Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody

This article is about the suicide of the chief of police of a small Canadian town, which - according to some - did not actually happen. While employed as a researcher and writer with a museum in Port Moody, British Columbia, the author heard this story as one of many told by the ‘old-timers’ who as...

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Main Author: Matthew Hayes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2018-01-01
Series:Public History Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/5442
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spelling doaj-a3c474671cc34bbdbafd1852961459b22020-11-24T21:07:57ZengUTS ePRESSPublic History Review1833-49892018-01-012410.5130/phrj.v24i0.54423438Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port MoodyMatthew Hayes0Trent University This article is about the suicide of the chief of police of a small Canadian town, which - according to some - did not actually happen. While employed as a researcher and writer with a museum in Port Moody, British Columbia, the author heard this story as one of many told by the ‘old-timers’ who assisted with the writing of a history book. The controversy over the potential suicide provided the means by which this article reflects on issues of ethics, advocacy, and performance when doing public history. The main request of the old-timers was to ‘put the good stories in’ when writing the book. This expectation caused tension between the author and the museum, reflecting the divide between doing ‘history’ and ‘heritage’. This article draws on Anthropological theories of ‘complicity’ and performance in storytelling to make sense of the author’s role within the context of a museum working to record the stories of long-time residents. The stories of the old-timers were filtered through the lens of early 20th century ideas about gender, race, and class, and affected by a lingering frontier mentality. As such, they wished to see their town’s history told in a very specific way. The story of the police chief’s suicide betrayed this intent, allowing for an analysis of how these expectations can affect the way in which public history is done. https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/5442Canadapublic historyperformancecomplicity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Hayes
spellingShingle Matthew Hayes
Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
Public History Review
Canada
public history
performance
complicity
author_facet Matthew Hayes
author_sort Matthew Hayes
title Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
title_short Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
title_full Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
title_fullStr Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
title_full_unstemmed Causing a Ruckus: Complicity and Performance in Stories of Port Moody
title_sort causing a ruckus: complicity and performance in stories of port moody
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Public History Review
issn 1833-4989
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This article is about the suicide of the chief of police of a small Canadian town, which - according to some - did not actually happen. While employed as a researcher and writer with a museum in Port Moody, British Columbia, the author heard this story as one of many told by the ‘old-timers’ who assisted with the writing of a history book. The controversy over the potential suicide provided the means by which this article reflects on issues of ethics, advocacy, and performance when doing public history. The main request of the old-timers was to ‘put the good stories in’ when writing the book. This expectation caused tension between the author and the museum, reflecting the divide between doing ‘history’ and ‘heritage’. This article draws on Anthropological theories of ‘complicity’ and performance in storytelling to make sense of the author’s role within the context of a museum working to record the stories of long-time residents. The stories of the old-timers were filtered through the lens of early 20th century ideas about gender, race, and class, and affected by a lingering frontier mentality. As such, they wished to see their town’s history told in a very specific way. The story of the police chief’s suicide betrayed this intent, allowing for an analysis of how these expectations can affect the way in which public history is done.
topic Canada
public history
performance
complicity
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/phrj/article/view/5442
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