Articles

Frank Oliver Call, Eastern Townships Poetry, and the Modernist Movement
Abstract: ?HE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS are situated in southern Québec and are bounded on ?thHeEsouth by the American border, the states of ...
Frederick Philip Grove: A Group of Letters

Abstract: IHAVE IN MY possession two sets of letters from Frederick Philip Grove ( 1871-1948). One set consists of the letters ...

Frederick Philip Grove: An Impression

Abstract: ONE DAY IN THE FALL of 1939 I was wandering among the book stacks in Eaton’s Toronto store. A novel, ...

From “Hunky” to Don Juan: The Canadian Hungarian Identity in Canadian Fiction

Abstract: ?ÍANADA’S MULTICULTURALISM is vividly reflected in Can- adian immigrant novels, many of which are about the characters’ difficulties in a ...

From Alienation to Transcendence: The Quest for Selfhood in Michel Tremblay’s Plays

Abstract: IN SLIGHTLY MORE THAN A DECADE of sustained productivity, Michel Tremblay created no less than eleven plays set in the ...

From Complicity to Subversion: The Female Subject in Adele Wiseman’s Novels

Abstract: AN EXAMINATION OF THE FEMALE SUBJECT in Adele Wiseman’s novels charts the radical shift from complicity with the patriarchy of ...

From Manuscript to Print: Stephen Leacock’s “The Transit of Venus”

Abstract: A. L.S LEACOCK s ONLY PUBLISHED ATTEMPT at a serious short story, “The Transit of Venus” stands apart from the ...

From Marichette to Rosealba and La Sagouine: A Genealogy au féminin for Acadian Theatre

Abstract: A.S the organizers of the celebrated booklaunch for La Sagouine2 must have realized, Antonine Maillet’s Sagouine can appear as a ...

From Qallunaat to James Bay: An Interview with Mini Aodla Freeman, Keavy Martin, Julie Rak, and Norma Dunning

Abstract: This interview speaks to Mini Aodla Freeman’s Life Among the Qallunaat, a memoir that interlaces vignettes about her childhood in James Bay, Nunavik with her adult life in Hamilton and Ottawa. The book has been published in two editions to date: the 1978 edition with Hurtig Publishers, which heavily revises the memoir, and the 2015 edition with the University of Manitoba Press, which restores the original manuscript. The interviewers met with Aodla Freeman and the editors, Keavy Martin, Julie Rak and Norma Dunning, on June 9, 2015 at Rak’s home in Treaty 6 territory. We discuss the editorial processes of the original and restored publications, as well as the community protocols and conditions of visibility that go into writing and publishing a book. Aodla Freeman shares new stories about James Bay, reflects on the republication of her memoir, and unveils her plans for future projects.

From The Business of Ramón García’s Disappearance

Abstract: Thinking of him, writing this, I wonder—has our dis- agreement with his politics delayed him? Does our opposition put us ...

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