian Popular Music (MICHAEL TAFT, page 197)
12 Our House, Their House: Canadian Cinema's Coming of Age (SETH FELDMAN, page 209)
13 Wives, Whores, and Priests: Gender Relations and Narrative Voices in Two Quebecois Traditions (CHARLINE POIRIER, page 222)
PART FOUR MERCHANDISING CULTURE (page 235)
14 The Canadianization of an American Fair: The Case of Expo 86 (MICHAEL M. AMES, page 237)
15 Culture for Sale: American Dollars Preferred (GEOFFREY WALL, page 247)
PART FIVE REFLECTIONS (page 257)
16 Made in America: The Problem of Mass Culture in Canada (PAUL RUTHERFORD, page 260)
17 American Popular Culture and the Canadian State: The Case of Pornography (THELMA McCORMACK, page 281)
18 American Popular Culture in Canada: Trends and Reflections (ANDREW WERNICK, page 293)
Notes (page 303)
Index (page 347)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<div>The contributing authors explore three aspects of American culture: its transmission by means of print and broadcast media and through live events in sport, entertainment, religious evangelism, and other public productions; its influence on Canadian popular culture; and the variety of Canadian
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