This dissertation examines the urban mystery in relation to the popular press in order to show how genre and form, modes of publication, and representations of urban space, crime, and punishment all contribute to the formation of national identity in nineteenth-century France and Quebec. Specifically, it explores the ways Eug�ne Sue’s genre-launching serial novel, Les Myst�res de Paris (1842–1843), uses literature and the press to make significant interventions in socio-political debates on social and penal reforms, not just reflecting public opinion, but actually forming it. In the following chapters, I analyze Sue’s novel as well as the works of Sue’s Canadian imitators, who each produced a novel bearing the title Les Myst�res de Montr�al...
This thesis explores the cities of Moncton and Ottawa as "literary capitals," a concept developed by...
“The English have invented the house,” writes Philip Gilbert Hamerton in Paris in Old and Present Ti...
The article analyzes the changes that took place in Québec in the field of the fictionalization of H...
This dissertation examines the urban mystery in relation to the popular press in order to show how g...
Our thesis studies Eugène Sue's “Mystères de Paris” (1842-1843) and the “romans-feuilletons” that ha...
Notre thèse est consacrée à l'étude des Mystères de Paris (1842-1843) d'Eugène Sue et des romans qui...
This thesis is a work of literary geography that addresses a phenomenon generally studied through it...
I am looking at early and late nineteenth century novels that fall into the category of “city myster...
This dissertation examines writing on colonialism in late nineteenth-century French literature and t...
Key works of popular fiction are often rewritten to capitalize on their success. But what are the im...
The literature of the Quiet Revolution tends to be read in terms of its engagement with the construc...
This dissertation explores the relationship between monarchical and patriarchal constructions of pow...
This thesis analyses the representation and creation of complicity in fin-de-siècle French literary ...
This dissertation provides the first sustained theorization of Canada’s urban literature. Critics h...
Jean-François Parot s series of crime thrillers is set in the French capital, in the second half of ...
This thesis explores the cities of Moncton and Ottawa as "literary capitals," a concept developed by...
“The English have invented the house,” writes Philip Gilbert Hamerton in Paris in Old and Present Ti...
The article analyzes the changes that took place in Québec in the field of the fictionalization of H...
This dissertation examines the urban mystery in relation to the popular press in order to show how g...
Our thesis studies Eugène Sue's “Mystères de Paris” (1842-1843) and the “romans-feuilletons” that ha...
Notre thèse est consacrée à l'étude des Mystères de Paris (1842-1843) d'Eugène Sue et des romans qui...
This thesis is a work of literary geography that addresses a phenomenon generally studied through it...
I am looking at early and late nineteenth century novels that fall into the category of “city myster...
This dissertation examines writing on colonialism in late nineteenth-century French literature and t...
Key works of popular fiction are often rewritten to capitalize on their success. But what are the im...
The literature of the Quiet Revolution tends to be read in terms of its engagement with the construc...
This dissertation explores the relationship between monarchical and patriarchal constructions of pow...
This thesis analyses the representation and creation of complicity in fin-de-siècle French literary ...
This dissertation provides the first sustained theorization of Canada’s urban literature. Critics h...
Jean-François Parot s series of crime thrillers is set in the French capital, in the second half of ...
This thesis explores the cities of Moncton and Ottawa as "literary capitals," a concept developed by...
“The English have invented the house,” writes Philip Gilbert Hamerton in Paris in Old and Present Ti...
The article analyzes the changes that took place in Québec in the field of the fictionalization of H...