Opposite Contraries: The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and Other Writings
by Emily Carr ISBN: 1550548964
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Opposite Contraries: The Unknown Journals of Emily Carr and Other Writings by Linda MorraA friend recently quipped that the only reason for Emily Carr's
continued success as an artist in Canada is because we have nothing
else of genuine quality to offer. As an avid fan and literary scholar
who specializes in her work, I expressed my astonishment and countered
that the recent acquisition of one of her paintings, "Quiet",
by a private collector for over a million dollars at an auction
must surely serve as evidence of her worth-or, at minimum, her
growing popularity. If that sale did not affirm either her status
or popularity as an artist, the publication of four books between
2003 and 2004 that revolve around or were written by Carr herself,
at the very least attests to the fact that the allure of her paintings
extends well beyond them to her personality and her writing. She
herself was an extraordinarily intriguing person, making sketching
trips out to the more remote areas of the West Coast and to the
Native villages while most women were preoccupied by domestic or
religious concerns: the sheer number of her biographies that have
proliferated, approximately ten, suggests how fascinating she remains
as an individual. If the quality of her work may be disputed, this
interest registers that Carr is rapidly evolving as one of Canada's
most central icons, resonant with political and social meaning, as
she is also becoming an important source for our national mythology.
One of these four books, published by Douglas & McIntyre, is a
reprinting of the 1941 edition of Carr's Klee Wyck, complements
Opposite Contraries because it moves beyond only reprinting the
segments omitted from later editions of the book to restoring it
to its original state. Finely introduced by Kathryn Bridge, the
Manager of Access Services at BCARS, Klee Wyck is a collection of
twenty-one stories that trace Carr's journeys as an artist through
various Native villages and their totem poles. In the first edition,
Carr's sympathies are clearly allied with Natives. She expresses
contempt for missionaries, resentment for the manner in which they
treated Natives and indignation with the practice of uprooting
children from their families and sending them to residential schools.
Bridge elucidates the history of the publication of Klee Wyck, from
its original printing of 2,500 copies, to its subsequent publication
in the United States the following year (by Farrar & Rinehart), to
the edition in 1951, which was published by Clarke, Irwin and
Company. This latter edition was the one substantially altered from
its original, although the company did not publicly acknowledge
this action.
Spurred on by Dr. Gerta Moray, an art historian and specialist on
Carr, Bridge "undertook a close comparison of the current
paperback version and the original first edition" when she
realized that all subsequent editions of Klee Wyck conformed to the
1951 version, not the original. The reasons for tampering with
Carr's original text, as Bridge's research shows, related to the
fact that the 1951 edition was to be included as part of Clarke,
Irwin's "Canadian Classics" series of publications, which
were being circulated in educational systems across the country.
The editor at Clarke, Irwin at that time argued that members of the
teaching profession might be offended by Carr's politics: as a
result, "almost every derogatory adjective or descriptor
concerning missionaries at Ucluelet and other places [and] observations
concerning their negative reactions to First Nations beliefs,"
among others, were removed. According to Bridge, the purpose in
reprinting the complete Klee Wyck is to reread it "within the
context of today's social attitudes and a knowledge of historical
events [because it] allows us to evaluate Carr in a new light."
The new edition of Klee Wyck is indeed timely, demonstrating that
Carr's attitudes towards Natives were far more precocious than that
of her contemporaries.
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