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Canadian literature, the body of written works produced by Canadians. Reflecting the country’s dual origin and its official bilingualism, the literature of Canada can be split into two major divisions: English and French. This article provides a brief historical account of each of these literatures.
- Poetry and Poetics
Canadian literature - Poetry, Poetics, Canadian Poets:...
- Modern Period, 1900–60
Canadian literature - Regionalism, Multiculturalism,...
- The "Quiet Revolution"
Canadian literature - Quiet Revolution, French-Canadian,...
- Contemporary Trends
Canadian literature - Multiculturalism, Regionalism,...
- The Literary Movement of 1860
Canadian literature - 1860s, Nationalism, Poetry: Under the...
- French, Poetry, Novels
Canadian literature - French, Poetry, Novels: The valley of...
- Poetry and Poetics
Literature in Canada. With the works of such internationally acclaimed authors as Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, Alice Munro and Lawrence Hill, Canada is a force to be reckoned with on the literary stage.
25 Μαΐ 2013 · 1. Susanna Moodie – Roughing it in the Bush (1852) Immigration played a large part in the formation of American literature in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but the Canadian version of the journey fared much differently.
Comparative Canadian Literature The comparative study of the Canadian literatures (which normally means writing in English and French) is of recent origin, the best work dating from the late 1960s. The linguistic situation that exists in Canada is not unlike that of other countries that practice bilingual policies (e.g., Cameroon and Belgium).
27 Μαρ 2017 · Canadian literature in English can be said to begin in the early 17th century with Jacobean poetry in Newfoundland; in the decades that followed with numerous explorers writing narratives of contact (seeExploration Literature); or in the mid-18th century with the epistolary fiction of the English garrison community in Québec.
The first to elevate Canadian Literature to the world stage were Lucy Maud Montgomery, Stephen Leacock, Mazo de la Roche, and Morley Callaghan. During the post-war decades Canadian literature, as were Australian and New Zealand literature, viewed as an appendage to British Literature.
The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Literature Sugars, Cynthia, editor A comprehensive, authoritative guide to many different genres, topics, and aspects of Canadian poetic and literary history, including modernist poetry and the developments in Canadian poetry since 1960.