Articles

An Evening with Babble and Doodle: Presentations of poetry
Abstract: We may call them, if the terms are thought dignified enough, babble and doodle. —Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism. M.LORE ...
An Interview with Frank G. Paci

Abstract: FRANK G. PACÍ is the most prolific and best-known Canadian writer of Italian origin. He is the author of three ...

An Interview with Sally Ito

Abstract: John Ming Chen has recently been working on a collection of interviews with Asian Canadian writers. In the spring of ...

An Interview with Wayson Choy

Abstract: Wayson Choy was in the process of researching his memoir, Paper Shadows (see review in this issue of Canadian Literature), ...

Anatomy of Confusion: Jack Ludwig’s Evolution

Abstract: ?lo SAY THAT OUR AGE is confused is a truism. Authors have been saying it withl odeipressing frequency since the ...

And the Sun Goes Down: Richler’s First Novel

Abstract: One generation passeth away, and an- other generation cometh: but the earth abideth for ever. ILN MORDECAI RICHLER’S FIRST NOVEL ...

And Tomorrow, I’m Somewhere Else: Destabilization, Dispossession, and Dissolution in the Vancouvers of Lisa Robertson and Mercedes Eng

Abstract: In this article, I read the poetry of Lisa Robertson and Mercedes Eng, both of whom stage, confront, and critique the capitalist and colonial processes that stabilize and destabilize the material relations that compose Vancouver in the twenty-first century. As processes, stabilization and destabilization involve both the ways a space is subject to change and the ways that individual actors can affect those changes. Both Robertson and Eng respond to a city that is repeatedly hailed both as one of the world’s most livable cities and as one of the most unaffordable—a city of condos and cranes, scaffolds, and tent encampments. When we read Robertson’s and Eng’s texts together, a potent tension emerges between the theoretical possibilities and material realities of instability—a tension that can help us think through the potentials of poetry to transform spaces and spatial relations.

André Major et Langagement: Les “Histoires de déserteurs” (1970-1976)

Abstract:

Anna Minerva Henderson: An Afro-New Brunswick Response to Canadian (Modernist) Poetry

Abstract: For Anna Minerva Henderson (1887-1987) A native of Saint John, New Brunswick, Anna Minerva Henderson worked in Ottawa for many ...

Anne Carson and the Solway Hoaxes

Abstract: Carson may be our newest pedestalized inamorata but the fact is—and I say this unabashedly—she is a phony, all sleight-of-hand, ...

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