National Visions, National Blindness: Canadian Art and Identities in the 1920s

[...] Dawn suggests that there are two important and the unintended consequences of this period: the recognition of the continuity of Native cultures, and hence the creation of a more inclusive and pluralistic notion of Canada. National Visions, National Blindness is a mix of cultural anthropology,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Canadian Review of Sociology Vol. 45; no. 3; p. 335
Main Author Burns, Janet M C
Format Book Review
LanguageEnglish
Published Montreal Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association, c/o Concordia University Department of Sociology and Anthropology 01.08.2008
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Summary:[...] Dawn suggests that there are two important and the unintended consequences of this period: the recognition of the continuity of Native cultures, and hence the creation of a more inclusive and pluralistic notion of Canada. National Visions, National Blindness is a mix of cultural anthropology, social, and political history and art history and charts new territory by bringing together previously autonomous discourses and empirical data.
ISSN:1755-6171
1755-618X