This thesis presents a comparative analysis of two periods of Canadian young adult historical fiction novels. Its goal is to determine if and how presentations of Canadian national identity changed following a major international event—the First World War. As the War can be seen as a catalyst that accelerated changing interpretations of the Canadian nation the novels selected bookend this event. Through a comparison of young adult historical fiction novels involving Canadian national history, the subjective and narrative characteristics of history are explored to emphasize common features found in both narrative histories and fiction. By relying on young adult historical fiction, which for the purpose of this thesis are texts intended for p...
286 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.A material feature I uncover ...
This anti-racist study is one which critically investigates the representation of whiteness in a Can...
The years following the First World War witnessed a dramatic change in the Canadian novel, from nine...
The search for a national identity has been a central concern of English-Canadian culture since the ...
This dissertation seeks to modify the widely held view that the Great War (1914-18) was the defining...
This thesis examines how medievalist narratives of nationhood developed in the early days of English...
This thesis investigates the expansion and continuing proliferation of Canadian historical fiction d...
This thesis examines the construction and contestation of Anglo-Canadian identity from the end of th...
Commemorating historical events is an intimately political phenomenon. What nations choose to commem...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century Canadian fiction in relation to the cultural context f...
Sociocultural studies in history education demonstrate that “positionality” influences how one under...
This article investigates the evolving conceptions of national identity in Canada and Australia thro...
This dissertation is a study of the extent, nature, and significance of the image of Canada in the l...
'"Transcolonial Circuits': Historical Fiction and National Identities in Ireland, Scotland, and Can...
This paper explores original material from a collection of Canadian mass-market magazines that were ...
286 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.A material feature I uncover ...
This anti-racist study is one which critically investigates the representation of whiteness in a Can...
The years following the First World War witnessed a dramatic change in the Canadian novel, from nine...
The search for a national identity has been a central concern of English-Canadian culture since the ...
This dissertation seeks to modify the widely held view that the Great War (1914-18) was the defining...
This thesis examines how medievalist narratives of nationhood developed in the early days of English...
This thesis investigates the expansion and continuing proliferation of Canadian historical fiction d...
This thesis examines the construction and contestation of Anglo-Canadian identity from the end of th...
Commemorating historical events is an intimately political phenomenon. What nations choose to commem...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century Canadian fiction in relation to the cultural context f...
Sociocultural studies in history education demonstrate that “positionality” influences how one under...
This article investigates the evolving conceptions of national identity in Canada and Australia thro...
This dissertation is a study of the extent, nature, and significance of the image of Canada in the l...
'"Transcolonial Circuits': Historical Fiction and National Identities in Ireland, Scotland, and Can...
This paper explores original material from a collection of Canadian mass-market magazines that were ...
286 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.A material feature I uncover ...
This anti-racist study is one which critically investigates the representation of whiteness in a Can...
The years following the First World War witnessed a dramatic change in the Canadian novel, from nine...