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Ottawa, Reconsidered

By Nick Ward

滨苍听Ottawology, 杏吧原创 sociologist Dr. Tonya Davidson reframes the capital through the everyday spaces where civic life actually unfolds

There is a familiar narrative about Ottawa as a sleepy government town defined by suburban public servants, national institutions, and a kind of demure political decorum. It鈥檚 a way of seeing the city that flattens it into symbols and stereotypes. But as 杏吧原创 sociologist Dr. Tonya Davidson explains, that framing misses far more than it captures.

In her book titled聽, Davidson reframes the city by shifting attention away from sweeping tropes and toward the everyday places and systems where people actually live alongside one another. 鈥淭his is also Ottawa,鈥 she says, describing how she opens the book by holding two spaces together.

The first is the Rideau Chapel at the , a heritage ceiling rescued in the 1970s and re-situated within a national institution. The space is carefully curated, and can feel formal but for Davidson, it is also deeply sociological. In the chapel, visitors can be 鈥渙verwhelmed and moved by the collective sounds鈥 of choral music, but also step close to hear individual voices, one by one. It becomes a way to think about what sociology does at its best: paying attention to the relationship between the individual and the collective.

She then moves a few kilometres away to Dundonald Park in Centretown, a dense and contested public space that reveals a very different register of city life. Here, people picnic, play music, organize protests, bring their kids, make art, drink, and spend long afternoons together. It is also a place where unhoused people use drugs, where police presence is constant, and where tensions around safety, care, and surveillance are impossible to ignore. These conditions are often framed through fear or avoidance, but Davidson reads them differently, as part of the social reality the city is continually negotiating. 鈥淕reat things happen collectively at Dundonald Park which are moving in this very sort of everyday way,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he Ottawology of this book is both about sort of Ottawa as a national capital space, but it is even more about the Dundonald Park-ness of Ottawa.鈥

Dundonald Park


Ottawology is not a civic love letter that looks away, nor is it a detached inventory of urban problems. Instead, it offers a sociological map of a city shaped by power, memory, infrastructure, and ordinary social life, one that is attentive to who benefits, who bears risk, and whose needs are routinely underfunded or ignored. Davidson, whose research spans urban spaces, public memory, nostalgia, popular culture, and Canadian identity, has spent years thinking about how cities train us to see and what they subtly teach us to ignore. Ottawa, she argues, is an ideal case study precisely because it is so legible and so routinely misunderstood.

One of the book鈥檚 recurring themes is that what we often perceive as mundane is anything but. Libraries, malls, bus routes, parks, department stores, dive bars, community centres. These spaces are routinely overlooked precisely because they are familiar. Yet they are where belonging is practiced, where inequality becomes visible, and where civic life is either sustained or quietly eroded. Davidson draws on the idea of 鈥渢hird places,鈥 popularized by Ray Oldenburg, to describe informal public gathering spaces with low barriers to access, places where people can spend time without being fully absorbed into the demands of home or work.

Ottawa, Davidson suggests, is a particularly revealing site for this kind of analysis precisely because of 鈥渉ow unexceptional it is.鈥 Beyond its capital status, the city shares many of the same social pressures and vulnerabilities as other North American cities, including the fragility of public and quasi-public spaces. She traces older forms of third-place life through Ottawa鈥檚 early 20th-century department stores, where shopping spaces doubled as safe, socially acceptable places for women to linger, sit, and socialize. When these places disappear, she notes, people aren鈥檛 only losing stores. They are losing places to be.

Ottawaology Book Cover



The stakes, in Davidson鈥檚 view, are both personal and civic. 鈥淪uburbanization and automobility鈥 encourage privatization of life,鈥 she says, narrowing daily contact with difference and making isolation feel normal. Public transit, by contrast, can be one of the few places where a city routinely forces us into small acts of social negotiation, patience, and shared presence. Those micro-interactions matter more than we tend to admit.

The book also asks readers to sit with the less comfortable dimensions of city life, the places where power becomes visible in ordinary, often unnoticed ways. Drawing on Ottawa-based research, Davidson addresses policing, security, and the uneven distribution of surveillance and violence across the city. She notes plainly that 鈥渙ne of the biggest threats to the safety of sex workers in Ottawa is violence at the hands of the police.鈥 These are not abstract concerns, but everyday realities shaped by policy, perception, and proximity. Including them, Davidson argues, is part of the book鈥檚 ethical work. Readers may arrive expecting a gentle tour of civic landmarks and find themselves instead thinking about whose safety is protected, whose is threatened, and how power quietly organizes daily life.

At the same time, Ottawology moves beyond human-made spaces and social relations to consider the broader systems that make city life possible in the first place. One of the book鈥檚 defining moves is to treat Ottawa as a city shaped by intersecting human and non-human lives, whose futures are inseparable from the natural environment. This, Davidson explains, is a way of seeing the city more fully, one that recognizes how land, water, light, and infrastructure are active participants in life and community and not just passive backdrops 鈥淚t is a truthful understanding of Ottawa. Grounding the city鈥檚 growth in settler colonialism and environmental extraction. Ottawa only became the sort of white settler site of habitation because of the bounty of the forest here,鈥 says Davidson.

Dr. Tonya Davidson



From historic timber pollution to contemporary sprawl, the natural world is a part of the city鈥檚 social fabric, and it bears the consequences of urban decisions. 鈥淪uburban expansion is happening on wetlands that are being completely obliterated,鈥 she adds, pointing to the long-term costs of land-use patterns built around private mobility.

Clearly, Ottawology is not built on a single new field project or perspective. It brings together decades of Davidson鈥檚 sociological research conducted in and about the city, much of it produced at 杏吧原创. She points to the depth of work emerging from the university鈥檚 sociology community and the many graduate students and faculty members who have been studying Ottawa for years, often without naming the project as such. 鈥淭hey were being Ottawaologists without knowing it,鈥 she says.

In fact, the book鈥檚 origin story is about teaching and learning at the university. During a 2020 sabbatical, when fieldwork wasn鈥檛 possible, Davidson returned to a course she has taught for years: the Sociology of Ottawa. She began transforming lectures into chapters, a process she describes as freeing precisely because lectures demand clarity, accessibility, and connection. 鈥淚t鈥檚 written really in that style,鈥 she says.

When she imagined readers, Davidson pictured two ends of the same civic spectrum: 鈥渕y first-year students鈥 and also the 93-year-old that鈥檚 spent 72 years in Ottawa.鈥 She also wrote for the crucial people who quietly keep neighbourhood life functioning: community associations, local historians, public memory workers, and volunteers who maintain parks, protect trees, and organize small events that make a city livable. And she wrote for those who love Ottawa enough to want more from it.

Increasingly, she wrote with children in mind. 鈥淲hen you know a baby鈥 you think about the future in an extended way,鈥 Davidson says. In the book鈥檚 dedication, she names the children in her life who have helped her see the city differently, and whose futures will be shaped by decisions made now. 

Ottawa will turn 300 one day, she notes, and those children may be there to see it. 鈥淗opefully, there are still trees here and the animals still have their homes,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd there are places where people can listen to music on a Tuesday.鈥

That future-facing sensibility is what ultimately gives Ottawology its urgency. The book invites readers to slow down, look more carefully, and recognize the social life already unfolding around them. For anyone who thinks they know Ottawa well, or who suspects they might not, Davidson offers a compelling reason to take another look.