PhDThis thesis attempts to discover the links between concepts of identity and origins, and Canadian women's writing. The work of three English-speaking Canadian women writers, Mavis Gallant, Margaret Atwood and Alice Munro, will be examined in order to discover the ways in which their writings problematize feminine subjecthood, and in doing so shed light on a specifically Canadian 'discourse' of identity. I posit thereby, that perceiving the absences and silences structuring their modes of representation is a (symbolic) means of perceiving Canada as a dualistic, fractured, and contradictory unity. This implies a dialogue between text and context: a reading of one through the other. The three writers in question draw on diverse,...
Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing studies the effects of the delineation of identity at a time in Canadian...
This article analyzes the relationship between ancestral women and their arrival in a new landscape ...
During the twentieth century, women poets who were immensely influenced by the most revolutionary as...
The short fiction of Canadian writers Mavis Gallant, Alice Munro, and Margaret Atwood highlights the...
This dissertation offers a new exploration of the relationship between geographic awareness and lite...
This thesis focuses on two twentieth-century Canadian female authors of distinct cultural and lingui...
Margaret Eleanor Atwood (1939 – ) is one of the contemporary most preeminent and multitalented livin...
PhD ThesisMy thesis is engaged in conceptualising the genre of the Canadian female Kuenstlerroman, ...
This Research paper is to elucidate the quest for self-Identity and women subjections in Canadian so...
This study is a critical reading of the fiction of contemporary Canadian novelist and poet Margaret ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe subject of this dissertation--non-fictional travel writi...
My thesis, feminist in approach, examines voices of the concerned middle through the female ficti...
Using the medium of Canadian literature my capstone thesis explores the origin of the distinct Canad...
This thesis explores the concepts of “voice” and “influence” through the case studies of two famous ...
This thesis explores the concepts of “voice” and “influence” through the case studies of two famous ...
Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing studies the effects of the delineation of identity at a time in Canadian...
This article analyzes the relationship between ancestral women and their arrival in a new landscape ...
During the twentieth century, women poets who were immensely influenced by the most revolutionary as...
The short fiction of Canadian writers Mavis Gallant, Alice Munro, and Margaret Atwood highlights the...
This dissertation offers a new exploration of the relationship between geographic awareness and lite...
This thesis focuses on two twentieth-century Canadian female authors of distinct cultural and lingui...
Margaret Eleanor Atwood (1939 – ) is one of the contemporary most preeminent and multitalented livin...
PhD ThesisMy thesis is engaged in conceptualising the genre of the Canadian female Kuenstlerroman, ...
This Research paper is to elucidate the quest for self-Identity and women subjections in Canadian so...
This study is a critical reading of the fiction of contemporary Canadian novelist and poet Margaret ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe subject of this dissertation--non-fictional travel writi...
My thesis, feminist in approach, examines voices of the concerned middle through the female ficti...
Using the medium of Canadian literature my capstone thesis explores the origin of the distinct Canad...
This thesis explores the concepts of “voice” and “influence” through the case studies of two famous ...
This thesis explores the concepts of “voice” and “influence” through the case studies of two famous ...
Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing studies the effects of the delineation of identity at a time in Canadian...
This article analyzes the relationship between ancestral women and their arrival in a new landscape ...
During the twentieth century, women poets who were immensely influenced by the most revolutionary as...