Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture

In the cultural upheaval of the 1920s, Canadians became particularly invested in looking at and debating women???s images in public. This dissertation looks at how English-Canadians debated, accepted, and challenged modernity through public images of women. In analysing the debates over cultural...

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Main Author: Nicholas, Jane
Language:en
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2636
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-26362014-06-18T03:51:12Z Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture Nicholas, Jane visual culture canadian history body history gender history In the cultural upheaval of the 1920s, Canadians became particularly invested in looking at and debating women???s images in public. This dissertation looks at how English-Canadians debated, accepted, and challenged modernity through public images of women. In analysing the debates over cultural rituals of looking it seeks to show how the discussions about images reveal the power of vision in ordering and understanding modernity as well as social and cultural changes. Through five case studies on the flapper, the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation, two beauty contests, an art exhibition including nudes, and the relationship between film and automobiles this study reveals how important images of the body were to the cultural developments and debates on the post-World War One modern world. By the 1920s urban visual culture was dominated by various images of women and an analysis of those images and the debates around them reveal underlying tensions related to gender, class, age, social order, and race. Anxieties over changes in these areas were absorbed into the broader concerns over the pleasures and perils associated with being modern. This dissertation looks at Canadian visual culture in terms of what it can reveal about modernity and the problems, perils, and pleasures associated with it. 2007-01-05T14:44:41Z 2007-01-05T14:44:41Z 2007-01-05T14:44:41Z 2006 Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2636 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic visual culture
canadian history
body history
gender history
spellingShingle visual culture
canadian history
body history
gender history
Nicholas, Jane
Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
description In the cultural upheaval of the 1920s, Canadians became particularly invested in looking at and debating women???s images in public. This dissertation looks at how English-Canadians debated, accepted, and challenged modernity through public images of women. In analysing the debates over cultural rituals of looking it seeks to show how the discussions about images reveal the power of vision in ordering and understanding modernity as well as social and cultural changes. Through five case studies on the flapper, the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation, two beauty contests, an art exhibition including nudes, and the relationship between film and automobiles this study reveals how important images of the body were to the cultural developments and debates on the post-World War One modern world. By the 1920s urban visual culture was dominated by various images of women and an analysis of those images and the debates around them reveal underlying tensions related to gender, class, age, social order, and race. Anxieties over changes in these areas were absorbed into the broader concerns over the pleasures and perils associated with being modern. This dissertation looks at Canadian visual culture in terms of what it can reveal about modernity and the problems, perils, and pleasures associated with it.
author Nicholas, Jane
author_facet Nicholas, Jane
author_sort Nicholas, Jane
title Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
title_short Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
title_full Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
title_fullStr Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
title_full_unstemmed Catching the Public Eye: The Body, Space, and Social Order in 1920s Canadian Visual Culture
title_sort catching the public eye: the body, space, and social order in 1920s canadian visual culture
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2636
work_keys_str_mv AT nicholasjane catchingthepubliceyethebodyspaceandsocialorderin1920scanadianvisualculture
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