Medievalism in English Canadian Literature
Anna Czarnowus (Hrsg.), M. J. Toswell (Hrsg.)
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Belletristik / Essays, Feuilleton, Literaturkritik, Interviews
Beschreibung
First full-length investigation into Canadian literary medievalism as a discrete phenomenon.
The essays in this volume consider what is original and distinctive about the manifestation of medievalism in Canadian literature and its origins and its subsequent growth and development: from the first novel published in Canadawritten by a Canadian-born author, Julia Beckwith Hart's
St Ursula's Convent (1824), to the recent work of the best-selling novelist Patrick DeWitt (
Undermajordomo Minor, published in 2015). Topics addressed includethe strong strain of medievalist fantasy itself in the work of the young-adult author Kit Pearson, and the longer novels of Charles de Lint, Steven Erikson, and Guy Gavriel Kay; the medievalist inclinations of Archibald Lampman and W.W. Campbell, well-known nineteenth-century Canadian poets; and the often-studied
Wacousta by John Richardson, first published in 1832. Chapters also cover early Canadian periodicals' engagement with orientalist medievalism; and works by twentieth-century writers such as the irrepressible Earle Birney, the witty and intellectual Robertson Davies, and the fascinating and learned Margaret Atwood.
M.J. TOSWELL is a Professor at theUniversity of Western Ontario, ANNA CZARNOWUS is a Professor at the University of Silesia in Katowice.
Contributors: D.M.R. Bentley, Agnieszka Klis-Brodowska, Anna Czarnowus, Brian Johnson, Laurel Ryan, David Watt, M.J. Toswell, Dominika Ruszkiewicz, Cory Rushton, Sylwia Borowska-Szerszun, Ewa Drab, and Michael Fox.
Kundenbewertungen
Canadian literature, medievalist fantasy, Atwood, Archibald Lampman, medievalist themes, Guy Gavriel Kay, Kit Pearson, Richardson, Medievalism, English Canadian Literature, Charles de Lint, Steven Erikson, Canadian medievalism, British dimension, Wacousta, W.W. Campbell, early Canadian periodicals, medievalist inclinations