Canadian Literature
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Recent papers in Canadian Literature
With the recent publication of The Gospel of Loki (Joanne Harris, 2014), and the forthcoming Vikings exhibition at the British Museum, interest in the life and legends of early Scandinavia is at a high point, but the mythological Old... more
The attribution of magical or holy properties to objects is inherent in religious consciousness. Treating fetishes as “unreal” overlooks the importance of the object as a mediator of social value. Fetishism suggests switching the... more
A critique of former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's anti-niqab policy and the dangerous rhetoric of Islamophobia.
Recent and past evaluations and comments of students who completed requirements for the core counselor training content from the Online College of Mental Health Counselling at www.collegemhc.com
Generally speaking, a minority language is “one spoken by less than 50 percent of a population in a given region, state or country” (Grenoble and Singerman, 2017, n.p.). In this article, I propose a more contextualized definition that... more
Short Fiction in Theory and Practice 4.2 (2014): 175-85. Print.
This essay interprets Daniel David Moses’s challenging experimental drama Kyotopolis, one of Moses’s “city plays” written at the end of the 20th century, in the light of Marshall McLuhan’s media theories of the Global Village that were... more
On the 25 th anniversary of the Air India bombings, June 23, 2010, Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivered an apology at a commemorative ceremony in Toronto on behalf of the federal government to those who lost loved ones on Air India... more
These is the syllabus for LITR 451, which was taught as part of a pair of concurrent courses taught entirely virtually at the intermediate and advanced level during the pandemic-era Spring 2021 semester. At both levels, the course offered... more
The focus of the paper is to explore the position and identity of the Jew in a Jewish-Canadian context of the mid-twentieth century Montreal Ghetto with reference to Mordecai Richler"s select novels. It also explains how history and... more
This article examines the political satire of Nova Scotian writer and politician Thomas Chandler Haliburton through the lens of early nineteenth-century transatlantic debates over reform and the best form of government. Haliburton’s Sam... more
Ce livre propose un regard novateur sur les liens entre la littérature et le monde de la santé contemporain. Les façons traditionnelles de représenter et surtout de raconter le corps humain sont bouleversées par le progrès des... more
Author: Herb Wyile This article revisits Jane Urquhart's 2001 novel The Stone Carvers in light of the Conservative Party of Canada's reframing of national identity, particularly its emphasis on Canada's military and its privileging of... more
Carol Shields’s last novel, Unless (2002), was a finalist for the Canada Reads contest for the best Canadian novel of the first decade of the 20th century. It would have been an ideal winner, not only because it is a brilliant novel, but... more
The character of this interesting monograph is best captured (or should we say “alluded to”?) by its somewhat catchy subtitle: this is not yet another history of the emergence and character of Canadian English (CanE); there are plenty,... more
A dialogue with Cecily Nicholson
Insecurity masked as misdirected identity would seem to be a theme running through much of Canada's early literary history. Situated historically and emotionally between its former colonial master the United Kingdom and its big brother... more
De Soucouyant à Brother transmission du trauma et transmission de la culture dans l'oeuvre de l'écrivain caribéen canadien David Chariandy Rodolphe Solbiac Colloque international : La transmission dans la Caraïbe (anglophone, francophone,... more
The Edinburgh Companion to the Arab Novel in English: The Politics of Anglo Arab and Arab American Literature and Culture
Joseph Boyden's novel Three Day Road (2005) interweaves the depiction of the horrors of World War I and their detrimental influence on the human psyche with the recollections of traditional Aboriginal life, as it is being altered by white... more
These are the endorsements that appear on the covers of Mavis Gallant: The Eye & the Ear, University of Toronto Press 2019, from Lesley Clement (author of Learning to Look: A Visual Response to Mavis Gallant's Fiction); W.H. New (Critic,... more
Article on Canadian playwright Trey Anthony and her play DA KINK IN MY HAIR.
In Arctic Dreams and Nightmares Alootook Ipellie argues that the harsh reality of life in the Arctic landscape has been a deciding factor in the development of Inuit literature, for Inuit 'live in the remote Arctic, relatively... more
Mainly set in Southwestern Ontario, Alice Munro is widely known as a prestigious Canadian short-story writer who explores the complexities of human souls in everyday-life tales with apparently prosaic plots. Munro has been acclaimed as... more
Aritha van Herk’s Places Far From Ellesmere is informed by the contrary dynamics of the centripetal forces of “emplacement” as “entextment,” and the centrifugal drive of dis-location striving to eschew textual and territorial enclosure.... more
A review essay on John McGahern's novel.
2018 Margaret Atwood Society Award for Best Undergraduate Essay [...]considering the complexities and even ambiguities of feminism(s), rather than affirming Offred as complied due to her lack of revolutionary character and action, as... more
This paper analyses the trope of water in Thomas King’s latest novel The Back of the Turtle from an ethics-of-care perspective that puts in conversation Indigenous ethics, feminist care ethics and environmental ethics. I suggest that... more
In Alice Munro’s short story, ‘Dimension,’ the protagonist Doree shifts through the nightmare aftermath of her children’s murder. Her husband Lloyd, the murderer, has been incarcerated in a facility for the criminally insane, and his... more