Invention of Canada
Literary Text and the Immigrant Imaginary
- Publisher
- Mawenzi House Publishers Ltd.
- Initial publish date
- Jan 1990
- Category
- Canadian
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780920661130
- Publish Date
- Jan 1990
- List Price
- $15.95
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Where to buy it
Out of print
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Description
An in-depth study of the Canadian reality as perceived through the works of modern immigrant writers, including:
Henry Kreisel, Ved Devajee (Reshard Gool), Austin Carke, Ethel Wilson, Brian Moore, John Marlyn, Gabriel Szohner, Jan Drabek, Stephen Gill, Stephen Vizinczey
The Invention of Canada is a well-researched introduction to the theory and practice of writing. There is an effortless fluidity of style which makes the book a pleasure to read. It is a powerful base from which to construct the argument for a Canadian imagination which displays the perils and strengths of an alternative tradition to that dominated by Frye, Atwood, Dennis Lee and the Toronto school.
- Ioan Davies
This book is a valuable contribution to Canadian critical theory. Itwaru's rigorous analysis of the ideological subtexts of the novels of post World War II immigrant writers upsets the proprietites of Canadian criticism, which has consistently aovided commenting on thematizations of racism, explotation, hegemony, and unequal distribution of power
- Arun Mukherjee
About the author
Contributor Notes
Arnold Itwaru is a writer of fiction and poetry, and is also a social and cultural theorist.
Editorial Reviews
The Invention of Canada is a well-researched introduction to the theory and practice of writing. There is an effortless fluidity of style which makes the book a pleasure to read. It is a powerful base from which to construct the argument for a Canadian imagination which displays the perils and strengths of an alternative tradition to that dominated by Frye, Atwood, Dennis Lee and the Toronto school. - IOAN DAVIES
This book is a valuable contribution to Canadian critical theory. Itwaru's rigorous analysis of the ideological subtexts of the novels of post World War II immigrant writers upsets the proprieties of Canadian criticism, which has consistently avoided commenting on thematizations of racism, exploitation, hegemony and unequal distribution of power.
- ARUN MUKHERJEE