The portrayal of Canadian landscape in Canadian Literature, its vast grassy fields, freezing winter and soothing summer are scintillating and impressive. Canadian women poets like Isabella Valancy Crawford, Margret Atwood, Anne Marriott, Catherine Owen, Margret Avison, Dorothy Livesey and P. K. Page have beautifully portrayed the beauty of Canada. Their poetry is quite in tune with the country’s climatic surroundings. Its ambience and scene of the land commingles with the creative urges of these poets before shaping the contours of their literature this paper examines how the women poets in Canada have from the time to time returned to the landscape for the soul of their poetry
From 1925 to 1962, the Ryerson Press published 200 short, artisanally printed books of poetry by eme...
During the nineteenth century, women in Britain and Canada read about natural history, wrote about i...
According to Gaile McGregor, nature has largely been associated in Canada with a ''violent duality,"...
Community, culture, nature: Northern BC Women\u27s Ecopoetry examines an approach of bioregionalist ...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
It has been my hope that this thesis would serve as a bridge between three things: my past wildernes...
Essential to the study of Canadian environmental literature is the students’ personal connection to ...
The island, and the fresh water island in particular, is a recurring motif in the work of early Cana...
This study offers additional nuance to the garden topos and trope within nineteenth- and twentieth-c...
This paper is an attempt to explore the ecological issues in Margaret Atwood’s novels. She happens t...
This thesis explores aesthetic representation in Australian and Canadian nature writing from the tur...
An examination of literary site pieces written in Canada during the nineteenth and early twentieth c...
Poetry in present day Canada begun almost simultaneously with the European colonization of those reg...
Landscape is a fact of Canadian life. Regardless of where one lives in Canada, the presence and ima...
Ecocriticism can be described in very general terms as the investigation of the many ways in which c...
From 1925 to 1962, the Ryerson Press published 200 short, artisanally printed books of poetry by eme...
During the nineteenth century, women in Britain and Canada read about natural history, wrote about i...
According to Gaile McGregor, nature has largely been associated in Canada with a ''violent duality,"...
Community, culture, nature: Northern BC Women\u27s Ecopoetry examines an approach of bioregionalist ...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
It has been my hope that this thesis would serve as a bridge between three things: my past wildernes...
Essential to the study of Canadian environmental literature is the students’ personal connection to ...
The island, and the fresh water island in particular, is a recurring motif in the work of early Cana...
This study offers additional nuance to the garden topos and trope within nineteenth- and twentieth-c...
This paper is an attempt to explore the ecological issues in Margaret Atwood’s novels. She happens t...
This thesis explores aesthetic representation in Australian and Canadian nature writing from the tur...
An examination of literary site pieces written in Canada during the nineteenth and early twentieth c...
Poetry in present day Canada begun almost simultaneously with the European colonization of those reg...
Landscape is a fact of Canadian life. Regardless of where one lives in Canada, the presence and ima...
Ecocriticism can be described in very general terms as the investigation of the many ways in which c...
From 1925 to 1962, the Ryerson Press published 200 short, artisanally printed books of poetry by eme...
During the nineteenth century, women in Britain and Canada read about natural history, wrote about i...
According to Gaile McGregor, nature has largely been associated in Canada with a ''violent duality,"...