The CanLit Guides 2018 Collection: Chapter Spotlight — Canadian Literature and the Canada-US Border

Sign on the Pacific Crest Trail, Oregon. Carissa Rogers, 2010. CC BY 2.0, via Flickr.

Canadian Literature and the Canada-US Border,” by Gillian Roberts, introduces Canadian literature’s relationship to the field of Canada-US Border Studies. In what we might call Canadian “border texts,” the border features prominently, if variably. The Canadian nation is a contested space, a site of struggle over political and cultural values between groups with diverging interests. Canadian border texts reveal the border as a site of struggle, too, figuring differently from different people’s perspectives. In analyzing these literary texts, we see that at times—for some people—the border appears porous and permeable, and at other times—for other people—impenetrable.

Read “Canadian Literature and the Canada-US Border”


CanLit Guides, created and maintained by Canadian Literature, is a open-access collection of learning materials on different topics in the field of Canadian literature. The CanLit Guides 2018 Collection is the result of collaboration between experts in the field and our editorial team. The chapters here cover a range of topics, time periods, and genres, and show the dynamic ways scholars are engaging with literatures in Canada today.