1. Queen of the Maple Leaf: Beauty Contests and Settler Femininity
- Author
-
Gentile, Patrizia and Gentile, Patrizia
- Subjects
- Beauty contests--Canada--History, Beauty contests--Social aspects--Canada, Feminine beauty (Aesthetics)--Social aspects--Canada
- Abstract
As modern versions of the settler nation took root in twentieth-century Canada, beauty emerged as a business. Queen of the Maple Leaf deftly uncovers the codes of femininity, class, sexuality, and race that beauty pageants exemplified, whether they took place on local or national stages. A union-organized pageant such as Queen of the Dressmakers, for example, might uplift working-class women, but immigrant women need not apply. Patrizia Gentile demonstrates how beauty contests connected female bodies to white, wholesome, respectable, middle-class femininity, locating their longevity squarely within their capacity to reassert the white heteropatriarchy at the heart of settler societies.
- Published
- 2020