Hockey
University of Ottawa Press (Verlag)
978-0-7766-2599-7 (ISBN)
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This interdisciplinary book considers hockey, both as professional and amateur sport, and both in historical and contemporary context, in relation to larger themes in Canadian Studies, including gender, race/ethnicity, ability, sexuality, geography, and reflects upon all aspects of hockey in Canadian life: play, fandom, sports broadcasting, and community activism.
This interdisciplinary scholarly collection is an extension of the “Hockey in Canada: More Than Just a Game” exhibition presented by the Canadian Museum of History.
Published in English. Includes one chapter in French.
Jenny Ellison and Jennifer Anderson are the curators of the exhibition on hockey in Canada for the Canadian Museum of History. Anderson is a historian at the Canadian Museum of History and has written on the history of Canadian-Russian relations. Ellison is Curator of Sport and Leisure at the Canadian Museum of History. She is the co-editor of Obesity in Canada: Historical and Critical Perspectives (University of Toronto Press).
Abstract
Résumé
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Préface
Chantal Machabée
Introduction
Challenging Hockey
Jenny Ellison and Jennifer Anderson, Editors
More Than Just A Game
Canada’s Game?
Challenging Hockey
Bibliography
Hockey: More Than Just a Game
Images from the Canadian Museum of History Exhibition,
March-October 2017
PART I
Debating Hockey’s Origins
Chapter 1
A Flag of Tendons: Hockey and Canadian History
Andrew C. Holman
Hockey History
A Metaphor for Canadian History
A Source of Unity, a Mirror of Divisions
Taking Hockey Seriously
Bibliography
Chapter 2
Re-Imagining the Creation: Popular Mythology, the Mi’kmaq,
and the Origins of Canadian Hockey
Paul W. Bennett
The Invented Tradition
The “Family Squabble” over Hockey’s Origins
Origins of the Game––Widening the Lens
The Mi’kmaw Claim––from Duwarken to Hurley on Ice
The King’s College Hockey Tradition––Real or Imagined?
Passion for the Game––a Canadian Tradition
The Wisdom of “Two-Eyed Seeing”
Bibliography
Chapter 3
Imagining a Canadian Identity through Sport: An Historical
Interpretation of Lacrosse and Hockey
Michael A. Robidoux
The Process of Modernization
Resisting an Imported Canadian Identity
Sport Sensibilities in Conflict
Violence, Masculinism, and Canadian Identity
Conclusion
Bibliography
Document 1
Excerpts from The Survivors Speak: A Report of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission of Canada (2015)
1. Name Redacted, Key First Nation, Saskatchewan
2. Doug Beardy, Thunder Bay, Ontario
3. Mervin Mirasty, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
4. Robert Malcolm, Winnipeg, Manitoba
5. Christina Kimball, Winnipeg, Manitoba
6. Paul Andrew, Inuvik, Northwest Territories
7. John Kistabish, Montreal, Quebec
8. Albert Fiddler, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
9. Orval Commanda, Spanish, Ontario
10. William Antoine, Little Current, Ontario
11. Roddy Soosay, Hobbema, Alberta
12. Fred Sasakamoose
PART II
Childhoods
Document 2
In the Beginning Was the Sweater: L’abominable feuille d’érable of Ste-Justine
John Willis
Sainte-Justine, Quebec
Selling the NHL
Sainte-Justine in the Late 1940s
Bibliography
Chapter 4
Decolonizing the Hockey Novel: Ambivalence and Apotheosis
in Richard Wagamese’s Indian Horse
Sam McKegney and Trevor J. Phillips
Indigenous Ambivalence and Settler Belonging through Hockey
The False Promise of Inclusion
From Ambivalence to Apotheosis: Individual Achievement and Communal
Resurgence
Conclusion: To Transform a Game, Not an Individual
Bibliography
Chapter 5
“Here they come! Look them over!”: Youth, Citizenship,
and the Emergence of Minor Hockey in Canada
Carly Adams and Jason Laurendeau
(Minor) Hockey Scholarship
Children, Childhood, and Nation-Building
The Development and Commercialization of Minor Hockey
“Aiding the Youth of Our Nation”
Conclusion
Bibliography
Chapter 6
A Myth within a Myth: “Outdoor Shinny” as the Nursery
for Canada’s National Game
Robert Rutherdale
Placing Outdoor Hockey’s Symbolic Appeal in Historical Context
Assessments of the Outdoor Rink in Life, Writing and Memory
Community Fatherhood and Memories of the “Zukeadome”
The Symbolic Appeal of Outdoor Ice and Canada’s National Game
Bibliography
PART III
Whose Game?
Document 3
Skating in the Drainage Ditches
Hayley Wickenheiser
Document 4
Tyrone’s Story
Emily Sadler
Chapter 7
Thirty Years of “Going Global”: Women’s International Hockey,
Cultural Diplomacy, and the Pursuit of Excellence
Julie Stevens
Introduction
Cultural Relations, Cultural Diplomacy, and Hockey
How Did We Get Here (2018) From There (1987)?
Fran Rider
Performing on the World Stage
Carla MacLeod
Sarah Murray
Welcoming the World
Shannon Miller
Danielle Goyette
From National Team to Hockey Programs
Margot Page
Laura Rollins
Lindsay McAlpine
Community and Competition within Women’s International Hockey
Hayley Wickenheiser
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Chapter 8
Women’s Recreational Hockey: A New Player Profile
Denyse Lafrance Horning
Review of Women’s Hockey Literature
Women’s Recreational Hockey
Player Profiles
Key Influencers
Benefits and Challenges of Play
Interaction among Player Cohorts
Recommendations
Promote Women’s Hockey
Focus on Skill Development
Improve Ice-Time Accessibility
Restructure Leagues to Expand Participation Options
Cultivate a Supportive Female Hockey Community
Conclusions
Bibliography
PART IV
Reporting Hockey
Document 5
Hockey in New Media
Joe Pelletier
Chapter 9
O Canada, We Stand On Guard For Thee: Representations of Canadian
Hockey Players in the Swedish Press, 1920–2016
Tobias Stark
Analytical Considerations
The Pioneering Years, 1920–1939
The Cold War Era, 1945–1989
Curtain Fall, 1989–2016
Bibliography
Chapter 10
The Hockey Night in Canada Punjabi Broadcast:
A Case Study in Ethnic Sports Media
Courtney Szto and Richard Gruneau
Hockey Night(s) in Canada
Ethnic (Sports) Media
Hockey Night Canada in Punjabi: From the Sidelines to Centre Stage
“Bonino Bonino Bonino!”
Ethnic Sports Media: Lessons Learned
Conclusion
Bibliography
Chapter 11
Taking Slap Shots at the House: When the Canadian Media
Turn Curlers into Hockey Players
Kristi A. Allain
National Identity and the Reproduction of Canadian Hockey Masculinity
Canadian Hockey Masculinity and the Transformation of Curling
The Problem of Narrowing Canadian Sports Masculinities
Bibliography
Chapter 12
Tweeting Sexism and Homophobia: Gender and Sexuality in the
Digital Lives of Male Major Midget AAA Hockey Players in Canada
Cheryl A. MacDonald
The Broader Study
The Social-Media Content Analysis
Discussion
Conclusion
Bibliography
PART V
Rethinking the Pros
Document 6
Maurice Richard : notre icône
Benoît Melançon
Document 7
Joseph Cletus (Joe) Malone, 1890-1969
Marc Durand
Chapter 13
Trust and Antitrust: The Failure of the First National Hockey League
Players’ Association, 1956–1958
J. Andrew Ross
More than a Game, a Business
A Resurgence of Athlete Activism
Not Out “to make trouble”
Congress and the Courts
“Union”
The End
Bibliography
Legal citations
Chapitre 14
Eric Lindros et les Nordiques de Québec : deux solitudes ?
Laurent Turcot
Un jeune prodige
Le repêchage de 1991
Un dossier qui se politise
L’échange
Bibliographie
Chapter 15
Whiteness and Hockey in Canada: Lessons from Semi-Structured
Interviews with Retired Professional Players
Nathan Kalman-Lamb
Canada, Multiculturalism, and Whiteness
Sport, Race, and Whiteness in Canada
Methodology
Hockey, Whiteness, and the Disavowal of Race(ism)
Racism and Violence in Canadian Hockey
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 06.07.2018 |
---|---|
Reihe/Serie | Mercury |
Verlagsort | Ottawa |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 171 x 241 mm |
Gewicht | 659 g |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Sport ► Ski- / Wintersport |
Geschichte ► Teilgebiete der Geschichte ► Kulturgeschichte | |
ISBN-10 | 0-7766-2599-3 / 0776625993 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-7766-2599-7 / 9780776625997 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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