"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse
Social historians have identified in late nineteenth-century English Canada a passion for social reform, largely initiated and organized by white, middle-class, Protestant Canadians, and designed to teach Canadian society greater compassion, equality, and humanity. Responding to the changes wroug...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Others |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
|
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4796 |
id |
ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-4796 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-47962018-01-05T17:32:11Z "Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse Fiamengo, Janice Anne Social historians have identified in late nineteenth-century English Canada a passion for social reform, largely initiated and organized by white, middle-class, Protestant Canadians, and designed to teach Canadian society greater compassion, equality, and humanity. Responding to the changes wrought in a rapidly industrializing, expanding nation, social reformers hoped to alleviate the suffering caused by social hierarchies, particularly the physical distress of the working poor and the stifling confinement of middle-class women. During this same period, a developing nationalist discourse insisted that Canada, for reasons of its youth, political institutions, climate, and racial composition, was already far in advance of other nations in its superior tolerance, egalitarianism, and sympathy for the weak. The tensions, accommodations, and contradictions resulting from the intersection of nationalist and reform discourses is the focus of my study. Although the social concerns of this period have been the subject of a number of recent sociological and historical studies, very little attention has been paid to social criticism in English-Canadian literary texts. To remedy such neglect, this study examines the social problem novel in the context of a broad range of non-literary texts, such as addresses to the Royal Society, social reform essays, political editorials, and reports to reform organizations. I analyze how these texts together produce, contest, or defend an ideal of Canada as a classless, just, and harmonious New World nation. To examine this problematic and productive conjunction of nationalism and social criticism, I give close attention to three novels that form the centre-piece of my study: Agnes Machar's Roland Graeme. Knight (1892), Joanna Wood's The Untempered Wind (1894), and Amelia Fytche's Kerchiefs to Hunt Souls (1895). Reading these three novels as representative in their discursive strategies, I conclude that the social problem text took on the task of generating compassion among the educated and influential middle classes for the socially marginal in Canadian society: the poor, the intemperate, the fallen, and the transgressive. In these texts, compassion depends on the representation of undeserved, decorous suffering. Through such representations, these novels are engaged in two processes of definition. They define appropriate objects of philanthropic intervention at the same time as they define the nature and the boundaries of the sympathetic Canadian community. Social problem literature constructs ideal figures deserving hitherto-denied inclusion in this community, but invariably these narratives also identify and expel those who fall outside the community's bounds. Thus, social problem discourses reveal some of the fundamental cultural debates of the period and give us insight into the creation and consolidation of a hegemonic humanist ethic that continues to dominate representations of Canada and social justice today. Arts, Faculty of English, Department of Graduate 2009-02-19 2009-02-19 1996 1996-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4796 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 17953908 bytes 4055040 bytes application/pdf application/pdf |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Others
|
sources |
NDLTD |
description |
Social historians have identified in late nineteenth-century English Canada a passion
for social reform, largely initiated and organized by white, middle-class, Protestant
Canadians, and designed to teach Canadian society greater compassion, equality, and
humanity. Responding to the changes wrought in a rapidly industrializing, expanding
nation, social reformers hoped to alleviate the suffering caused by social hierarchies,
particularly the physical distress of the working poor and the stifling confinement of
middle-class women. During this same period, a developing nationalist discourse insisted
that Canada, for reasons of its youth, political institutions, climate, and racial composition,
was already far in advance of other nations in its superior tolerance, egalitarianism, and
sympathy for the weak. The tensions, accommodations, and contradictions resulting from
the intersection of nationalist and reform discourses is the focus of my study. Although the
social concerns of this period have been the subject of a number of recent sociological and
historical studies, very little attention has been paid to social criticism in English-Canadian
literary texts. To remedy such neglect, this study examines the social problem novel in the
context of a broad range of non-literary texts, such as addresses to the Royal Society,
social reform essays, political editorials, and reports to reform organizations. I analyze
how these texts together produce, contest, or defend an ideal of Canada as a classless, just,
and harmonious New World nation.
To examine this problematic and productive conjunction of nationalism and social
criticism, I give close attention to three novels that form the centre-piece of my study:
Agnes Machar's Roland Graeme. Knight (1892), Joanna Wood's The Untempered Wind
(1894), and Amelia Fytche's Kerchiefs to Hunt Souls (1895). Reading these three novels
as representative in their discursive strategies, I conclude that the social problem text took
on the task of generating compassion among the educated and influential middle classes for
the socially marginal in Canadian society: the poor, the intemperate, the fallen, and the
transgressive. In these texts, compassion depends on the representation of undeserved, decorous suffering. Through such representations, these novels are engaged in two
processes of definition. They define appropriate objects of philanthropic intervention at the
same time as they define the nature and the boundaries of the sympathetic Canadian
community. Social problem literature constructs ideal figures deserving hitherto-denied
inclusion in this community, but invariably these narratives also identify and expel those
who fall outside the community's bounds. Thus, social problem discourses reveal some of
the fundamental cultural debates of the period and give us insight into the creation and
consolidation of a hegemonic humanist ethic that continues to dominate representations of
Canada and social justice today. === Arts, Faculty of === English, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Fiamengo, Janice Anne |
spellingShingle |
Fiamengo, Janice Anne "Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
author_facet |
Fiamengo, Janice Anne |
author_sort |
Fiamengo, Janice Anne |
title |
"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
title_short |
"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
title_full |
"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
title_fullStr |
"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
title_full_unstemmed |
"Even in this Canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-Victorian Canadian social reform discourse |
title_sort |
"even in this canada of ours" : suffering, sympathy, and social justice in late-victorian canadian social reform discourse |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4796 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT fiamengojaniceanne eveninthiscanadaofourssufferingsympathyandsocialjusticeinlatevictoriancanadiansocialreformdiscourse |
_version_ |
1718586920287600640 |