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Literary Criticism Canadian

Between Languages and Cultures

Colonial and Postcolonial Readings of Gabrielle Roy

by (author) Rosemary Chapman

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2009
Category
Canadian
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773575806
    Publish Date
    Apr 2009
    List Price
    $110.00

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Description

Gabrielle Roy is one of the best-known figures of Québec literature, yet she spent much of the first thirty years of her life studying, working, and living in English. For Roy, as a member of Manitoba's francophone minority, bilingualism was a necessary strategy for survival and success. How did this bilingual and bicultural background help shape her work as a writer in French? The implications of her linguistic and cultural identity are explored in chapters looking at education, language, translation, and the representation of Canada's other minorities, from the immigrants in Western Canada to the Inuit of Ungava. What emerges is a new reading of Roy's work. Drawing on archival material, postcolonial theory, and translation studies, Between Languages and Cultures explores the traces and effects of Roy's intimate knowledge of English language and culture, challenging and augmenting the established view that her work is distinctly French-Canadian or Québécois.

About the author

Rosemary Chapman is reader in French and Canadian studies, University of Nottingham, and author of Siting the Quebec Novel: The Representation of Space in Francophone Writing in Quebec.

Rosemary Chapman's profile page