Young Hunting

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Young Hunting by Martin Hunter, ECW Press
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Author: Martin Hunter ISBN: 9781554905379
Publisher: ECW Press Publication: October 31, 2008
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Martin Hunter
ISBN: 9781554905379
Publisher: ECW Press
Publication: October 31, 2008
Imprint:
Language: English

Taking inspiration from John Glassco’s Memoirs of Montparnasse Young Hunting is both a story of discovery and transformation. While Toronto changes around him from a puritanical British colonial outpost to a mixing bowl filled with colourful cultural components a young boy emerges from his middle class childhood to become a flamboyant adolescent a questioning adult who refuses to accept conventional wisdom. The Toronto of the ’40s and ’50s is often painted as the epitome of dull convention – but this was clearly not Martin Hunter’s experience. The child of eastern Ontario farmers he was exposed to fundamentalist Presbyterian values; yet at the same time he was connecting with a number of remarkable artists who profoundly influenced the course of his young life. In Young Hunting the dichotomy is personified by Hunter’s two closest friends: Dick who would become an Academy Award-winning animator; and Jimmy who would go on to become the minister of Canada’s largest Presbyterian church. The pull of each of these influences was strong and each helped define both Hunter’s youth and developing view of life. Along the way he soaked up vast and varied experience: as an actor in a children’s theatre company; a boarder at an evangelical summer camp; a messenger delivering samples on Queen Street; an officer cadet in the Royal Canadian Navy; a student at Oxbridge-inspired Trinity College; and as a labourer at both a mining camp in the Yukon and a paper mill in Quebec. And while as Young Hunting explains Martin Hunter “thoroughly enjoyed the often ludicrous pretension of these various institutions ” it was not until he escaped to fulfill his “dreams of high culture” that he gained true perspective on his life’s journey – discovering that Europe’s vaunted old world cultural superiority was just as hollow as the institutions of his homeland.

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Taking inspiration from John Glassco’s Memoirs of Montparnasse Young Hunting is both a story of discovery and transformation. While Toronto changes around him from a puritanical British colonial outpost to a mixing bowl filled with colourful cultural components a young boy emerges from his middle class childhood to become a flamboyant adolescent a questioning adult who refuses to accept conventional wisdom. The Toronto of the ’40s and ’50s is often painted as the epitome of dull convention – but this was clearly not Martin Hunter’s experience. The child of eastern Ontario farmers he was exposed to fundamentalist Presbyterian values; yet at the same time he was connecting with a number of remarkable artists who profoundly influenced the course of his young life. In Young Hunting the dichotomy is personified by Hunter’s two closest friends: Dick who would become an Academy Award-winning animator; and Jimmy who would go on to become the minister of Canada’s largest Presbyterian church. The pull of each of these influences was strong and each helped define both Hunter’s youth and developing view of life. Along the way he soaked up vast and varied experience: as an actor in a children’s theatre company; a boarder at an evangelical summer camp; a messenger delivering samples on Queen Street; an officer cadet in the Royal Canadian Navy; a student at Oxbridge-inspired Trinity College; and as a labourer at both a mining camp in the Yukon and a paper mill in Quebec. And while as Young Hunting explains Martin Hunter “thoroughly enjoyed the often ludicrous pretension of these various institutions ” it was not until he escaped to fulfill his “dreams of high culture” that he gained true perspective on his life’s journey – discovering that Europe’s vaunted old world cultural superiority was just as hollow as the institutions of his homeland.

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