![]() ![]() In this regard the novel makes a significant contribution to accounts of national identity in its insistence that citizens are drawn into the nation through their emotional and erotic lives. ![]() Barometer Rising stages such events to bring Haligonians together emotionally and physically, representing and rehearsing a particularly somatic nationalism. Author of Two solitudes, The watch that ends the night, Barometer rising, Each mans son, Voices in time, Return of the sphinx, The colour of Canada. 3.Complete the following for your own records: a)Summarize the events found in the Introduction and those that occur on Sunday in the novel. Sara Ahmed insists that “affective economies” are key to aligning individuals with communities through public events that elicit shared emotional responses. 1.Read the following in Barometer Rising by Hugh MacLennan: Sunday 2.Make notes for these pages, which you feel will help you later in this course. ![]() This dualist view fails to account for how feelings and sensations are also among the building blocks of national identity in the novel. Such an approach, however, reduces characters to components of an abstract national schema that sits awkwardly alongside the novel’s visceral descriptions of the Halifax Explosion. Critics of Barometer Rising (1941) tend to treat the novel’s various personages as rigigly representing aspects of Canadian identity. ![]()
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