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New river strain, locating the author and the narrator in David Adams Richards' Miramichi trilogyLindsay, David C. January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Writing home : regionalism, distance, and metafiction in four novels by Wayne Johnston /Pearce, Jason, January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (M. A.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1997. / Bibliography: leaves 86-92.
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Regionalism in the fiction of Alistair MacLeod, Alden Nowlan, and David Adams RichardsCormier, Audrey M. January 2000 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Space and identity formation in twentieth-century Canadian realist novels : recasting regionalism within Canadian literary studiesChalykoff, Lisa 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation develops and demonstrates a new mode of regional literary
analysis. I begin by assessing the work of five Canadian literary regionalists from
perspectives provided by human geographers and spatial theorists. Although discourses
of Canadian literary regionalism vary, I argue that this field has tended to rely upon a
reified understanding of regional analysis, a mystified conception of regional identity,
and a passive construction of regional space.
I offer a means of disrupting these tendencies by re-imagining the process of
regional literary analysis. As I define it, literary regionalism is the process of
demonstrating patterns in the way that literary texts deploy representations of sociomaterial
space to enable performances of identity. This approach foregrounds literature's
capacity to elucidate space's social efficacy. It also directs literary regionalism towards a
more contemporary understanding of space and identity.
In part two I begin to apply my mode of analysis to eight twentieth-century
Canadian realist novels by introducing the concept of place. Because place-studies focus
on the organization of social relations within a single text, I argue that they offer a useful
means of initiating cross-textual, regional analyses. I demonstrate this point by analyzing
the relationship between place and gender identity in Charles Bruce's The Channel Shore,
and then looking for parallels in the way other novels articulate this relationship.
In part three I construct a "region of denial and purgation" by interrogating how
and why authors deploy representations of nature to deny the social origins of identity
formation. I relate the power such representations have to articulate seemingly epiphanic
shifts in identity to the sublime's enduring legacy. Because sublime experience enables
characters to reconstitute themselves as new, it facilitates their desires to purge those
aspects of their personal histories that have caused them guilt or shame.
I conclude that this dissertation makes two contributions to Canadian literary
studies. First, it advances a productive dialogue between human geography and Canadian
literary studies. Second, by re-imagining the practice of Canadian literary regionalism
through alternate disciplinary lenses, this dissertation helpfully foregrounds the heterodox
character—and'unexplored potential—of a regional mode of literary analysis.
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A song and a slogan : regional influences on Carl Sandburg and Edgar Lee Masters /Dunlavey, Amanda, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Eastern Illinois University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 97-101).
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Between a rock and a soft place postmodern-regionalism in Canadian and American fiction /MacLeod, Alexander, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.). / Written for the Dept. of English. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2008/08/04). Includes bibliographical references.
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Hindī, Gujarātī ke āñcalika upanyāsa eka tulnātmaka adhyayana /Nāgapāla, Rāja. January 1978 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Delhi University. / In Hindi. Includes bibliographical references (p. [203]-207).
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Books and worlds : a literary cartographer of the Canadian north /Surgeoner, Joanna Christine. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2004. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 287-299).
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The individual is everything or the world is nothing, morality and regionalism in the novels of David Adams RichardsAllison, Michael David January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Space and identity formation in twentieth-century Canadian realist novels : recasting regionalism within Canadian literary studiesChalykoff, Lisa 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation develops and demonstrates a new mode of regional literary
analysis. I begin by assessing the work of five Canadian literary regionalists from
perspectives provided by human geographers and spatial theorists. Although discourses
of Canadian literary regionalism vary, I argue that this field has tended to rely upon a
reified understanding of regional analysis, a mystified conception of regional identity,
and a passive construction of regional space.
I offer a means of disrupting these tendencies by re-imagining the process of
regional literary analysis. As I define it, literary regionalism is the process of
demonstrating patterns in the way that literary texts deploy representations of sociomaterial
space to enable performances of identity. This approach foregrounds literature's
capacity to elucidate space's social efficacy. It also directs literary regionalism towards a
more contemporary understanding of space and identity.
In part two I begin to apply my mode of analysis to eight twentieth-century
Canadian realist novels by introducing the concept of place. Because place-studies focus
on the organization of social relations within a single text, I argue that they offer a useful
means of initiating cross-textual, regional analyses. I demonstrate this point by analyzing
the relationship between place and gender identity in Charles Bruce's The Channel Shore,
and then looking for parallels in the way other novels articulate this relationship.
In part three I construct a "region of denial and purgation" by interrogating how
and why authors deploy representations of nature to deny the social origins of identity
formation. I relate the power such representations have to articulate seemingly epiphanic
shifts in identity to the sublime's enduring legacy. Because sublime experience enables
characters to reconstitute themselves as new, it facilitates their desires to purge those
aspects of their personal histories that have caused them guilt or shame.
I conclude that this dissertation makes two contributions to Canadian literary
studies. First, it advances a productive dialogue between human geography and Canadian
literary studies. Second, by re-imagining the practice of Canadian literary regionalism
through alternate disciplinary lenses, this dissertation helpfully foregrounds the heterodox
character—and'unexplored potential—of a regional mode of literary analysis. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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