Undressed Toronto: From the Swimming Hole to Sunnyside, How a City Learned to Love the Beach, 1850-1935

Author:   Dale Barbour
Publisher:   University of Manitoba Press
ISBN:  

9780887559471


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   01 October 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Undressed Toronto: From the Swimming Hole to Sunnyside, How a City Learned to Love the Beach, 1850-1935


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Full Product Details

Author:   Dale Barbour
Publisher:   University of Manitoba Press
Imprint:   University of Manitoba Press
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780887559471


ISBN 10:   0887559476
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   01 October 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Readers interested in urban environmental history and the history of recreation will find this book especially valuable. For me, the book's most significant contribution is its portrayal of hybrid spaces and Torontonians' embodied encounters with them. Undressed Toronto shows how industry and nature co-existed and even enabled bathing in the urban environment. --Mary-Ann Shantz Network in Canadian History & Environment Undressed Toronto is a unique take on social and environmental history. It invokes a nostalgia for summer days of beachside revels, while also reminding us that bathing gave nineteenth-century women a new pastime, gave men a new way to demonstrate masculinity, and provided citizens with natural spaces to escape to from the increasingly industrialised city. Exploring Toronto through its waterways and beaches, Undressed Toronto is as delightful and refreshing as a summer evening's dip. --Claudine Fortin Ontario History


Undressed Toronto is a unique take on social and environmental history. It invokes a nostalgia for summer days of beachside revels, while also reminding us that bathing gave nineteenth-century women a new pastime, gave men a new way to demonstrate masculinity, and provided citizens with natural spaces to escape to from the increasingly industrialised city. Exploring Toronto through its waterways and beaches, Undressed Toronto is as delightful and refreshing as a summer evening's dip. -, Ontario History--Claudine Fortin Ontario History


"""I experienced [a] glow of recollection while reading Dale Barbour's well-researched, densely argued, and marvelously illustrated social and environmental history of lake and river swimming in rapidly industrializing Toronto.""--Bruce Kidd ""H-Environment Roundtable Reviews"" ""The valuable and fascinating primary sources help readers unfamiliar with Toronto's geography understand the topic and dynamics at play in Barbour's book... Barbour's narrative is an essential addition to Toronto's history, leisure studies, cultural geography, and gender studies.""--Anne Barjolin-Smith ""H-Environment"" ""Undressed Toronto is a unique take on social and environmental history. It invokes a nostalgia for summer days of beachside revels, while also reminding us that bathing gave nineteenth-century women a new pastime, gave men a new way to demonstrate masculinity, and provided citizens with natural spaces to escape to from the increasingly industrialised city. Exploring Toronto through its waterways and beaches, Undressed Toronto is as delightful and refreshing as a summer evening's dip."" --Claudine Fortin ""Ontario History"" ""Readers interested in urban environmental history and the history of recreation will find this book especially valuable. For me, the book's most significant contribution is its portrayal of ""hybrid spaces"" and Torontonians' embodied encounters with them. Undressed Toronto shows how industry and nature co-existed and even enabled bathing in the urban environment."" --Mary-Ann Shantz ""Network in Canadian History & Environment"" ""With its attention to questions of social identity and place, Dale Barbour's study of bathing in Toronto is a welcome addition. As Toronto and other cities rediscover the pleasures and economic value of their rivers and waterfronts, [Undressed Toronto] reminds us of the messy process that first brought modern urbanites to the beach."" --Daniel Ross ""The Canadian Historical Review"""


Author Information

Dale Barbour grew up on a farm in Manitoba, and worked in journalism and communications before getting hooked on history. He completed his PhD in history at the University of Toronto in 2018 and is currently the University of Winnipeg's H. Sanford Riley Postdoctoral Fellow.

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