Linda Hutcheon, one of the foremost Canadian critics of the day, in her famous work The Politics of Postmodernism, seems to find herself initially in a dilemma. She attempts an elucidation of what postmodernism is and what it is not, recognizing its both positive and negative dimensions. The present paper focuses on the literary culture in Canada, and the manifestation of postmodernist traces therein, with a special reading of Hutcheon’s The Politics of Postmodernism
Canadian criticism has too easily accepted the official description of a Canadian literature which e...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2011. Major: English. Advisor: Paula Rabinowitz. 1 ...
This study explores the usage of public and counterpublic spaces in two Canadian novels, Dionne Bran...
In an examination of the mnemonic dimensions of Canadian postmodernism, Cheetham focuses on the rela...
Whereas the 1990s witnessed the establishment of the basic parameters within which Canada could be c...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
Canadian Postmodern Regionalism in Newfoundland - The Fiction of Lisa Moore (Rabanus Mitterecker)Th...
This research examines poetry reviewing in Canada since 1961 when, arguably, the cultural shift into...
Agnieszka Rzepa It’s a Bad Line. Canadian Re-visions: Postcolonialism, Tra...
The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Literature provides a broad-ranging introduction to some of the key ...
Decolonisation does become problematic when the initial binary power structure is fused, as is the c...
When I was an undergraduate, I recall having heard Canada described as the world\u27s first postmod...
David Leahy historicizes Linda Hutcheon's contributions to contemporary critical studies by examinin...
In order to get past the blind spots that have developed in contemporary postcolonial theory, it is...
"© Edited by E.J. Smyth, published by Batsford 1991. Reproduced by permission of Chrysalis Books Gro...
Canadian criticism has too easily accepted the official description of a Canadian literature which e...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2011. Major: English. Advisor: Paula Rabinowitz. 1 ...
This study explores the usage of public and counterpublic spaces in two Canadian novels, Dionne Bran...
In an examination of the mnemonic dimensions of Canadian postmodernism, Cheetham focuses on the rela...
Whereas the 1990s witnessed the establishment of the basic parameters within which Canada could be c...
An important critical study of Canadian literature, placing internationally successful anglophone Ca...
Canadian Postmodern Regionalism in Newfoundland - The Fiction of Lisa Moore (Rabanus Mitterecker)Th...
This research examines poetry reviewing in Canada since 1961 when, arguably, the cultural shift into...
Agnieszka Rzepa It’s a Bad Line. Canadian Re-visions: Postcolonialism, Tra...
The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Literature provides a broad-ranging introduction to some of the key ...
Decolonisation does become problematic when the initial binary power structure is fused, as is the c...
When I was an undergraduate, I recall having heard Canada described as the world\u27s first postmod...
David Leahy historicizes Linda Hutcheon's contributions to contemporary critical studies by examinin...
In order to get past the blind spots that have developed in contemporary postcolonial theory, it is...
"© Edited by E.J. Smyth, published by Batsford 1991. Reproduced by permission of Chrysalis Books Gro...
Canadian criticism has too easily accepted the official description of a Canadian literature which e...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2011. Major: English. Advisor: Paula Rabinowitz. 1 ...
This study explores the usage of public and counterpublic spaces in two Canadian novels, Dionne Bran...