Undressed Toronto

From the Swimming Hole to Sunnyside, How a City Learned to Love the Beach, 1850–1935

By Dale Barbour
Categories: History, Canadian History, Gender & Sexuality Studies
Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
Paperback : 9780887559471, 328 pages, October 2021
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780887559495, 328 pages, October 2021
Ebook (PDF) : 9780887559518, 328 pages, October 2021
Hardcover : 9780887559532, 328 pages, October 2021

Table of contents

Ch 1: Central Waterfront: Testing the Waters
Ch 2: The Central Waterfront: Vernacular Spaces
Ch 3: Toronto Island: Implementing a Beach
Ch 4: The Don River and the Bathing Boy
Ch 5: Humber River Encounters
Ch 6: Sunnyside and the Beach

Description

Undressed Toronto looks at the life of the swimming hole and considers how Toronto turned boys skinny dipping into comforting anti-modernist folk figures. By digging into the vibrant social life of these spaces, Barbour challenges narratives that pollution and industrialization in the nineteenth century destroyed the relationship between Torontonians and their rivers and waterfront. Instead, we find that these areas were co-opted and transformed into recreation spaces: often with the acceptance of indulgent city officials.

While we take the beach for granted today, it was a novel form of public space in the nineteenth century and Torontonians had to decide how it would work in their city. To create a public beach, bathing needed to be transformed from the predominantly nude male privilege that it had been in the mid-nineteenth century into an activity that women and men could participate in together. That transformation required negotiating and establishing rules for how people would dress and behave when they bathed and setting aside or creating distinct environments for bathing.

Undressed Toronto challenges assumptions about class, the urban environment, and the presentation of the naked body. It explores anxieties about modernity and masculinity and the weight of nostalgia in public perceptions and municipal regulation of public bathing in five Toronto environments that showcase distinct moments in the transition from vernacular bathing to the public beach: the city’s central waterfront, Toronto Island, the Don River, the Humber River, and Sunnyside Beach on Toronto’s western shoreline.

Reviews

“Undressed Toronto is a unique take on social and environmental history. It invokes a nostalgia for summer days of beachside revels, while also reminding us that bathing gave nineteenth-century women a new pastime, gave men a new way to demonstrate masculinity, and provided citizens with natural spaces to escape to from the increasingly industrialised city. Exploring Toronto through its waterways and beaches, Undressed Toronto is as delightful and refreshing as a summer evening’s dip.”
– , Ontario History

- Claudine Fortin