Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

In nineteenth-century Toronto, people took to the streets to express their jubilation on special occasions, such as the 1860 visit of the Prince of Wales and the return in 1885 of the local Volunteers who helped to suppress the Riel resistance in the North-West. In a contrasting mood, people also took to the streets in anger to object to government measures, such as the Rebellion Losses bill, to heckle rival candidates in provincial election campaigns, to assert their ethno-religious differences, and to support striking workers.

Expressive Acts examines instances of both celebration and protest when Torontonians publicly displayed their allegiances, politics, and values. The book illustrates not just the Victorian city’s vibrant public life but also the intense social tensions and cultural differences within the city. Drawing from journalists’ accounts in newspapers, Expressive Acts illuminates what drove Torontonians to claim public space, where their passions lay, and how they gave expression to them.

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Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

In nineteenth-century Toronto, people took to the streets to express their jubilation on special occasions, such as the 1860 visit of the Prince of Wales and the return in 1885 of the local Volunteers who helped to suppress the Riel resistance in the North-West. In a contrasting mood, people also took to the streets in anger to object to government measures, such as the Rebellion Losses bill, to heckle rival candidates in provincial election campaigns, to assert their ethno-religious differences, and to support striking workers.

Expressive Acts examines instances of both celebration and protest when Torontonians publicly displayed their allegiances, politics, and values. The book illustrates not just the Victorian city’s vibrant public life but also the intense social tensions and cultural differences within the city. Drawing from journalists’ accounts in newspapers, Expressive Acts illuminates what drove Torontonians to claim public space, where their passions lay, and how they gave expression to them.

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Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

by Ian Radforth
Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

Expressive Acts: Celebrations and Demonstrations in the Streets of Victorian Toronto

by Ian Radforth

eBook

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Overview

In nineteenth-century Toronto, people took to the streets to express their jubilation on special occasions, such as the 1860 visit of the Prince of Wales and the return in 1885 of the local Volunteers who helped to suppress the Riel resistance in the North-West. In a contrasting mood, people also took to the streets in anger to object to government measures, such as the Rebellion Losses bill, to heckle rival candidates in provincial election campaigns, to assert their ethno-religious differences, and to support striking workers.

Expressive Acts examines instances of both celebration and protest when Torontonians publicly displayed their allegiances, politics, and values. The book illustrates not just the Victorian city’s vibrant public life but also the intense social tensions and cultural differences within the city. Drawing from journalists’ accounts in newspapers, Expressive Acts illuminates what drove Torontonians to claim public space, where their passions lay, and how they gave expression to them.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487545925
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 01/31/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 250
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Ian Radforth is a professor emeritus in the Department of History at the University of Toronto.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments 

Introduction

1. Tory Rebels and a Viceregal Visit
2. The Press and Election Culture
3. A Prince in Town
4. Religious Processions and Disorder
5. Colonialism Triumphant: Celebrating the Suppression of the North-West Resistance of 1885
6. Boys, Young Men, and Disorder
7. Strikers and their Supporters

Conclusion

Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

John C. Walsh

"Expressive Acts is a masterclass in historiography. While it explains why things happened, the storytelling also invites readers to witness for themselves the ways in which mid-Victorian masculinities in Toronto competed and performed in the streets, in Parliament, and in the press for power."

Cecilia Morgan

"With its multi-faceted explorations of a wide range of public political, religious, and social celebrations and demonstrations in Victorian Toronto, Expressive Acts shows how vibrant the city's street culture was in this period. This well-researched and cogently argued study calls our attention to the ways that gender, religion, class, and race were integral to Toronto's public culture."

Steve Penfold

"Expressive Acts is a major accomplishment of research and writing. With a storyteller's eye for the good detail, Radforth digs deep into the rowdy public sphere of nineteenth-century Toronto."

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