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Title National plots : historical fiction and changing ideas of Canada / edited by Andrea Cabajsky and Brett Josef Grubisic.

Publication Info. Waterloo, Ont. : Wilfrid Laurier University Press, [2010]
Saint-Lazare, Quebec : Canadian Electronic Library, 2010.
©2010

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xxiv, 252 pages)
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Part one. A Usable Past? New Questions, New Directions -- "A Trading Shop So Crooked a Man Could Jump through the Cracks": Counting the Cost of Fred Stenson's Trade in the Hudson's Bay Company Archive / Kathleen Venema -- Past Lives: Aimee Laberge's Where the River Narrows and the Transgenerational Gene Pool / Cynthia Sugars -- The Orange Devil: Thomas Scott and the Canadian Historical Novel / Albert Braz -- State of Shock: History and Crisis in Hugh MacLennan's Barometer Rising / Robert David Stacey -- "And They May Get it Wrong, After All": Reading Alice Munro's "Meneseteung" / Tracy Ware.
Part two. Unconventional Voices: Fiction versus Recorded History -- Windigo Killing: Joseph Boyden's Three Day Road / Herb Wyile -- Telling a Better Story: History, Fiction, and Rhetoric in George Copway's Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation / Shelley Hulan -- The Racialization of Canadian History: African-Canadian Fiction, 1990-2005 / Pilar Cuder-Dominguez -- Turning the Tables / Aritha van Herk.
Part three. Literary Histories, Regional Contexts -- "To Free Itself, and Find Itself": Writing a History for the Prairie West / Claire Campbell -- "Old Lost Land": Loss in Newfoundland Historical Fiction / Paul Chafe -- Imagining Vancouvers: Burning Water, Ana Historic, and the Literary (Un) Settling of the Pacific Coast / Owen Percy -- Too Little Geography; Too Much History: Writing the Balance in "Meneseteung" / Dennis Duffy.
Summary Fiction that reconsiders, challenges, reshapes, and/or upholds national narratives of history has long been an integral aspect of Canadian literature. Works by writers of historical fiction (from early practitioners such as John Richardson to contemporary figures such as Alice Munro and George Elliott Clarke) propose new views and understandings of Canadian history and individual relationships to it. Critical evaluation of these works sheds light on the complexity of these depictions. The contributors in National Plots: Historical Fiction and Changing Ideas of Canada critically examine text.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject National characteristics, Canadian, in literature.
National characteristics, Canadian, in literature.
Historical fiction, Canadian (English) -- History and criticism.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Added Author Grubisic, Brett Josef.
Cabajsky, Andrea, 1971-
Other Form: Print version: 9781554580613
ISBN 9781554581610 (electronic book)
1554581613 (electronic book)
9781554580613 (print)
1554580617