Inventing Tom Thomson: From Biographical Fictions to Fictional Autobiographies and Reproductions

Front Cover
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2004 - Art - 234 pages
Since his drowning in 1917, Tom Thomson has been recreated by poets, playwrights, novelists, filmmakers, biographers, and other artists as a legendary figure synonymous with Canada and its northern identity. Touted as a great artist cut off in his prime, his mysterious death in Canoe Lake, Algonquin Park, and the controversy about his final resting-place fired the popular imagination and raised him to the status of a national hero. In "Inventing Tom Thomson" Sherrill Grace examines many of the ways in which the figure of Thomson has been imagined by Canadians. Even people who do not know his paintings well will recognize "The Jack Pine" and know his legend through the marketing of Thomson memorabilia on the Web, in museums, and in stores. Grace suggests that the figure we have come to recognize as Tom Thomson is inextricably associated with many of the qualities that we believe characterize Canadian culture - love of the wilderness, northern purity, solitary independence, and a masculine ability to canoe, camp, fish, and rough it in the bush. "Inventing Tom Thomson" is about those artists who have felt compelled to imagine their own Tom Thomsons and about what the man has come to represent to the culture at large - it is about us and how the stories about this exceptional painter have shaped our sense of who we are as a nation.
 

Contents

INVENTING TOM THOMSON
3
Thomas as Legend Myth and Symbol
8
THE BIOGRAPHICAL STORIES
14
The Art of Biography
63
ALTERIOGRAPHIC INVENTIONS
85
Thomson as Poetic Trope
87
Thomas as Fictional Character
103
Performing Tom Thomson
119
INVENTIVE REPRODUCTIONS
148
Reproducing a National Icon
174
Going Back There
182
Notes
197
Works Consulted
215
Index
227
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About the author (2004)

Sherrill E. Grace is professor of English at the University of British Columbia where she holds the Brenda and David McLean Chair in Canadian Studies. She has published books on Margaret Atwood, literary expressionism, Canadian drama, and Malcolm Lowry, including Lowry's "Collected Letters", and is the author of "Canada and the Idea of North" and the editor of Mina Benson Hubbard's "A Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador."

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