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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
91

"In all their diversity", ethnicity and the anxiety of nation-building in English-Canadian literary studies at the end of the millennium

Smyrl, Shannon Lorene January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
92

Search procedures, carnivalization in language- and theory-focused texts of four Canadian women writers

Sojka, Eugenia January 1996 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
93

The question of identity in Italian-Canadian fiction

Canton, Licia January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
94

La re-escritura de la historia en las ficciones argentina y quebequense contemporáneas

Elgue de Martini, Cristina January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
95

Maria Chapdelaine, part II, la fiction contre le mythe

Lavoie, Marie-Renée January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
96

Writing the Diaspora : a bibliography and critical commentary on post-Shoah English-language fiction in Australia, South Africa, and Canada

Hart, Alexander 05 1900 (has links)
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote Reflexions sur la Question Juive (1946), in which he concluded that the fate of the Jews, the fate of the individual non-Jew, and the fate of the entire world are inextricably and reciprocally intertwined. Building on Sartre's perception, Portrait of a Jew (1962) and The Liberation of the Jew (1966) describe what the author, Albert Memmi, terms "the universal Jewish fate": that of being the paradigmatic "colonized" Other—insofar as the Jews are a particularly oppressed minority, that is, their marginalization epitomizes the fate of all humanity. Further, Memmi argues both that "to be a Jewish writer is ... to express the Jewish fate" and that a "true Jewish literature" is necessarily one which revolts against the imposition and acceptance of this fate. Sartre's and Memmi's insights posit that Jewish consciousness acts upon both national and world consciousness. Memmi suggests that one means of expressing the Jewish consciousness is through literature. In their imaginative interpretations of the post-Shoah interconnections between the Jew, the nation, and the world, modern Jewish fiction writers of the Diaspora (dispersion) —at least those whose work foregrounds tropes of Jewish sensibility, incorporating Jewish characters and themes—often delineate a world which, in the aftermath of Auschwitz, is socially and existentially even more precarious than it was before the war. This study examines post-Shoah Jewish consciousness and its relation to national/world consciousness,as represented in the English-language Jewish fiction of Australia, South Africa, and Canada, Commonwealth countries whose diverse Jewish literatures have been overshadowed by the predominant English-language Jewish literary culture of the U.S.A. The structure of this study is bipartite. Part B is an indexed Bibliography enumerating primary works by Jewish prose fiction writers of Australia, Canada, and South Africa. Part A is a critical commentary on Part B. The Introduction (Chapter 1) outlines the theoretical bases for the study. The three following chapters scrutinize Jewish Australian (Chapter 2), Jewish South African (Chapter 3), and Jewish Canadian (Chapter 4) fiction. Among the writers considered are Australians B.N. Jubal, Judah Waten, David Martin, Morris Lurie, Serge Liberman, and Lily Brett; South Africans Nadine Gordimer, Dan Jacobson, Jillian Becker, Antony Sher, and Rose Zwi; and Canadians Henry Kreisel, A.M. Klein, Adele Wiseman, Mordecai Richler, and Robert Majzels. Each of these three chapters follows a similar format: a description of the origin, history, and demography of the Jewish community; an outline of the important pre-World War II Jewish fiction writers and their work; an examination of representative post-Shoah works; and concluding remarks about the ways in which the works under consideration here contest and revise both the canons of nation and national literature and the very concepts of nation, canon, and canon-making. An Epilogue (Chapter 5) contextualizes the thematic patterns common to the Jewish fiction of the three countries and suggests ways in which this fiction can be located within the larger framework of Jewish Literature. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
97

Making babies, representations of the infant in 20th century Canadian fiction

Sabatini, Sandra January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
98

Making babies, representations of the infant in 20th century Canadian fiction

Sabatini, Sandra January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
99

La femme de gouttière recueil de nouvelles ; suivi de L'évolution de l'espace féminin dans des nouvelles québécoises des années 1954-1992 /

Champagne, Blanche, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse (Ph.D.)--Université Laval, 1997. / Comprend des réf. bibliogr.
100

Constitution du corpus des écrits des femmes dans la presse canadienne-française entre 1883 et 1893 et analyse de l'usage des pseudonymes

Pilon, Simone, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse (Ph.D.)--Université Laval, 1999. / Comprend des réf. bibliogr.

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