Edward Taylor Fletcher was born in England in 1817 and arrived in Canada as a young boy. An important figure in Canadian literature, Fletcher’s writing was almost entirely forgotten by history. In this volume, James Gifford has gathered and annotated Fletcher’s essays and poems, writings that describe a nineteenth-century Canadian cultural life far more cosmopolitan than what we might have imagined. Fletcher was a voracious reader of works in many languages and although he was oriented toward Britain, his writing notably reflects a gaze fixed on a horizon much further away. His work therefore stands in contrast to the tendency of later Canadian writers, who focus inward on the nation, and on issues of Canadian identity. His work as a sur...
In 1861 Mary Gordon Copleston published Canada: Why We Live in it, and Why We Like it as a gentlewom...
As Northrop Frye has noted, Canadian literature is remarkably similar, at times, to Middle English l...
In the autumn of 1953 the Cambridge economic historian, C.R. Fay, presented a series of lectures at ...
This digital book is a companion to Of Sunken Islands and Pestilence: Restoring the Voice of Edward ...
A ground-breaking study of nineteenth-century British colonial poetry.Imagined Homelands chronicles ...
Thomas D'Arcy McGee, a Father of Confederation, was a literary as well as a political figure, being ...
The search for a national identity has been a central concern of English-Canadian culture since the ...
Margaret Atwood's Surfacing departs significantly from her previous writing through its location in ...
England's search for the Northwest Passage marks an important dividing line in the development of th...
Critics have long noted a discrepancy between Canadian landscape and the imported European literary ...
Editor, Novelist, Poet, Humorist, Historian, Journalist, Educationalist. Born 1824; died 1903. Act...
The « Big Island », located in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and along the Southern boundary of the Easte...
This thesis examines nearly three centuries of island novels by focusing on Daniel Defoe’s Robinson ...
This article will look at how two Irish writers in nineteenth and early twentieth century Mo...
During the early days of the 20th century, the majority of Canadian immigrants were of British origi...
In 1861 Mary Gordon Copleston published Canada: Why We Live in it, and Why We Like it as a gentlewom...
As Northrop Frye has noted, Canadian literature is remarkably similar, at times, to Middle English l...
In the autumn of 1953 the Cambridge economic historian, C.R. Fay, presented a series of lectures at ...
This digital book is a companion to Of Sunken Islands and Pestilence: Restoring the Voice of Edward ...
A ground-breaking study of nineteenth-century British colonial poetry.Imagined Homelands chronicles ...
Thomas D'Arcy McGee, a Father of Confederation, was a literary as well as a political figure, being ...
The search for a national identity has been a central concern of English-Canadian culture since the ...
Margaret Atwood's Surfacing departs significantly from her previous writing through its location in ...
England's search for the Northwest Passage marks an important dividing line in the development of th...
Critics have long noted a discrepancy between Canadian landscape and the imported European literary ...
Editor, Novelist, Poet, Humorist, Historian, Journalist, Educationalist. Born 1824; died 1903. Act...
The « Big Island », located in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and along the Southern boundary of the Easte...
This thesis examines nearly three centuries of island novels by focusing on Daniel Defoe’s Robinson ...
This article will look at how two Irish writers in nineteenth and early twentieth century Mo...
During the early days of the 20th century, the majority of Canadian immigrants were of British origi...
In 1861 Mary Gordon Copleston published Canada: Why We Live in it, and Why We Like it as a gentlewom...
As Northrop Frye has noted, Canadian literature is remarkably similar, at times, to Middle English l...
In the autumn of 1953 the Cambridge economic historian, C.R. Fay, presented a series of lectures at ...