The Sexual Politics of Moral Citizenship and Containing "Dangerous" Foreign Men in Cold War Canada, 1950s-1960s
Authors
Franca Iacovetta
Abstract
Canadian historians have not fully explored how post-1945 mass immigration
heightened contemporary panics about crippled personalities, failing families, and
declining moral standards and how these panics also served to bolser state surveillance
of those considered a source of contamination. Among the groups considered
potentially dangerous, in the discourse of the time, were European refugee and
immigrant men. Popular writers, journalists covering ethnic murders, professional
researchers, government officials, ethnic Canadians, and caseworkers dealt with the
sexual, moral, and mental health of New Canadian men in ways that were often contradictory.
An examination of some of these sources sheds light on an under-studied
dimension to the exaggerations and alarmist predictions that fuelled the moral
panic of the early Cold War years.