Introduction: Laying the Groundwork: Canada's (In) visibility

J Andrews - Canada Through American Eyes: Literature and …, 2023 - Springer
American constructions of Canada as a place of refuge are not new, nor are Canada's efforts
to articulate its uniqueness and superiority to the US. The continued depictions of Canada …

[PDF][PDF] Pacific Doors: Earle Birney, Allen Curnow, and Pacific Modernisms

D McNeill - Studies in Canadian Literature, 2018 - erudit.org
Dougal McNeill t's only by our lack of ghosts/we're haunted”: few lines feel as familiar, and
also as dissonant and as wrong, as Earle Birney's often-quoted conclusion to “Can. Lit.”(One …

Looking in stereo: School photography, interracial intimacy, and the pulse of the archive

N Attewell - Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas, 2018 - brill.com
This article examines the visual genre of the school photograph in order to reflect on the
promise of transcolonial methodologies for thinking about the history of race and belonging …

[PDF][PDF] The “Unfetter'd” Muse: R obert Burns, Pre-Confederation Poets, and Transatlantic Circulation

L Davis - Studies in Canadian Literature, 2019 - erudit.org
Chronicle of the Hundredth Birthday of Robert Burns, collecting into one massive volume
accounts of 872 celebrations “honouring the memory of the Ploughman Bard” that had been …

On Burning Canadian Literature in Amsterdam

R Zacharias - Mosaic: An interdisciplinary critical journal, 2020 - JSTOR
In 2011, Lawrence Hill's bestselling novel, The Book of Negroes, was burned by protestors
in the Netherlands. This essay considers the controversy surrounding Hill's novel to explore …

[HTML][HTML] Robert Burns, Pre-Confederation Poets, and Transatlantic Circulation

L Davis - journals.lib.unb.ca
1 In May 1859, artist and writer James Ballantine published his Chronicle of the Hundredth
Birthday of Robert Burns, collecting into one massive volume accounts of 872 celebrations …

[HTML][HTML] Earle Birney, Allen Curnow, and Pacific Modernisms

D McNeill - journals.lib.unb.ca
1 “It's only by our lack of ghosts/we're haunted”: few lines feel as familiar, and also as
dissonant and as wrong, as Earle Birney's often-quoted conclusion to “Can. Lit.”(One 58) …