Table of contents

 

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Challenging Frontiers
Lorry W. Felske and Beverly Rasporich

Images of the West

Naming the West

Shooting a Saskatoon (Whatever Happened to the Marolboro Man?)
Aritha van Herk

Early Interpretation of Region

Regionalism, Landscape, and Identity in the Prairie West
R. Douglas Francis

Celebrating Magpies: Artists Paul Kane Hongeeyesa, and Emily Carr
Ann Davies

Challenging Western History and Frontier Myth–Making

Filling in Historical Absence

Two Months in Big Bear?s Camp, 1885: Narratives of "Indian Captivity" and the Articulation of "Race" and "Gender" Hierarchies in Western Canada
Sarah Carter

Roughing It in the West, or, Whose Frontier, Whose History?
Janice Dickin

Diversifying Our Past: Finding a Place for Coal Mining Communities in Alberta?s Historic Identity
Lorry W. Felske

De–Mythologizing Cowboys and Indians

When the "Wild West" is Me: Re–Viewing Cowboys and Indians
Emma LaRocque

Managing Contradictory Visions of the West: The Great Richardson/Weadick Experiment
Robert Seiler and Tamara Siler

Hank Snow and the Eastern Frontiers of Western Music
Brian Rusted

New Frontiers

The Deconstruction of Architecture and Western History

Standard Prairie Grain Elevators: A Disappearing Icon
Geoffrey Simmins

From Somewhere to Everywhere to Nowhere: The Bank of Montreal and a Case of Vanishing Identity
Michael McMordie

Forces of Change

Asian Immigration to Western Canada
Madeline A. Kalbach

Chinese–Language Media across the West
Lloyd Sciban

The Reform and Alliance Experiments: Federal Politics in Western Canad
David Taras

Constancy Amid Change: Ranching in Western Canada
Max Foran

Contemporary Artists: The New Mythmakers

North/Western Aurages: The Soundscapes of Allan Gordon Bell
Marcia Jenneth Epstein

Rodeos, Ranching, and the House of Tea: Irene McCaugherty and Esther Warkov Re–Invent the West
Beverly Rasporich

Contributors
Index

Description

The frontier reality of confronting new conditions, adapting cultural inclinations, and dealing with a volatile environment in an effort to establish and nurture new communities is central to the western Canadian experience. It has shaped many aspects of our heritage, and it is within that context the essays assembled here strive to identify and critique the impact of the frontier on our region, culture, and society.

Challenging Frontiers: The Canadian West is a multidisciplinary study using critical essays as well as creative writing to explore the conceptions of the "West," both past and present. Considering topics such as ranching, immigration, art and architecture, as well as globalization and the spread of technology, these articles inform the reader of the historical frontier and its mythology, while also challenging and reassessing conventional analysis.

With a comprehensive introduction to situate the geographic and cultural boundaries of the western frontier, this collection is a must for anyone interested in uncovering what it means to be a westerner and how the new frontier has influenced every part of our society.

With Contributions By:
Sarah Carter
Ann Davis
Janice Dickin
Marcia Jenneth Epstein
Lorry W. Felske
Max Foran
R. Douglas Francis
Madeline A. Kalbach
Emma LaRocque
Michael McMordie
Beverly Raporich
Brian Rusted
Lloyd Sciban
Robert Seiler
Tamara Seiler
Geoffrey Simmins
David Taras
Aritha van Herk

Reviews

 

Challenging Frontiers lives up to its title in challenging the monochromatic definition of ?frontier? that has played across most of western North American "frontier theory."

—Francis W. Kaye, Canadian Ethnic Studies