Joy Kogawa's Obasan has enjoyed a status unprecedented for a book written by a non-white Canadian. The novel has been credited with changing the Canadian literary canon, facilitating a practice of multicultural pedagogy, and bridging the gap between writing and political activism. The phenomenon of Obasan has consequences far beyond literature and pedagogy, and can be seen as symptomatic of larger shifts that an integrative analysis of gender, race, class, and sexuality has brought about in Canadian constructions of national identity. Kogawa's text addresses the relationship between narrative and history by forcing Canada to undergo a radical change in its "communal knowledge" of itself as a nation. Obasan thus succeeds in mediating the rel...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
Käesoleva uurimistöö eesmärk on mõista, mis on identiteedi kujunemise peamised põhjused ning miks sa...
International audience'Obasan' (1981) recalls how stigmatizing labels served to justify the evacuati...
This article situates the reception of Joy Kogawa\u27s Obasan within a comparative North American co...
Joy Kogawa is a well known Japanese-Canadian poet and novelist. Her award-winning autobiographical n...
The aim of Joy Kogawa's Obasan is political as well as aesthetic -- Kogawa wishes to articulate the ...
Esta dissertação investiga de que maneiras a representação do sujeito canadense pode ser encontrada ...
Biography: Joy Kogawa is an award-winning author who became a member of the Order of Canada in 1986 ...
This essay examines the discrimination that natives and Japanese Canadians have suffered at the hand...
Power structures and the resultant abjection of their victims in Joy Obasan's Obasan are illuminated...
This paper examines the symbolic implications of preserving Canadian author Joy Kogawa’s childhood h...
[[abstract]]This paper aims to reconsider the other's silence in Joy Kogawa's Obasan, which represen...
The Japanese American community has been deeply marked by the internment experience as a result of t...
[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130404~20130407[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]大阪,...
In 1965 George Grant published Lament for a Nation: The Defeat of Canadian Nationalism,1 a book aski...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
Käesoleva uurimistöö eesmärk on mõista, mis on identiteedi kujunemise peamised põhjused ning miks sa...
International audience'Obasan' (1981) recalls how stigmatizing labels served to justify the evacuati...
This article situates the reception of Joy Kogawa\u27s Obasan within a comparative North American co...
Joy Kogawa is a well known Japanese-Canadian poet and novelist. Her award-winning autobiographical n...
The aim of Joy Kogawa's Obasan is political as well as aesthetic -- Kogawa wishes to articulate the ...
Esta dissertação investiga de que maneiras a representação do sujeito canadense pode ser encontrada ...
Biography: Joy Kogawa is an award-winning author who became a member of the Order of Canada in 1986 ...
This essay examines the discrimination that natives and Japanese Canadians have suffered at the hand...
Power structures and the resultant abjection of their victims in Joy Obasan's Obasan are illuminated...
This paper examines the symbolic implications of preserving Canadian author Joy Kogawa’s childhood h...
[[abstract]]This paper aims to reconsider the other's silence in Joy Kogawa's Obasan, which represen...
The Japanese American community has been deeply marked by the internment experience as a result of t...
[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130404~20130407[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]大阪,...
In 1965 George Grant published Lament for a Nation: The Defeat of Canadian Nationalism,1 a book aski...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
Käesoleva uurimistöö eesmärk on mõista, mis on identiteedi kujunemise peamised põhjused ning miks sa...
International audience'Obasan' (1981) recalls how stigmatizing labels served to justify the evacuati...