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Canadian literature

Canadian literature is the literature of a multicultural country, written in languages including Canadian English, Canadian French, and Indigenous languages. Influences on Canadian writers are broad both geographically and historically, representing Canada's diversity in culture and region.

Canadian literature is often divided into French- and English-language literatures, which are rooted in the literary traditions of France and Britain, respectively.[1] The earliest Canadian narratives were of travel and exploration.[2] This progressed into three major themes that can be found within historical Canadian literature; nature, frontier life, Canada's position within the world, all three of which tie into the garrison mentality, a condition shared by all colonial era societies in their beginnings, but sometimes erroneously thought to apply mainly to Canada because a Canadian intellectual coined the term.[3] In recent decades Canada's literature has been strongly influenced by immigrants from around the world.[4] Since the 1980s, Canada's ethnic and cultural diversity has been openly reflected in its literature,[5] which by the 1990s was widely appreciated around the world.[5]

Indigenous literature edit

Indigenous peoples of Canada are culturally diverse.[6] Each group has its own literature, language and culture.[7][6] The term "Indigenous literature" therefore can be misleading. As writer Jeannette Armstrong states in one interview, "I would stay away from the idea of "Native" literature, there is no such thing. There is Mohawk literature, there is Okanagan literature, but there is no generic Native in Canada".[6]

French-Canadian literature edit

In 1802, the Lower Canada legislative library was founded, being one of the first in Occident, the first in the Canada. For comparison, the library of the British House of Commons was founded sixteen years later. The library had some rare titles about geography, natural science and letters. All books it contained were moved to the Canadian parliament in Montreal when the two Canadas, lower and upper, were united. On April 25, 1849, a dramatic event occurred: the Canadian parliament was burned by furious people along with thousands of French Canadian books and a few hundred of English books. This is why some people still affirm today, falsely, that from the early settlements until the 1820s, Quebec had virtually no literature. Though historians, journalists, and learned priests published, overall the total output that remain from this period and that had been kept out of the burned parliament is small.

It was the rise of Quebec patriotism and the 1837 Lower Canada Rebellion, in addition to a modern system of primary school education, which led to the rise of French-Canadian fiction. L'influence d'un livre by Philippe-Ignace-Francois Aubert de Gaspé is widely regarded as the first French-Canadian novel. The genres which first became popular were the rural novel and the historical novel. French authors were influential, especially authors like Balzac.

 
Gabrielle Roy was a notable French Canadian author.

In 1866, Father Henri-Raymond Casgrain became one of Quebec's first literary theorists. He argued that literature's goal should be to project an image of proper Catholic morality. However, a few authors like Louis-Honoré Fréchette and Arthur Buies broke the conventions to write more interesting works.

This pattern continued until the 1930s with a new group of authors educated at the Université Laval and the Université de Montréal. Novels with psychological and sociological foundations became the norm. Gabrielle Roy and Anne Hébert even began to earn international acclaim, which had not happened to French-Canadian literature before. During this period, Quebec theatre, which had previously been melodramas and comedies, became far more involved.

French-Canadian literature began to greatly expand with the turmoil of the Second World War, the beginnings of industrialization in the 1950s, and most especially the Quiet Revolution in the 1960s. French-Canadian literature also began to attract a great deal of attention globally, with Acadian novelist Antonine Maillet winning the Prix Goncourt in 1979.[8] An experimental branch of Québécois literature also developed; for instance the poet Nicole Brossard wrote in a formalist style. In 1979, Roch Carrier wrote the story The Hockey Sweater, which highlighted the cultural and social tensions between English and French speaking Canada.

Before Confederation edit

 
 
Sisters Susanna Moodie and Catherine Parr Traill wrote several stories about their experiences in the Canadas.

Because Canada only officially became a country following the unification, or 'confederation' of several colonies, including Upper and Lower Canada, into one nation on July 1, 1867, it has been argued that literature written before this time was colonial. The book often considered to be the first work of Canadian literature is The History of Emily Montague by Frances Brooke, published in 1769. Brooke wrote the novel in Sillery, Quebec following the Conquest of New France. Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill, English sisters who adopted the country as their own, moved to Upper Canada in 1832. They recorded their experiences as pioneers in Parr Traill's The Backwoods of Canada (1836) and Canadian Crusoes (1852), and Moodie's Roughing It in the Bush (1852) and Life in the Clearings (1853). However, both women wrote until their deaths, placing them in the country for more than 50 years and certainly well past Confederation. Moreover, their books often dealt with survival and the rugged Canadian environment; these themes re-appear in other Canadian works, including Margaret Atwood's Survival. Moodie and Parr Trail's sister, Agnes Strickland, remained in England and wrote elegant royal biographies, creating a stark contrast between Canadian and English literatures.

However, one of the earliest Canadian writers virtually always included in Canadian literary anthologies is Thomas Chandler Haliburton (1796–1865), born and raised in Nova Scotia, who died just two years before Canada's official birth. He is remembered for his comic character, Sam Slick, who appeared in The Clockmaker and other humorous works throughout Haliburton's life.

After 1867 edit

 
Charles G. D. Roberts was a poet that belonged to an informal group known as the Confederation Poets.

A group of poets now known as the "Confederation Poets", including Charles G. D. Roberts, Archibald Lampman, Bliss Carman, Duncan Campbell Scott, and William Wilfred Campbell, came to prominence in the 1880s and 1890s. Choosing the world of nature as their inspiration, their work was drawn from their own experiences and, at its best, written in their own tones. Isabella Valancy Crawford, Frederick George Scott, and Francis Sherman are also sometimes associated with this group.

During this period, E. Pauline Johnson and William Henry Drummond were writing popular poetry - Johnson's based on her part-Mohawk heritage, and Drummond, the Poet of the Habitant, writing dialect verse.

L. M. Montgomery's novel Anne of Green Gables was first published in 1908. It has sold an estimated 50 million copies and is one of the best selling books worldwide.[9]

Between 1915 and 1925, Stephen Leacock (1869-1944) was the best selling humour writer in the world. His best known book of fiction, Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town was published in 1912.

Three of Canada's most important post-World War I novelists were Hugh MacLennan (1907 – 1990), W.O. Mitchell (1914-1998), and Morley Callaghan (1903 – 1990). MacLennan's best-known works are Barometer Rising (1941), The Watch That Ends the Night (1957), and Two Solitudes (1945), while Callaghan is best known for Such Is My Beloved (1934), The Loved and the Lost (1951), and More Joy in Heaven (1937). Mitchell's most-loved novel is Who Has Seen the Wind.

Perhaps reacting against a tradition that largely emphasized the wilderness and the small town and country experience, Leonard Cohen wrote the novel Beautiful Losers (1966). It was labelled by one reviewer "the most revolting book ever written in Canada".[10] In time, however, this novel was considered a Canadian classic. Despite beginning his career as a poet of major importance, Cohen is perhaps best known as a folk singer and songwriter, with an international following.

Canadian author Farley Mowat is best known for his work Never Cry Wolf (1963) and his Governor General's Award-winning children's book, Lost in the Barrens (1956).

Following World War II, writers such as Mavis Gallant, Mordecai Richler, Norman Levine, Sheila Watson, Margaret Laurence and Irving Layton added to the Modernist influence in Canadian literature previously introduced by F. R. Scott, A. J. M. Smith and others associated with the McGill Fortnightly. This influence, at first, was not broadly appreciated. Norman Levine's Canada Made Me,[11] a travelogue that presented a sour interpretation of the country in 1958, for example, was widely rejected.

After 1967, the country's centennial year, the national government increased funding to publishers and numerous small presses began operating throughout the country.[12] The best-known Canadian children's writers include L. M. Montgomery and Monica Hughes.

Contemporary Canadian literature: After 1967 edit

Arguably, the best-known living Canadian writer internationally (especially since the deaths of Robertson Davies and Mordecai Richler) is Margaret Atwood, a prolific novelist, poet, and literary critic. Other great 20th-century Canadian authors include Margaret Laurence, Mavis Gallant, Michael Ondaatje, Carol Shields, Alistair MacLeod, Mazo de la Roche, and Gabrielle Roy.

 
Short story writer Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013.

This group, along with Nobel Laureate Alice Munro, who has been called the best living writer of short stories in English,[13] were part of a 'new wave' of Canadian writers, some starting their careers in the 1950's. The first to elevate Canadian Literature to the world stage were Lucy Maud Montgomery, Stephen Leacock, Mazo de la Roche, and Morley Callaghan. During the post-war decades Canadian literature, as were Australian and New Zealand literature, viewed as an appendage to British Literature. When academic Clara Thomas decided in the 1940s to concentrate on Canadian literature for her master's thesis, the idea was so novel and so radical that word of her decision reached The Globe and Mail books editor William Arthur Deacon, who then personally reached out to Thomas to pledge his and the newspaper's resources in support of her work.[14]

Other major Canadian novelists include Carol Shields, Lawrence Hill, and Alice Munro. Carol Shields novel The Stone Diaries won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and another novel, Larry's Party, won the Orange Prize in 1998. Lawrence Hill's Book of Negroes won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize Overall Best Book Award, while Alice Munro became the first Canadian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013.[15] Munro also received the Man Booker International Prize in 2009.

In the 1960s, a renewed sense of nation helped foster new voices in Canadian poetry, including: Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, Leonard Cohen, Eli Mandel and Margaret Avison. Others such as Al Purdy, Milton Acorn, and Earle Birney, already published, produced some of their best work during this period.

The TISH Poetry movement in Vancouver brought about poetic innovation from Jamie Reid, George Bowering, Fred Wah, Frank Davey, Daphne Marlatt, David Cull, and Lionel Kearns.

 
The former Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate George Elliott Clarke (2015)

Canadian poets have been expanding the boundaries of originality: Christian Bök, Ken Babstock, Karen Solie, Lynn Crosbie, Patrick Lane, George Elliott Clarke and Barry Dempster have all imprinted their unique consciousnesses onto the map of Canadian imagery.

A notable anthology of Canadian poetry is The New Oxford book of Canadian Verse, edited by Margaret Atwood (ISBN 0-19-540450-5).

Anne Carson is probably the best known Canadian poet living today. Carson in 1996 won the Lannan Literary Award for poetry. The foundation's awards in 2006 for poetry, fiction and nonfiction each came with $US 150,000.

Canadian authors who have won international awards edit

Nobel Prize in Literature

International Booker Prize

  • Alice Munro (2009)

Booker Prize

Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

National Book Critics Circle Award

International Dublin Literary Award

Orange Prize

Commonwealth Writers' Prize

Peace Prize of the German Book Trade

  • Margaret Atwood (2017)

Awards edit

There are a number of notable Canadian awards for literature:

Awards For Children's and Young Adult Literature:

Further reading edit

  • K. Balachandran, K. (2007) Canadian Literature: An Overview. Sarup & Sons
  • Eugene Benson and William Toye, eds. (1997) The Oxford companion to Canadian literature; online. 1226 pp of short articles by experts.
  • Faye Hammill (2007). Canadian literature. Edinburgh Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2162-0
  • Jeffrey M. Heath (1991). Profiles in Canadian Literature, Volume 7. Dundurn Press. ISBN 1-55002-145-1
  • William H. New (1990). Native writers and Canadian writing. UBC Press. ISBN 0-7748-0370-3
  • William H. New (2002). Encyclopedia of literature in Canada. Univ. Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-0761-9
  • William H. New (2003). A history of Canadian literature. McGill-Queen's Univ. Press. ISBN 0-7735-2597-1
  • Michael Newton (2015) Seanchaidh na Coille / The Memory-Keeper of the Forest: Anthology of Scottish-Gaelic Literature of Canada.
  • Reingard M. Nischik (2008). History of literature in Canada: English-Canadian and French-Canadian. Camden House. ISBN 9781571133595
  • Pivato, Joseph (1994 and 2003). Echo: Essays on Other Literatures. Guernica Editions. ISBN 1-55071-176-8
  • David Stouck (1988). Major Canadian authors: a critical introduction to Canadian literature in English. Univ. Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-4119-4
  • Cynthia Sugars and Eleanor Ty, eds. (2015). Canadian Literature and Cultural Memory. Oxford Univ. Press, 493pp. Scholarly essays on how cultural memory is reflected in Canadian fiction, poetry, drama, films, etc.
  • Elizabeth Waterston (1973). Survey; a short history of Canadian literature. Methuen. ISBN 0-458-90930-0
  • Siemerling, Winfred (2015). The Black Atlantic Reconsidered: Black Canadian writing, cultural history, and the presence of the past. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-4508-3. OCLC 1259125407.
  • Ty, Eleanor Rose; Verduyn, Christl, eds. (2008). Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-1-55458-023-1. OCLC 753479603.
  • Lai, Larissa (2014). Slanting I, Imagining We: Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s. Waterloo, Ontario, Canada: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-1-77112-041-8. OCLC 866930850.
  • Khoo, Tseen-Ling (2003). Banana Bending: Asian-Australian and Asian-Canadian Literatures. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0-7735-2551-3. OCLC 651001993.
  • Hazelton, Hugh, ed. (2007). Latinocanadá: A Critical Study of Ten Latin American Writers of Canada. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773560352. OCLC 646788253.
  • Greenstein, Michael, ed. (2004). Contemporary Jewish Writing in Canada: An Anthology. Jewish Writing in the Contemporary World Series. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803221857. OCLC 53315140.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Keith, W. J. (2006). Canadian Literature in English. The Porcupine's Quill. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-88984-283-0.
  2. ^ R.G. Moyles, ed. (28 September 1994). Improved by Cultivation: English-Canadian Prose to 1914. Broadview Press. pp. 15–. ISBN 978-1-55111-049-3. OCLC 1016305898.
  3. ^ New, William H. (2002). Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. University of Toronto Press. pp. 259–261. ISBN 978-0-8020-0761-2.
  4. ^ Crabtracks: Progress and Process in Teaching the New Literatures in English. Essays in Honour of Dieter Riemenschneider. BRILL. 28 December 2021. pp. 388–391. ISBN 978-90-04-48650-8. OCLC 1291314955.
  5. ^ a b Dominic, K. V. (2010). Studies in Contemporary Canadian Literature. Pinnacle Technology. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-1-61820-640-4.
  6. ^ a b c Eigenbrod, Renate; et al. (2003). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-09-10. Retrieved 2019-11-05.
  7. ^ . indigenousfoundations.adm.arts.ubc.ca. Archived from the original on 2017-03-24. Retrieved 2017-03-21.
  8. ^ "Tous les lauréats".
  9. ^ Reuters 2010-01-13 at the Wayback Machine on Anne of Green Gables: ""Anne of Green Gables" has sold more than 50 million copies and been translated into 20 languages, according to Penguin." (19 March 2008)
  10. ^ Who held a gun to Leonard Cohen's head? Tim de Lisle, Guardian Online, retrieved 11 October 2006.
  11. ^ "Norman Levine". Independent.co.uk. 20 June 2005. Retrieved 2017-08-20.
  12. ^ . The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2009-03-04. Retrieved 2008-01-26.
  13. ^ "For a long time Alice Munro has been compared with Chekhov; John Updike would add Tolstoy, and AS Byatt would say Guy de Maupassant and Flaubert. Munro is often called the best living writer of short stories in English; the words "short story" are frequently dropped." Riches of a Double Life, Ada Edemariam, Guardian Online, retrieved 11 October 2006.
  14. ^ "Author and educator Clara Thomas was a relentless advocate of CanLit". The Globe and Mail, November 28, 2013.
  15. ^ "Nobel-winner Alice Munro hailed as 'master' of short stories". Cbc.ca. Retrieved 2017-08-20.
  16. ^ . Canadian Authors. Archived from the original on 2014-04-25. Retrieved 2014-04-24.

External links edit

  • – Library and Archives Canada
  • Canadian Literature – CanLit
  • Canadian Literature – Historica – The Canadian Encyclopedia Library
  • Canadian Writers – Resource for Canadian authors publishing in English or French – Athabasca University, Alberta
  • Studies in Canadian Literature – University of New Brunswick
  • Dominion of the North: Literary & Print Culture in Canada – An online exhibition celebrating prominent poets, authors, and historians. It comprises one hundred monographs, organized topically into eight collections.

canadian, literature, quarterly, academic, journal, canadian, literature, journal, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, genera. For the quarterly academic journal see Canadian Literature journal This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Canadian literature is the literature of a multicultural country written in languages including Canadian English Canadian French and Indigenous languages Influences on Canadian writers are broad both geographically and historically representing Canada s diversity in culture and region Canadian literature is often divided into French and English language literatures which are rooted in the literary traditions of France and Britain respectively 1 The earliest Canadian narratives were of travel and exploration 2 This progressed into three major themes that can be found within historical Canadian literature nature frontier life Canada s position within the world all three of which tie into the garrison mentality a condition shared by all colonial era societies in their beginnings but sometimes erroneously thought to apply mainly to Canada because a Canadian intellectual coined the term 3 In recent decades Canada s literature has been strongly influenced by immigrants from around the world 4 Since the 1980s Canada s ethnic and cultural diversity has been openly reflected in its literature 5 which by the 1990s was widely appreciated around the world 5 Contents 1 Indigenous literature 2 French Canadian literature 3 Before Confederation 4 After 1867 5 Contemporary Canadian literature After 1967 5 1 Canadian authors who have won international awards 6 Awards 7 Further reading 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksIndigenous literature editMain article Indigenous literatures in Canada Indigenous peoples of Canada are culturally diverse 6 Each group has its own literature language and culture 7 6 The term Indigenous literature therefore can be misleading As writer Jeannette Armstrong states in one interview I would stay away from the idea of Native literature there is no such thing There is Mohawk literature there is Okanagan literature but there is no generic Native in Canada 6 French Canadian literature editMain article Quebec literature See also List of French Canadian writers from outside Quebec List of Quebec writers and Literature of Quebec In 1802 the Lower Canada legislative library was founded being one of the first in Occident the first in the Canada For comparison the library of the British House of Commons was founded sixteen years later The library had some rare titles about geography natural science and letters All books it contained were moved to the Canadian parliament in Montreal when the two Canadas lower and upper were united On April 25 1849 a dramatic event occurred the Canadian parliament was burned by furious people along with thousands of French Canadian books and a few hundred of English books This is why some people still affirm today falsely that from the early settlements until the 1820s Quebec had virtually no literature Though historians journalists and learned priests published overall the total output that remain from this period and that had been kept out of the burned parliament is small It was the rise of Quebec patriotism and the 1837 Lower Canada Rebellion in addition to a modern system of primary school education which led to the rise of French Canadian fiction L influence d un livre by Philippe Ignace Francois Aubert de Gaspe is widely regarded as the first French Canadian novel The genres which first became popular were the rural novel and the historical novel French authors were influential especially authors like Balzac nbsp Gabrielle Roy was a notable French Canadian author In 1866 Father Henri Raymond Casgrain became one of Quebec s first literary theorists He argued that literature s goal should be to project an image of proper Catholic morality However a few authors like Louis Honore Frechette and Arthur Buies broke the conventions to write more interesting works This pattern continued until the 1930s with a new group of authors educated at the Universite Laval and the Universite de Montreal Novels with psychological and sociological foundations became the norm Gabrielle Roy and Anne Hebert even began to earn international acclaim which had not happened to French Canadian literature before During this period Quebec theatre which had previously been melodramas and comedies became far more involved French Canadian literature began to greatly expand with the turmoil of the Second World War the beginnings of industrialization in the 1950s and most especially the Quiet Revolution in the 1960s French Canadian literature also began to attract a great deal of attention globally with Acadian novelist Antonine Maillet winning the Prix Goncourt in 1979 8 An experimental branch of Quebecois literature also developed for instance the poet Nicole Brossard wrote in a formalist style In 1979 Roch Carrier wrote the story The Hockey Sweater which highlighted the cultural and social tensions between English and French speaking Canada Before Confederation edit nbsp nbsp Sisters Susanna Moodie and Catherine Parr Traill wrote several stories about their experiences in the Canadas Because Canada only officially became a country following the unification or confederation of several colonies including Upper and Lower Canada into one nation on July 1 1867 it has been argued that literature written before this time was colonial The book often considered to be the first work of Canadian literature is The History of Emily Montague by Frances Brooke published in 1769 Brooke wrote the novel in Sillery Quebec following the Conquest of New France Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill English sisters who adopted the country as their own moved to Upper Canada in 1832 They recorded their experiences as pioneers in Parr Traill s The Backwoods of Canada 1836 and Canadian Crusoes 1852 and Moodie s Roughing It in the Bush 1852 and Life in the Clearings 1853 However both women wrote until their deaths placing them in the country for more than 50 years and certainly well past Confederation Moreover their books often dealt with survival and the rugged Canadian environment these themes re appear in other Canadian works including Margaret Atwood s Survival Moodie and Parr Trail s sister Agnes Strickland remained in England and wrote elegant royal biographies creating a stark contrast between Canadian and English literatures However one of the earliest Canadian writers virtually always included in Canadian literary anthologies is Thomas Chandler Haliburton 1796 1865 born and raised in Nova Scotia who died just two years before Canada s official birth He is remembered for his comic character Sam Slick who appeared in The Clockmaker and other humorous works throughout Haliburton s life After 1867 edit nbsp Charles G D Roberts was a poet that belonged to an informal group known as the Confederation Poets A group of poets now known as the Confederation Poets including Charles G D Roberts Archibald Lampman Bliss Carman Duncan Campbell Scott and William Wilfred Campbell came to prominence in the 1880s and 1890s Choosing the world of nature as their inspiration their work was drawn from their own experiences and at its best written in their own tones Isabella Valancy Crawford Frederick George Scott and Francis Sherman are also sometimes associated with this group During this period E Pauline Johnson and William Henry Drummond were writing popular poetry Johnson s based on her part Mohawk heritage and Drummond the Poet of the Habitant writing dialect verse L M Montgomery s novel Anne of Green Gables was first published in 1908 It has sold an estimated 50 million copies and is one of the best selling books worldwide 9 Between 1915 and 1925 Stephen Leacock 1869 1944 was the best selling humour writer in the world His best known book of fiction Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town was published in 1912 Three of Canada s most important post World War I novelists were Hugh MacLennan 1907 1990 W O Mitchell 1914 1998 and Morley Callaghan 1903 1990 MacLennan s best known works are Barometer Rising 1941 The Watch That Ends the Night 1957 and Two Solitudes 1945 while Callaghan is best known for Such Is My Beloved 1934 The Loved and the Lost 1951 and More Joy in Heaven 1937 Mitchell s most loved novel is Who Has Seen the Wind Perhaps reacting against a tradition that largely emphasized the wilderness and the small town and country experience Leonard Cohen wrote the novel Beautiful Losers 1966 It was labelled by one reviewer the most revolting book ever written in Canada 10 In time however this novel was considered a Canadian classic Despite beginning his career as a poet of major importance Cohen is perhaps best known as a folk singer and songwriter with an international following Canadian author Farley Mowat is best known for his work Never Cry Wolf 1963 and his Governor General s Award winning children s book Lost in the Barrens 1956 Following World War II writers such as Mavis Gallant Mordecai Richler Norman Levine Sheila Watson Margaret Laurence and Irving Layton added to the Modernist influence in Canadian literature previously introduced by F R Scott A J M Smith and others associated with the McGill Fortnightly This influence at first was not broadly appreciated Norman Levine s Canada Made Me 11 a travelogue that presented a sour interpretation of the country in 1958 for example was widely rejected After 1967 the country s centennial year the national government increased funding to publishers and numerous small presses began operating throughout the country 12 The best known Canadian children s writers include L M Montgomery and Monica Hughes Contemporary Canadian literature After 1967 editArguably the best known living Canadian writer internationally especially since the deaths of Robertson Davies and Mordecai Richler is Margaret Atwood a prolific novelist poet and literary critic Other great 20th century Canadian authors include Margaret Laurence Mavis Gallant Michael Ondaatje Carol Shields Alistair MacLeod Mazo de la Roche and Gabrielle Roy nbsp Short story writer Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013 This group along with Nobel Laureate Alice Munro who has been called the best living writer of short stories in English 13 were part of a new wave of Canadian writers some starting their careers in the 1950 s The first to elevate Canadian Literature to the world stage were Lucy Maud Montgomery Stephen Leacock Mazo de la Roche and Morley Callaghan During the post war decades Canadian literature as were Australian and New Zealand literature viewed as an appendage to British Literature When academic Clara Thomas decided in the 1940s to concentrate on Canadian literature for her master s thesis the idea was so novel and so radical that word of her decision reached The Globe and Mail books editor William Arthur Deacon who then personally reached out to Thomas to pledge his and the newspaper s resources in support of her work 14 Other major Canadian novelists include Carol Shields Lawrence Hill and Alice Munro Carol Shields novel The Stone Diaries won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and another novel Larry s Party won the Orange Prize in 1998 Lawrence Hill s Book of Negroes won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize Overall Best Book Award while Alice Munro became the first Canadian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013 15 Munro also received the Man Booker International Prize in 2009 In the 1960s a renewed sense of nation helped foster new voices in Canadian poetry including Margaret Atwood Michael Ondaatje Leonard Cohen Eli Mandel and Margaret Avison Others such as Al Purdy Milton Acorn and Earle Birney already published produced some of their best work during this period The TISH Poetry movement in Vancouver brought about poetic innovation from Jamie Reid George Bowering Fred Wah Frank Davey Daphne Marlatt David Cull and Lionel Kearns nbsp The former Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate George Elliott Clarke 2015 Canadian poets have been expanding the boundaries of originality Christian Bok Ken Babstock Karen Solie Lynn Crosbie Patrick Lane George Elliott Clarke and Barry Dempster have all imprinted their unique consciousnesses onto the map of Canadian imagery A notable anthology of Canadian poetry is The New Oxford book of Canadian Verse edited by Margaret Atwood ISBN 0 19 540450 5 Anne Carson is probably the best known Canadian poet living today Carson in 1996 won the Lannan Literary Award for poetry The foundation s awards in 2006 for poetry fiction and nonfiction each came with US 150 000 Canadian authors who have won international awards edit Nobel Prize in Literature Alice Munro 2013 International Booker Prize Alice Munro 2009 Booker Prize Michael Ondaatje The English Patient 1992 Margaret Atwood The Blind Assassin 2000 Yann Martel Life of Pi 2002 Margaret Atwood The Testaments 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction Carol Shields The Stone Diaries 1995 National Book Critics Circle Award Carol Shields The Stone Diaries 1994 International Dublin Literary Award Alistair MacLeod No Great Mischief 2001 Rawi Hage De Niro s Game 2008 Orange Prize Anne Michaels Fugitive Pieces 1997 Carol Shields Larry s Party 1998 Commonwealth Writers Prize Olive Senior Summer Lightning 1987 Mordecai Richler Solomon Gursky Was Here 1990 Rohinton Mistry Such a Long Journey 1991 Rohinton Mistry A Fine Balance 1996 Austin Clarke The Polished Hoe 2003 Lawrence Hill The Book of Negroes 2008 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade Margaret Atwood 2017 Awards editThere are a number of notable Canadian awards for literature The Atlantic Writers Competition highlights talent across the Atlantic Provinces Books in Canada First Novel Award for the best first novel of the year Canadian Authors Association Awards for Adult Literature honouring works by Canadian writers that achieve excellence without sacrificing popular appeal since 1975 16 CBC Literary Awards Canada Council Molson Prize for distinguished contributions to Canada s cultural and intellectual heritage Danuta Gleed Literary Award for a first collection of short fiction by a Canadian author writing in English Dayne Ogilvie Prize for an emerging writer in the lesbian gay bisexual or transgender communities Doug Wright Awards for graphic literature and novels Floyd S Chalmers Canadian Play Awards for best Canadian play staged by a Canadian theatre company Hilary Weston Writers Trust Prize for Nonfiction for best work of nonfiction Gerald Lampert Award for the best new poet Lane Anderson Award for best Canadian non fiction science Giller Prize for the best Canadian novel or book of short stories in English Governor General s Awards for the best Canadian fiction poetry non fiction drama and translation in both English and French Griffin Poetry Prize for the best book of poetry one award each for a Canadian poet and an international poet Indigenous Voices Awards for works of literature by First Nations Metis and Inuit writers Marian Engel Award for female writers in mid career Matt Cohen Award to honour a Canadian writer for a lifetime of distinguished achievement Milton Acorn Poetry Awards for an outstanding people s poet National Business Book Award Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction Pat Lowther Award for poetry written by a woman International Council for Canadian Studies Pierre Savard Award e g Faye Hammill for Literary Culture and Female Authorship in Canada Prix Aurora Awards for Canadian science fiction and fantasy in English and French RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers Rogers Writers Trust Fiction Prize for the best work of fiction Shaughnessy Cohen Award for Political Writing Stephen Leacock Award For Humour W O Mitchell Literary Prize for a writer who has made a distinguished lifetime contribution both to Canadian literature and to mentoring new writers Room of One s Own Annual Award for poetry and literature 3 Day Novel Contest annual literary marathon born in Canada Writers Trust Engel Findley Award for a distinguished writer in mid career Writers Trust McClelland amp Stewart Journey PrizeAwards For Children s and Young Adult Literature Young Adult Novel Prize of the Atlantic Writers Competition R Ross Annett Award for Children s Literature Geoffrey Bilson Award for Historical Fiction Ann Connor Brimer Award Canadian Library Association Book of the Year Award for Children CLA Young Adult Canadian Book Award Sheila A Egoff Children s Literature Prize Elizabeth Mrazik Cleaver Canadian Picture Book Award Floyd S Chalmers Award for Theatre for Young Adults Amelia Frances Howard Gibbon Illustrator s Award Information Book of the Year I0DE Book Award Janet Savage Blachford Prize for Children s and Young Adult Literature Max and Greta Ebel Memorial Award for Children s Writing Norma Fleck Award for children s non fiction Governor General s Awards for the best Canadian children s literature text based or illustrated in both English and French Vicky Metcalf Award for Children s LiteratureFurther reading editK Balachandran K 2007 Canadian Literature An Overview Sarup amp Sons Eugene Benson and William Toye eds 1997 The Oxford companion to Canadian literature online 1226 pp of short articles by experts Faye Hammill 2007 Canadian literature Edinburgh Univ Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2162 0 Jeffrey M Heath 1991 Profiles in Canadian Literature Volume 7 Dundurn Press ISBN 1 55002 145 1 William H New 1990 Native writers and Canadian writing UBC Press ISBN 0 7748 0370 3 William H New 2002 Encyclopedia of literature in Canada Univ Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 0761 9 William H New 2003 A history of Canadian literature McGill Queen s Univ Press ISBN 0 7735 2597 1 Michael Newton 2015 Seanchaidh na Coille The Memory Keeper of the Forest Anthology of Scottish Gaelic Literature of Canada Reingard M Nischik 2008 History of literature in Canada English Canadian and French Canadian Camden House ISBN 9781571133595 Pivato Joseph 1994 and 2003 Echo Essays on Other Literatures Guernica Editions ISBN 1 55071 176 8 David Stouck 1988 Major Canadian authors a critical introduction to Canadian literature in English Univ Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 4119 4 Cynthia Sugars and Eleanor Ty eds 2015 Canadian Literature and Cultural Memory Oxford Univ Press 493pp Scholarly essays on how cultural memory is reflected in Canadian fiction poetry drama films etc Elizabeth Waterston 1973 Survey a short history of Canadian literature Methuen ISBN 0 458 90930 0 Siemerling Winfred 2015 The Black Atlantic Reconsidered Black Canadian writing cultural history and the presence of the past Montreal Quebec Canada McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 4508 3 OCLC 1259125407 Ty Eleanor Rose Verduyn Christl eds 2008 Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 1 55458 023 1 OCLC 753479603 Lai Larissa 2014 Slanting I Imagining We Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s Waterloo Ontario Canada Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 1 77112 041 8 OCLC 866930850 Khoo Tseen Ling 2003 Banana Bending Asian Australian and Asian Canadian Literatures McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 2551 3 OCLC 651001993 Hazelton Hugh ed 2007 Latinocanada A Critical Study of Ten Latin American Writers of Canada Montreal Quebec Canada McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773560352 OCLC 646788253 Greenstein Michael ed 2004 Contemporary Jewish Writing in Canada An Anthology Jewish Writing in the Contemporary World Series University of Nebraska Press ISBN 9780803221857 OCLC 53315140 See also edit nbsp Literature portal nbsp Canada portalBy author Canadian women Acadians Aboriginal peoples in Canada Irish Canadians Italian Canadians South Asian Canadian Literary period The Confederation Poets Canadian postmoderns or Canadian Poets Between the Wars Canadian poetry Canadian science fiction List of Canadian writers List of Canadian short story writers Indigenous literatures in Canada List of Asian Canadian writers List of Black Canadian writers Jewish Canadian authors Latin American Canadians Writers Arab Canadians Filmmakers and writers Romani literature Canada The Canadian Centenary Series Canada Reads Basodee Canadian content Theatre of CanadaReferences edit Keith W J 2006 Canadian Literature in English The Porcupine s Quill p 19 ISBN 978 0 88984 283 0 R G Moyles ed 28 September 1994 Improved by Cultivation English Canadian Prose to 1914 Broadview Press pp 15 ISBN 978 1 55111 049 3 OCLC 1016305898 New William H 2002 Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada University of Toronto Press pp 259 261 ISBN 978 0 8020 0761 2 Crabtracks Progress and Process in Teaching the New Literatures in English Essays in Honour of Dieter Riemenschneider BRILL 28 December 2021 pp 388 391 ISBN 978 90 04 48650 8 OCLC 1291314955 a b Dominic K V 2010 Studies in Contemporary Canadian Literature Pinnacle Technology pp 8 9 ISBN 978 1 61820 640 4 a b c Eigenbrod Renate et al 2003 Aboriginal Literatures in Canada A Teacher s Resource Guide A Teacher s Resource Guide PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 09 10 Retrieved 2019 11 05 Culture indigenousfoundations adm arts ubc ca Archived from the original on 2017 03 24 Retrieved 2017 03 21 Tous les laureats Reuters Archived 2010 01 13 at the Wayback Machine on Anne of Green Gables Anne of Green Gables has sold more than 50 million copies and been translated into 20 languages according to Penguin 19 March 2008 Who held a gun to Leonard Cohen s head Tim de Lisle Guardian Online retrieved 11 October 2006 Norman Levine Independent co uk 20 June 2005 Retrieved 2017 08 20 Small Presses in the 1960s and 1970s The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2009 03 04 Retrieved 2008 01 26 For a long time Alice Munro has been compared with Chekhov John Updike would add Tolstoy and AS Byatt would say Guy de Maupassant and Flaubert Munro is often called the best living writer of short stories in English the words short story are frequently dropped Riches of a Double Life Ada Edemariam Guardian Online retrieved 11 October 2006 Author and educator Clara Thomas was a relentless advocate of CanLit The Globe and Mail November 28 2013 Nobel winner Alice Munro hailed as master of short stories Cbc ca Retrieved 2017 08 20 Canadian Authors Association Literary Awards Canadian Authors Archived from the original on 2014 04 25 Retrieved 2014 04 24 External links editIntroduction Canadian Writers Library and Archives Canada Canadian Literature CanLit Canadian Literature Historica The Canadian Encyclopedia Library Canadian Writers Resource for Canadian authors publishing in English or French Athabasca University Alberta Studies in Canadian Literature University of New Brunswick Dominion of the North Literary amp Print Culture in Canada An online exhibition celebrating prominent poets authors and historians It comprises one hundred monographs organized topically into eight collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canadian literature amp oldid 1199617160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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