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Social Science Women's Studies

Queen of the Maple Leaf

Beauty Contests and Settler Femininity

by (author) Patrizia Gentile

Publisher
UBC Press
Initial publish date
Nov 2020
Category
Women's Studies, Race & Ethnic Relations, Discrimination & Race Relations, Post-Confederation (1867-)
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780774864152
    Publish Date
    Nov 2020
    List Price
    $32.95
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780774864121
    Publish Date
    Nov 2020
    List Price
    $89.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780774864138
    Publish Date
    May 2021
    List Price
    $32.95

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Description

As modern versions of the settler nation took root in twentieth-century Canada, beauty emerged as a business. But beauty pageants were more than just frivolous spectacles. Queen of the Maple Leaf deftly uncovers how colonial power operated within the pageant circuit.

 

Patrizia Gentile examines the interplay between local or community-based pageants and provincial or national ones. Contests such as Miss War Worker and Miss Civil Service often functioned as stepping stones to larger competitions. At all levels, pageants exemplified codes of femininity, class, sexuality, and race that shaped the narratives of the settler nation. A union-organized pageant such as Queen of the Dressmakers, for example, might uplift working-class women, but immigrant women need not apply.

 

Queen of the Maple Leaf demonstrates how these contests connected female bodies to respectable, wholesome, middle-class femininity, locating their longevity squarely within their capacity to reassert the white heteropatriarchy at the heart of settler societies.

About the author

Patrizia Gentile is an associate professor in the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies at Carleton University.

Patrizia Gentile's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Gentile’s compelling argument and sharp analysis of a diverse set of sources provide a rich examination of oft-trivialized beauty pageants. While Gentile hardly celebrates these events, she does allow room to consider women’s (uneven) agency.

Journal of the History of Sexuality

[Queen of the Maple Leaf ] will be of interest to all who study nation making in Canada as a process involving intersecting categories of subject positions.

University of Toronto Quarterly

[Queen of the Maple Leaf] is a seminal contribution to better understanding how histories of women’s bodies make for legitimate historiography of settler colonialism, truth regimes and power dynamics within Canada.

Canadian Journal of History