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The Coast Way: A Portrait of the English on the Lower North Shore of the st Lawrence

The Coast Way: A Portrait of the English on the Lower North Shore of the st LawrenceAuthor: Louise Abbott
Publisher: Mcgill Queens Univ Pr
Category: Book

List Price: $95.00
Buy New: $91.99
as of 2/8/2012 04:50 MST details
You Save: $3.01 (3%)

In Stock


New (4) Used (11) from $12.50

Seller: indoobestsellers
Sales Rank: 6,595,854

Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1St Edition
Pages: 160
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0
Dimensions (in): 11.7 x 9.7 x 0.6

ISBN: 0773506543
EAN: 9780773506541
ASIN: 0773506543

Publication Date: October 1988
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Coast Way: A Portrait of the English on the Lower North Shore of the st Lawrence

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The openness of local residents enabled Louise Abbott to create a remarkable documentary study of this overlooked region of Quebec. In The Coast Way, Abbott focuses on the people of the Lower North Shore and the ways in which their lives have changed during the past twenty years. She presents, in photographs and words, an image of a society in transition - where homemade birch brooms and satellite dishes sit side by side. In the early 1970s when electric light finally reached the Lower North Shore, one of the last places in Canada to be provided with electricity, it was quite an event. "The first night," remembers Jack Bursey, "I put on every light in the house and left them all on just to sit down and look. I felt so glad we had electric, eh. Yeah, I'll never forget. Oh, God, it changed a lot after electricity come." The advent of electrical power marked the end of one kind of isolation and the beginning of another. Television arrived, bringing with it visions of an outside world at once compelling and engrossing. "People don't visit one another in Tabatiere like they used to one time," laments Ivy Robertson. "A lot of that is due to TV, I guess." With a camera, taperecorder, and notebooks, Abbott has documented the impact change has had on this isolated community of English Quebecers, revealing her subjects as they revealed themselves to her.


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