TY - BOOK AU - Robertson,Leslie A. TI - Imagining difference: legend, curse and spectacle in a Canadian mining town SN - 0774810920 AV - HN110.F47 R62 2005 U1 - 305.0971165 22 PY - 2005///] CY - Vancouver PB - UBC Press KW - Ethnology KW - British Columbia KW - Fernie KW - Indians of North America KW - Folklore KW - Legends KW - Blessing and cursing KW - Group identity KW - Differentiation (Sociology) KW - Fernie (B.C.) KW - Social conditions N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-292) and index; Preface : knowing who your neighbors are --; Introduction : ideas make acts possible --; 1; Conversations among Europeans and other acts of possession --; 2; Latkep, Ansicht, View, [VID] : constructing the "foreign" --; 3; "The story as I know it" --; 4; A movement of silence --; 5; Getting rid of the story --; 6; Development, discovery, and disguise --; 7; One step beyond --; Epilogue : waiting N2 - "In Imagining Difference, Leslie Robertson turns to a popular local legend to explore the social construction of difference through ideas of "race," "foreignness," and regional, class, and religious identity, as expressed by residents of Fernie, British Columbia, a coal-mining town on its way to becoming an international ski resort. The legend revolves around a curse cast on the valley by indigenous people in the nineteenth century. Successive interpretations of the story reveal a complicated landscape of memory and silence, mapping official and contested histories, social and scientific theories, as well as the edicts of political discourse. Cursing becomes a metaphor for the discursive power that resonates in political, popular, and cultural contexts, transmitting ideas of difference across generations and geographies." "Paying close attention to public performances, mass media, and processes of place-making, Robertson examines forms of social knowledge circulating within local settings, which shape shared understandings and common-sense views of the world. While situated historically and socially in Fernie, this ethnographic study offers significant insights into the cultural foundations of rural communities generally. It shows how people summon imagery from diverse European traditions and personal histories to weave complex webs of representation."--BOOK JACKET ER -