"What Orr represents to his generation is one of the great founding stories of Canadian culture. We are a country that produced hockey players organically, born of the rocks and the trees and the ice and snow. Their skill was not the product of science or schooling or technology, but somehow came naturally, emerging from the landscape and the climate, the frozen pond and the backyard rink. Those shiny golden boys could exist out there somewhere in a quiet small town, unknown except to those around them and untouched by the corrupting influences of the big city, of big money and of the big country to the south."
He spoke to Steve about how we find our identity where we choose to and for the generation that grew up with Hockey Night in Canada, hockey players such as Orr are forged out of the place where they first played and embody what Canadians think we are: tough, unpretentious, good team players, shy, modest, and self-effacing. And then Steve asked Stephen whether new Canadians, who do not know who Bobby Orr is, can understand Canada if they do not understand why Orr is important.
And Stephen said:

But there are all kinds of people in this country who grew up somewhere else, or who are growing up now -- my kids won't feel this way. They don't care about this stuff.

This was the only choice we had and that is one of the reasons it became very powerful. What else was there? What else were you going to grasp onto? I think that when that generation passes and they are not as influential as the boomers are right now, I am not sure what it is going to be, but I think we need something."
And that made me ask myself, "Do we?" And, "Was there ever really a time when we all cared about the same thing at the same time?" And, "Why do I feel nostalgic for that even though I never felt completely part of such a phenomenon myself?"
No answers yet.
Listen to the podcast here.
I wonder if that's not a '60s and '70s thing. Maybe its my nostalgia talking, but the early '70s really did seem like a time apart for Canada and Canadians. I think "they" broke us in the mean '80s. (And I think we allowed it to happen.) I got shivers down my spine when I read Searching for Bobby Orr. Nowadays, Hockey Night in Canada leaves me cold.
ReplyDeleteDo you suppose it will ever be like that again?
I have been thinking about what you said about the '60s and '70s. I feel that as well - that it was a time of possibility - but always wonder if that is because I was a kid then.
ReplyDeleteI saw a play about Willy Brandt last night and it made think about Trudeau and how, for all his faults, he made us think that good citizenship meant to be smarter and more creative and to demand more of ourselves and our politicians.
And now, since Paul Martin(?), we live in an era where our political leaders tell us good citizenship means tightening our belts (when it comes to social programs); being a good consumer/taxpayer; a quiet, uncomplaining, skilled-but-not-too-skilled worker ... and generally demanding less from everyone. Dream crushers.
I am just not sure if it will be like that again. Dreaming and high expectations seem to have fallen out of favour. I enjoy the Simpsons as much as the next person but I am getting a bit sick of living in the "whatever" era.
Or maybe it is just that the dreamers and believers are clustered about in our fragmented, web 2.0 world and once we figure out how to get together, we will live in a time apart for our choir rather than our nation. Maybe this is the time of reclustering.
Live in hope.