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Publisher:University of Calgary Press, 2011 -
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Publisher:University of Calgary Press, 2011
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- Author: Azoulay, DanDate:Created2011Summary:
What was romance like for Canadians a century ago? What qualities did marriageable men and women look for in prospective mates? How did they find suitable partners in difficult circumstances such as frontier isolation and parental disapproval, and, when they did, how did courtship proceed in the immediate post-Victorian era, when traditional romantic ideals and etiquette were colliding with the modern realities faced by ordinary people? Searching for answers, Dan Azoulay has turned to a variety of primary sources, in particular letters to the "correspondence columns" of two leading periodicals of the era, Montreal's Family Herald and Weekly Star, and Winnipeg's Western Home Monthly. Examining over 20,000 such letters, Azoulay has produced the first full-length study of Canadian romance in the years 1900 to 1930, a period that witnessed dramatic changes, including massive immigration, rapid urbanization and industrialization, western settlement, a world war that killed and maimed hundreds of thousands of young Canadians, and a virtual revolution in morals and manners.
Subject(s): Canada | Courtship | Man-woman relationships | Mate selection | Social aspectsOriginal Publisher: Calgary, University of Calgary PressLanguage(s): EnglishISBN: 9781552385210, 1552385213Collection(s)/Series: Read Alberta Ebooks
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