The 'Heritage Minutes' and Canadian collective memory: an analysis of the use of nostalgia and nationalism to build a unifying cultural memory
Since its beginnings as a nation, Canada has been a country characterized by plurality, regionalism and internal differences. It struggles in search of a unifying national identity and self-definition. Owing to its multicultural status, proximity to the United States, the vastness of its territory, its colonial past and its high immigration levels, Canada endures an on-going identity crisis. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the political and cultural elite in Canada became preoccupied with this identity crisis. In 1991, the privately owned Charles R. Bronfman Foundation initiated a series of television vignettes called the ‘Heritage Minutes’. These spots were intended to encourage Canadian collective cultural memory and help to build a unifying Canadian national identity. This dissertation examines the ‘Heritage Minutes’ as examples of how the nation’s past can be used as a resource to aid in the formation of collective national memories and create a sense of national unity and identity within Canada. A dissertation submitted in part fulfilment of the requirements of the MA in Cultural Memory at the IGRS, 2008-9.
Item Type | Thesis (Masters) |
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Keywords | Canada, Nationalism, Cultural memory, Nostalgia |
Subjects |
Culture, Language & Literature History |
Divisions |
Institute of Modern Languages Research Institute of Modern Languages Research > Centre for Cultural Memory Studies |
Date Deposited | 08 Oct 2010 10:19 |
Last Modified | 05 Aug 2024 15:48 |
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picture_as_pdf - Peters - Heritage Minutes - Text.pdf