
Rethinking the Great White North: Race, Nature, and the Historical Geographies of Whiteness in Canada
Andrew Baldwin (Ed.)
Canadian national identity is bound to the idea of a Great White North. Images of snow, wilderness, and emptiness seem innocent, yet this path-breaking volume shows they contain the seeds of contemporary racism.
Rethinking the Great White North moves the idea of whiteness to the centre of debates about Canadian history, geography, and identity. Informed by critical race theory and the insight that racism is geographical as well as historical and cultural, the contributors trace how notions of race, whiteness, and nature helped shape Canada’s identity as a white country in travel writing and treaty making; scientific research and park planning; and within small towns, cities, and tourist centres. These nuanced explorations of diverse historical geographies of nature not only revisit the past: they offer a new vocabulary for contemporary debates on Canada’s role in the North and the nature of multiculturalism.
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About Andrew Baldwin (Ed.)
Reviews for Rethinking the Great White North: Race, Nature, and the Historical Geographies of Whiteness in Canada
Bruno Cornellier, Centre for Globalization and Cultural Studies, University of Manitoba
Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, Vol. 13 No. 3, Winter 2012
Is the issue race or whiteness? Nature or wilderness? The best papers in this collection engage the tensions between key concepts, offering not only theoretically engaged analyses of the Canadian situation but also seeking to advance conceptual understanding of race or whiteness and nature or wilderness.
Shannon Stunden Bower, University of Alberta
The Goose, Issue 10, 2012