Description
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- Cover Page
- Half Title page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Maps
- 1 Introduction: First Peoples and the Colonial Narratives of Canadian Literature
- Overview
- First Peoples and Founding Narratives
- Negotiating Contact
- Naming Culture: Colonial Interpretation, or, Power-Knowledge Narratives
- Cultural Re-Naming and the Indian Act
- First Stories – Textualization
- European Colonial Historical Narratives of Conquest and Warfare: “Settlement” and Trade to 1650
- Multiple Theatres of War: Canada and European Empires
- “American” Theatres of War
- Colonial Modes of Power: the Emerging Nation After 1812
- Religious and National Differences Between Upper and Lower Canada
- Louis-Joseph Papineau and the Patriotes
- William Lyon Mackenzie and Radical Reforming Zeal
- The Durham Report and Canadian Confederation
- Countering Colonial Notions of “Progress”: Aboriginal Literary Resistances
- George Copway and Early Indigenous Writers in English
- Performing Ethnicity: Pauline Johnson (Tekahionwake)
- “The Two Sisters”: The Textualized Short Story as a Mediating Device
- The Trope of Incarceration: Aboriginal Protest Writing in the Twentieth Century
- Conclusion
- 2 Literatures of Landscape and Encounter Canadian Romanticism and Pastoral Writing
- Overview
- Beginnings of a Canadian Canon: Edward Hartley Dewart’s Selections from Canadian Poets (1864)
- Charles Sangster, Alexander McLachlan, and Charles Heavysege
- The Confederation Poets
- The Confederation Poets and the Canadian Landscape
- Inhabited Nature
- Conclusion
- 3 A New Nation Prose fiction and the Rise of the Canadian Novel During the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- Overview
- Double Discourse and New World Sensibility
- Strategic Sensibility in Eighteenth-Century Female Writing
- The Double Image: The Coquette and Resemblance
- The “Re-Structuring” of Power in French and British Canada
- New World Aesthetics: Major John Richardson’s Wacousta (1832)
- The “Man of Feeling” and Psychological Space
- The Two Cultures of Rosanna Leprohon’s Antoinette De Mirecourt (1864)
- An Allegory Of Decline: William Kirby’s The Golden Dog (1877)
- Re-Defining Domesticity: Immigration and Gender Politics in Women’S Autobiographical Settler Narratives
- Re-Defining Domestic Space in the Writing of Catherine Parr Traill
- Sketches from the Bush: The Eriting of Susanna Moodie
- The Rise of the Canadian Popular Novel and the Role of the Popular Press
- Resemblance and Misrecognition in Catherine Beckwith Hart’s St. Ursula’s Convent (1824)
- The First Novel in Quebec: Philippe-Aubert de Gaspé’s The Influence of a Book (1837)
- From Oral to Print Culture: Humour and the Picaresque in de Gaspé and Haliburton
- Historical Romance and Les Anciens Canadiens (1863)
- Sublime community in New France
- The Imperial Idea in the Local Setting: Sarah Jeanette Duncan’s The Imperialist (1904)
- Affectionate Irony: Small-Town Canada Sketched by Stephen Butler Leacock
- Deconstructing the Novel of Education: Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables (1908)
- The speculative worlds of James De Mille: A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder (1888)
- Container or Vontained? Narrative Interplay in A Strange Manuscript
- Conclusion
- 4 In Flanders Fields Gender and social transformation in the First and Second World Wars
- Overview
- The Execution or Poetics of Canadian War Literature: Some Shared Themes
- The war Poetry of john maccrae and f.g. Scott
- Discordant Voices: In Flanders Fields
- The Competing Perspectives of the Soldier Poets
- Popular Fiction And Romance: The War Writing of Bertrand William Sinclair
- The Economics of War: Societal Profit and Loss in Popular Fiction
- The War Machine: Redemption and Propaganda at a Distance
- Redefining gender Performances in Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Rilla of Ingleside (1921)
- A Feminist Critique of War: Francis Marion Beynon’s Aleta Dey (1919)
- The New Language of War: Absurdism In Charles Yale Harrison’s Generals Die in Bed (1930)
- Literature of the Second World War: Psychology And Ethics in the Canadian War Novel
- War as Existential Void: Colin McDougall’s Execution (1958)
- Conclusion
- 5 Canadian Modernism, 1914–60 “A Journey Across Canada”
- Overview
- Marginal Modernism/Imagism and the Poetic Imagination
- Canadian Modernist Manifesto Writing
- The Garden and the Machine in Louise Morey Bowman’s Timepieces (1922)
- Journeys into Modernity: Katherine Hale’s Grey Knitting (1914) and Going North (1923)
- Imagism in the Canadian Poetic Imagination: A.J.M. Smith and E.J. Pratt
- The Montreal Movement: “Ideas are changing”
- The Canadian Authors Meet (1927 and 1928)
- Protest, Social Observation and Ethnicity: “King or Chaos”
- Dorothy Livesay’s Aesthetic of Commitment
- The Image Constellations of P.K. Page
- Diasporic Intertextuality in the Jewish-Canadian Modernism of A.M. Klein
- The Poet’s Gaze: Klein’s The Rocking Chair (1948)
- Canadian Modernist Prose: A Second Scroll
- Alienated Space in Sinclair Ross’s As for me and my House (1941)
- Gendered Re-Visioning in Canadian Modernism: Sheila Watson, Bertram Brooker and Elizabeth Smart
- The Polysemic Word: From Smart to Klein’s The Second Scroll (1951)
- Conclusion
- 6 Feminist Literatures New Poetics of Identities and Sexualities from the 1960s to the Twenty-First Century
- Overview
- Gender and Creativity in Margaret Atwood’s Fiction
- Margaret Laurence: Decolonization and Writing in Africa
- Margaret Laurence’s Manawaka Cycle (1964 to 1974)
- A Change of Scenery/Dépaysement: The Nomadic Fiction of Gabrielle Roy
- Alice Munro’s Visionary Short Stories
- “Scandalous bodies”: Gender Recoding and Auto/Biographies from Aritha Van Herk to Kerri Sakamoto
- Japanese-Canadian Internment and Historical Silences in Joy Nozomi Kogawa’s Obasan (1981)
- Postmodern Auto/Biography in the Work of Carol Shields
- A “Politics of Location” in Daphne Marlatt and Dionne Brand
- Psychogeography in Canadian Asian Writing
- Feminist Poetry: An Alternative Space of Writing (or, Being Other)
- Theorizing Feminist Collaborative and Communal Writing in the 1980s and 1990s
- Embodying Theory from Postmodernism to Postcolonialism: Feminist Conceptions of Translation, Textuality and Corporeality
- Recoding the Symbolic Mother: Nicole Brossard’s These Our Mothers (1977) and Picture Theory (1982)
- The Feminist-Deconstructive Poetics of Lola Lemire Tostevin
- “Between Command and Defiance”: Mothers and Daughters in the Poetry of Di Brandt
- Diasporic Doubled Consciousness: Dionne Brand’s Postcolonial Canada
- Performing Gender/Feminist Theatrical Subjectivities
- Foundational Feminist Drama from the 1930s to the Work of Gwen Pharis Ringwood
- The 1970s and 1980s: New Environments and Dramatic Re-Telling of Women’s Stories
- Carnival and the Picaresque Heroine in Antonine Maillet’s La Sagouine (1971)
- Sharon Pollock and Margaret Hollingsworth: Alternative Worlds
- Psychodrama and “the Violent Woman” in Feminist Theatre in the 1980s and 1990s
- Dramatic Sites of Desire: Lesbian Theatre in Canada
- Conclusion
- 7 Contemporary Indigenous Literatures Narratives of Autonomy and Resistance
- Overview
- New Venues, new Voices: Indigenous Publishing in the 1960s
- Anthologization: Recollecting and Innovating
- Contemporary Aboriginal Writing/Performance in English
- The Hybrid Drama of Tomson Highway
- Aboriginal Drama in the 1970s and 1980s
- Collaborations: Maria Campbell and Linda Griffiths Negotiate The Book of Jessica: A Theatrical Transformation (1989)
- The Residential Schools Explored Through Theatre: Oskiniko Larry Loyie, Vera Manuel and Joseph A. Dandurand
- Monique Mojica’s Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots (1991)
- The Satirical Humour of Drew Haydon Taylor and Daniel David Moses
- Interrogating Colonial History and its Societal Impact: The Rise of the Aboriginal Novel
- Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water (1993)
- Aboriginal Fiction Surveyed: the 1980s and 1990s
- Intertextuality and the Native Gothic in Eden Robinson’s Traplines (1996) and Monkey Beach (2000)
- Power Relations in Eden Robinson’s Blood Sports (2006)
- Globalized Aboriginal Literature
- “Words are Memory”: Contemporary Aboriginal Poetry – New Beginnings
- Aesthetic/Poetic Growth in the 1990s and Twenty-First Century
- Conclusion
- 8 Canadian Postmodernism Genre Trouble and New Media in Contemporary Canadian Writing
- Overview
- Beginnings, or, Deconstructive Voices: Margaret Atwood
- The Historiographical Metafiction of George Bowering
- Metafictional Parodies in the Writing of Leonard Cohen and Robert Kroetsch
- The Postmodern “Freak Shows” of Susan Swan and Jack Hodgins
- “The Politics of Settlement”: Giving Voice to Community in the Postmodern Fiction of Rudy Wiebe
- Genre Trouble and new Media Technologies: Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient (1992)
- Tele-vision: Catherine Bush’s Minus Time (1993)
- Hyperreal Canada and Digital Domains: Postmodern Journeys into Fear and the Virtual Worlds of William Gibson
- Mediatized/Postmodernism Performance
- Conclusion
- 9 Concluding with the Postcolonial Imagination Diversity, Difference and Ethnicity
- Overview
- The Postcolonial Paradigm: Contested Understandings and Alternative Models
- Theorizing “Trans.Can.Lit”
- Re-Conceiving the Canadian Canon: Postcolonial Possibilities and Allegorical Resistances
- Reconceiving the Canon through African-Canadian Perspectives
- Conclusion
- Glossary of Terms
- Guide to Further Reading
- Biographical, Reference and Historical Works
- Literary Histories and Encyclopaedias
- Aboriginal/First Peoples Literary Criticism
- Early Canadian Literature: Critical Approaches
- Drama Criticism
- Poetry Criticism
- The Novel: Criticism
- The Short Story/Short Fiction
- Critical Themes
- Author Criticism
- Works Cited
- Index
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