A History of Canadian LiteratureMacmillan Education, 1989 - 380 páginas This comprehensive survey begins with an account of the myths of the New World, describing the fascinating background against which to read the emerging English and French language Literatures of Canada. An examination of the early literature takes full account of explorers' journals, the Jesuit Relations and settlement and captivity narratives, and the works of writers from 1880 to the present day such as Kirkby, Frechette, F.R. Scott, Tremblay, Munro and Atwood are fully discussed. Account is taken of historical events such as Confederation, the Canada First Movement and the Imperial Federation Movement, as well as the main critical movements of each period. |
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Página 94
... readers lay ; readers were drawn to the melodrama , and subsequent editions have repeatedly abridged the book to remove all passages that seem to impede the main plotline . It is difficult to comment securely , for the text has always ...
... readers lay ; readers were drawn to the melodrama , and subsequent editions have repeatedly abridged the book to remove all passages that seem to impede the main plotline . It is difficult to comment securely , for the text has always ...
Página 177
... readers , the third group is abstract , concerning itself with theories of communication . From the perspective of the third group , the first readers mistook the concreteness of the text for the concreteness of life . As For Me and My ...
... readers , the third group is abstract , concerning itself with theories of communication . From the perspective of the third group , the first readers mistook the concreteness of the text for the concreteness of life . As For Me and My ...
Página 270
... readers to see it sometimes as the inverse side of domestic realism rather than as a negation of it . A similar generalisation touches science fiction writing as well . Again from the 1960s on , Canadian practice in this genre began to ...
... readers to see it sometimes as the inverse side of domestic realism rather than as a negation of it . A similar generalisation touches science fiction writing as well . Again from the 1960s on , Canadian practice in this genre began to ...
Conteúdo
early literature | 1 |
literature to 1867 | 24 |
literature to 1922 | 81 |
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A. M. Klein adventure American anglophone Anne Hébert appeared attitudes Atwood Audrey Thomas AUTHOR AND TITLE became becomes British Columbia Canada Canadian literature century character collected colony comic contemporary conventional critical culture Dave Godfrey Dorothy Livesay edited Emily empirical English essays established European EVENT example excerpts F. R. Scott fiction film francophone French Garneau George Hence immigrant Indian Inuit Jacques John joual journal Kroetsch land landscape language later Layton literary lives Livesay Mackenzie Magazine Manitoba Margaret Margaret Atwood Margaret Laurence Montreal Moodie moral myths narrative nature Nelligan Newfoundland Nicole Brossard norms North Nova Scotia novel Ontario Pierre plays poems poet poetry political prairies prose published Quebec readers reality recognise Riel Robert romance satiric Scott short stories sketches social society songs speech structure Susanna Moodie tale tells Toronto translated turn Vancouver verse voice West wilderness woman women writers wrote