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Canada and the Blackface Atlantic
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22 April 2025

Canada and the Blackface Atlantic traces the origins of theatre, dance, and concert singing in Canada and their connection to British and American song and dance traditions.
When theatrical acts first appeared in the late eighteenth century, chattel slavery had transformed into mass entertainment on minstrel stages across the Atlantic world. As railroads and theatres were built, local blackface troupes emerged alongside touring British and American acts. By the 1850s, blackface theatre could be found in remote Western outposts to stages in Central and Maritime Canada. This is one of the first books to connect the rise of Canadian blackface minstrelsy with the emergence of Black singers, and choral groups. It describes how Black performers who assumed minstrelsy’s mask remapped plantation slavery on Canadian stages.
It begins with the conflicts that shaped North America – the American Revolutionary War, and the War of 1812. Next, it connects these origins with eighteenth-century British immigration, which brought folk dances and masking traditions to North America. From there, it unmasks when and how “Jim Crow” became an Atlantic world sensation, which set the stage for blackface to expand. Finally, it considers how Black acts reimagined the parameters of their own freedom.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations, PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / History & Criticism, HISTORY / African American & Black, MUSIC / History & Criticism, HISTORY / Canada / General, Ethnic groups and multicultural studies, Theatre studies
“[Canada and the Blackface Atlantic] reframes Canadian history through a practice most would prefer to ignore. By showing how caricature and culture were deeply bound to slavery, race and resistance, Thompson leads readers to conclude that blackface did not merely happen in Canada, it helped create both the “elusive structure of racism that [binds us all)” and, more disturbingly, our nation itself.” — Gabriel M. Milhet, Canada’s History
INTRODUCTION
1. Canada and the Emergence of the Blackface Atlantic, 1812 – 1839
2. Performing Conflict in Blackface, Anti-Slavery Movements, and the First Black Dancers, 1840 – 1857
3. Newspapers, Railways, and Theatre Expansion Leads to Home-Grown Blackface Minstrels, 1858 – 1861
4. Canada’s Civil War Sympathizers and the Rise of Black Minstrelsy, 1862 – 1866
5. The New Plantation Minstrelsy, Blackface Political Cartoons, and Choral Songs of Freedom, 1867 – 1886
6. White Women Minstrels, Darkest America, and Black Singers on Canadian Stages, 1887 – 1897
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index