In the Province of History

The Making of the Public Past in Twentieth-Century Nova Scotia

Ian McKay author Robin Bates author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press

Published:18th May '10

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In the Province of History cover

How a region sells - and misrepresents - its past.

How a region sells - and misrepresents - its pastUsing archival sources, novels, government reports, and works on tourism and heritage, Ian McKay and Robin Bates look at how state planners, key politicians, and cultural figures such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, long-time premier Angus L. Macdonald, and novelist Thomas Raddall were all instrumental in forming "tourism/history." The authors argue that Longfellow's 1847 poem Evangeline - on the brutal British expulsion of Acadians from Nova Scotia - became a template a new kind of profit-making history that exalted whiteness and excluded ethnic minorities, women, and working class movements. A remarkable look at the intersection of politics, leisure, and the presentation of public history, In the Province of History is a revealing account of how a region has both used and distorted its own past.

"In the Province of History gives a highly provocative and sometimes startling insight into the evolution of Nova Scotia's tourism history. McKay and Bates demonstrate expert archival knowledge, while masterfully sustaining an intellectual narrative, from cover to cover. This highly anticipated book will inform, inspire, and advance alternative understanding of Nova Scotian history. The authors are to be congratulated." Gwendolyn Davies, Professor and Dean Emerita, University of New Brunswick "[McKay] makes his case with passion, sarcasm, and irony." Christopher Moore, Canada's History

ISBN: 9780773537033

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

481 pages