This thesis is a comparative study of contemporary Canadian novels written during the period 1945-70 which deal with youths and children. Its principal aim is to examine characteristics of our recent child-centered literature. A total of twenty-two novels are taken into consideration. The first chapter serves to define the terms of reference to outline an approach based on the study of certain variables (class, religion, economic level) as applied to the three major groups in Canadian society: immigrants or New Canadians; French Canadians; and English Canadians. The Introduction elaborates the secondary aims of the thesis; to examine the developmental novel as a genre in Canadian literature, and to gain insights into our social environment....
Early musings on the ideas about novels for young people with alternating narratives--the focus if m...
This thesis is principally a study of one theme - engagement - in sixteen Canadian novels of the Twe...
The Canadian is a social, geographical, psychological and literary phenomenon who in his never-endin...
Studies of children in Canadian fiction have tended to be very general, and often label the individu...
This thesis will examine the changing perceptions of childhood as evident in contemporary Quebec and...
The child in many Canadian novels in French and in English serves to symbolize the nation or to make...
This thesis concerns the development of the short story in Canada from 1935 to 1955. The political, ...
This paper aims at analysing the representation of childhood in contemporary Quebec fiction. More pr...
This study examines several aspects of the 20th century Canadian Bildungsroman, most particularly th...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
Canada is a country built on immigration and it continues to grow with the arrival of new immigrant...
In Canada, where only 18% of the population is bilingual in English and French, translation should b...
One question which this study will attempt to investigate is whether bilingual characters in Canadia...
The following Master's thesis is proposing the analysis of five novels, written between 1988 and 199...
It is our purpose in the present work to examine the different attitudes toward the Jewish character...
Early musings on the ideas about novels for young people with alternating narratives--the focus if m...
This thesis is principally a study of one theme - engagement - in sixteen Canadian novels of the Twe...
The Canadian is a social, geographical, psychological and literary phenomenon who in his never-endin...
Studies of children in Canadian fiction have tended to be very general, and often label the individu...
This thesis will examine the changing perceptions of childhood as evident in contemporary Quebec and...
The child in many Canadian novels in French and in English serves to symbolize the nation or to make...
This thesis concerns the development of the short story in Canada from 1935 to 1955. The political, ...
This paper aims at analysing the representation of childhood in contemporary Quebec fiction. More pr...
This study examines several aspects of the 20th century Canadian Bildungsroman, most particularly th...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
Canada is a country built on immigration and it continues to grow with the arrival of new immigrant...
In Canada, where only 18% of the population is bilingual in English and French, translation should b...
One question which this study will attempt to investigate is whether bilingual characters in Canadia...
The following Master's thesis is proposing the analysis of five novels, written between 1988 and 199...
It is our purpose in the present work to examine the different attitudes toward the Jewish character...
Early musings on the ideas about novels for young people with alternating narratives--the focus if m...
This thesis is principally a study of one theme - engagement - in sixteen Canadian novels of the Twe...
The Canadian is a social, geographical, psychological and literary phenomenon who in his never-endin...