Love, Hate, and Fear in Canada's Cold War / / ed. by Richard Cavell.

The essays in Love, Hate, and Fear in Canada's Cold War present a Cold War different in many respects from the familiar one of anti-communist hysteria. In Canada, the Cold War raised issues of national self-representation that went beyond international political tensions related to capitalistic...

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Bibliographic Details
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Place / Publishing House:Toronto : : University of Toronto Press, , [2018]
©2004
Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Series:Green College Thematic Lecture Series
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (240 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Introduction: The Cultural Production of Canada's Cold War
  • Part I: Fear
  • 1: 'We Know They're There': Canada and Its Others, with or without the Cold War
  • 2: Sunday Morning Subversion: The Canadian Security State and Organized Religion in the Cold War
  • Part II: Hate
  • 3: Freedom Lovers, Sex Deviates, and Damaged Women: Iron Curtain Refugee Discourses in Cold War Canada
  • 4: The Canadian Cold War on Queers: Sexual Regulation and Resistance
  • Part III: Love
  • 5: Margin Notes: Reading Lesbianism as Obscenity in a Cold War Courtroom
  • 6: 'It's a Tough Time to Be in Love': The Darker Side of Chatelaine during the Cold War
  • 7: Monkey on the Back: Canadian Cinema, Conflicted Masculinities, and Queer Silences in Canada's Cold War
  • Coda: Communists and Dandies
  • Contributors