Trans.Can.Lit

Trans.Can.Lit

Author: Smaro Kamboureli

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press

Published: 2009-10-22

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13: 1554587182

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The study of Canadian literature—CanLit—has undergone dramatic changes since it became an area of specialization in the 1960s and ’70s. As new global forces in the 1990s undermined its nation-based critical assumptions, its theoretical focus and research methods lost their immediacy. The contributors to Trans.Can.Lit address cultural policy, citizenship, white civility, and the celebrated status of diasporic writers, unabashedly recognizing the imperative to transfigure the disciplinary and institutional frameworks within which Canadian literature is produced, disseminated, studied, taught, and imagined.


Trans.can.lit

Trans.can.lit

Author: Smaro Kamboureli

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press

Published: 2007-11-08

Total Pages: 253

ISBN-13: 0889205132

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Recognises the imperative to transfigure the study of Canadian literature to mirror the dramatic changes it has undergone since the 1960s and 70s.


Transnational Canadas

Transnational Canadas

Author: Kit Dobson

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press

Published: 2011-04-07

Total Pages: 258

ISBN-13: 1554586682

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Transnational Canadas marks the first sustained inquiry into the relationship between globalization and Canadian literature written in English. Tracking developments in the literature and its study from the centennial period to the present, it shows how current work in transnational studies can provide new insights for researchers and students. Arguing first that the dichotomy of Canadian nationalism and globalization is no longer valid in today’s economic climate, Transnational Canadas explores the legacy of leftist nationalism in Canadian literature. It examines the interventions of multicultural writing in the 1980s and 1990s, investigating the cultural politics of the period and how they increasingly became part of Canada’s state structure. Under globalization, the book concludes, we need to understand new forms of subjectivity and mobility as sites for cultural politics and look beyond received notions of belonging and being. An original contribution to the study of Canadian literature, Transnational Canadas seeks to invigorate discussion by challenging students and researchers to understand the national and the global simultaneously, to look at the politics of identity beyond the rubric of multiculturalism, and to rethink the slippery notion of the political for the contemporary era.