Notes from North of 49ºN
Charles McGrath in the NY Times wrote a curious and annoying piece on Canada’s quest for gold in the upcoming Winter Olympics in Vancouver {HT: LinnyQat}. I thought his characterization of Canada to be a collection of what I call “university-educated” stereotypes complete with quotes of Canadians, such as Margaret Atwood, that make the country sound like a nation of self-loating and self-deprecating sots. It’s articles like this that remind me that the New York Times often is a purveyor of moderately well-written naval gazing with all the right references to make it seem legit.
I’ve written blogs on Canada’s postcolonial experience, as well as how a trajectory of regionalism may be at play. Reading McGrath made me think about my own blogs. He thinks he’s stumbled on a new Canadian consciousness that cares about Olympic medals that’s out of place in the zeitgeist of the nation::
“They want to rewire the national mind-set and come away with not just a couple of golds but the most medals over all. They have dedicated roughly $118 million to enhancing the performance of Canadian athletes, and have financed something called the Top Secret project, in which teams of scientists have been studying the various winter sports in hope of gaining a technological edge.
The organization in charge of improving Canada’s medal performance has the un-Canadian-sounding name Own the Podium, and its chief executive, Roger Jackson, said: “We’ve never been pressured before to perform to a stated goal. Thirty medals or more is what we’re hoping for this time. I think we can get those.”
Talk like this, so nakedly ambitious, makes some Canadians uneasy. Theirs is a vast country that in many ways is run like a small town, with small-town values, and it has a highly developed culture of modesty, if not a collective inferiority complex. The athletic record in general is a little underwhelming, and some Canadians think that is because their countrymen prefer that, considering a good effort just as valuable as a trunkload of trophies, maybe better.”
McGrath is sounding like an American version of Andrew Cohen in The Unfinished Canadian. While I’ve argued that Canadian identity may be “fuzzy,” that has more to do with its sheer size, distinct regions, and relatively small population. Never underestimate the power of sports to galvanize a sense of identity, as evident in the recent film Invictus::
What McGrath fails to parse is the effects of capitalism and of culture. Hockey galvanizes Canada, solidifying an identity that may be fuzzy. It’s not that Canadians are OK with losing, as McGrath implies, it’s question of economics. It looks like Canada is willing to invest in its teams and I’ll bet a box of Timbits that if Canada wins medals, there won’t be a collective national sheepishness over the feat. Canadians don’t fear winning, it’s just that Canadian capitalism, to date, hasn’t fostered it. It looks like that’s changing.
The Canadian embracing of funding the medal count may not be without controversy. The Olympics have their detractors because of the astronomical costs involved. So, Canadians may like winning, there may not be a collective willingness to finance it at stratospheric levels.
Some may argue that if Canadians are so into hockey, why did they let the sport become Americanized and lose the Winnipeg Jets and Québec Nordiques in the process? It’s all about capitalism. I’ve blogged about the NHL on Rhizomicon and while the NHL has tried to expand heavily in the US to vie for the sports entertainment dollar, it’s the Canadian fans that are making the Canadian teams the top revenue generators.
Unfortunately, given scarcity of resources, the Canadian biatheletes are out in the cold, i.e., no corporate sponsorships. So, I’ll give them a shout out::
While Zina Kocher is a World Cup bronze medalist from the 2006-7 season, the funding just isn’t there for the biathlon.
Here’s a response to the NY Times pirce from the Toronto Star, which is pretty funny::
“We started talking about what we’re hoping for at the Olympics.
Ned said he hoped Canada would win so many fourths that they’d have to make a special new medal. Maybe a nickel medal. With a beaver on it. But not a cocky-looking beaver. Just a plain work-a-day beaver. We could hand them out after all the foreigners leave – so that no one feels left out.
I said I hoped we might sweep the fourths and fifths. And the odd sixth. But Ned shook his head at me, and I felt awful for a few minutes. And then ashamed of feeling awful.
But it was exciting to talk this way. Maybe the most exciting thing we’ve talked about since they (whimper) let Wayne drift away into that heaven-on-Earth they call California.”
Twitterversion:: NYTimes #fail confuses Canadian culture with capitalism re: Olympic medal push. Hilarious response in #Toronto Star. @Prof_K
Song:: The Besnard Lakes {Montréal, QC} -“Albatross”
Comments 4
Joey Diggs — February 12, 2010
LOL. Canadians are such a sensitive and humorless group. Sure, some of the best comedians do come from Canada. But they leave, don't they? Those that are left behind are the most touchy unfunny motherfuckers. Always ready to jump at the slightest perceived slight. Canada will always be subsumed by America. Our cars, our highways, or buildings, our clothes, our TV, movies, businesses (large and small) - are all virtually identical to everything in the United States. As someone who has lived in both countries, I can tell you for a fact that your fantasy of a Canadian identity is just that - a fantasy.
You want to know what the Canadian culture really is? It's not "fuzzy", it's "whiny". Here is an urbandictionary.com-ready definition of our culture: "Canadians can be defined as overly sensitive unfunny politically correct whiners who define themselves as somehow being different from Americans, but aren't".
The Olympics: the Alcohol of the National Soul - MP Nunan - An American Ex-Pat in... America - True/Slant — February 25, 2010
[...] know this will do nothing to make me popular in certain quarters – another American commenting on the issue of the Canadian national soul. But [...]
Meaghan Macnab — March 1, 2010
Joey Diggs - Your confidence is intoxicating. I presume that you are one of the 90% of Americans who do not have a passport and therefore (since 9/11) are now unable to travel outside of your own delicious American borders. Follow your instincts Joey. Stay right where you are. Why would you leave when everything you need is within 10 miles of your home? Why open yourself to new cultures, languages or philosophies when you already have all of the answers? What is the point in curiosity or trying to understand people who are wrong about religion, culture, morality - everything? Sit back, bust open another bag of Cheetos, get your news from your local tv station, and tune into some of that quality American television programming. And, before you retire at the end of the each day Joey, find comfort in the fact that you are superior. Sweet dreams Joey. Life doesn't get any better than this. You are an American and the rest of us are seething with envy.
domain — September 3, 2014
I quite like looking through an article that will make people think.
Also, thank you for allowing me to comment!