The Hero and the Historians: Historiography and the Uses of Jacques Cartier

Front Cover
UBC Press, 2010 - Biography & Autobiography - 248 pages

Historians have long engaged in passionate debate about collective memory and the building of national identities. Alan Gordon focuses on one national hero Jacques Cartier to explore how notions about the past have been created and passed on from generation to generation in English- and French-speaking Canada and used to present particular ideas about the world.

The Hero and the Historians traces the evolution of Cartier's image from his exploration of the St. Lawrence in 1534 to the mid-twentieth century, when hero worship fell from favour among professional historians and ties it to changing notions of the past. Gordon reveals that nineteenth-century celebrations of Cartier reflected a particular understanding of history that accompanied the arrival of modernity in North America. This new sensibility, in turn, shaped the political and cultural currents of identity formation and nation building in Canada. Cartier may have been a point of contact between English- and French-Canadian nationalisms, but, as Gordon shows, the nature of that contact had profound limitations.

This important work shows how changing notions of the past have shaped identity formation in English-speaking Canada and Quebec.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 The SixteenthCentury World and Jacques Cartier
10
2 Forgetting and Remembering
29
3 The Invention of a Hero
50
4 Cartiermania
72
5 Common Sense
99
6 The Many Meanings of Jacques Cartier
128
7 Decline and Dispersal
157
8 Failure and Forgetting
180
Notes
190
Bibliography
216
Index
232
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2010)

Alan Gordon is an associate professor in the Department of History, University of Guelph.