the book is engaging and provides a well-researched spectrum of the different aspects of Canadian literature in relation to cultural memory.

Kate Smith, U.S. Studies Online

Critics argue that contemporary western societies are immersed in a "culture of memory," devoting resources to national histories and heritage, commemoration, public re-enactments, etc. We use these recollections of our national past to maintain a collective identity in the present, among other uses. These essays, edited by Cynthia Sugars and Eleanor Ty, explore how Canadian literature draws on aspects of cultural memory, past and future. Exploring memory as a "vector of signification" involves a wide range of topics such concepts of as heritage, antiquity, nostalgia, elegy, ancestry, haunting, trauma, affect, aging, authenticity, commemoration, public history. Contributors to this collection consider literary treatments of both mainstream and alternative uses of cultural memory, past and contemporary, urban and rural. From well-known writers like Alice Munro, Al Purdy and Dionne Brand to recreations of Aboriginal pasts and less common topics like food and Mennonites, there is wide representation of Canada's literary diversity. And equally representative is the collection's historical spread, ranging across early explorer narratives to contemporary works. The collection digs into some of the darker moments in our past (immigrant experiences, recollections of interned Japanese-Canadians in World War 2, and memories of Native children in residential schools). The sheer ambition of this collection suggests the multifaceted ways that Canada's past is part of our collective cultural memory now. A four-page colour insert - including Seth cartoons as well as unique, little known photography - provides a compelling visual context for the collection's treatment of the complex, multifaceted character of cultural memory in Canada. The collection is divided into five parts (amnesia, postmemory, recovery work, trauma, and globalization), all areas of research in the emerging field of cultural memory. These thought-provoking essays reflect the many ways the past infuses the present, and the present adapts the past. Students and scholars will find this rich collection useful in upper-level courses in Canadian literature as well as in cultural studies.
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PART I: SITES OF MEMORY: CULTURAL AMNESIA AND THE DEMANDS OF PLACE; PART II: MEMORY TRANSFERENCE: POSTMEMORY, RE-MEMORY, AND FORGETTING; PART III: RE-MEMBERING HISTORY: MEMORY WORK AS RECOVERY; PART IV: THE COMPULSION TO REMEMBER: TRAUMA AND WITNESSING; PART V: CULTURAL MEMORY IN A GLOBALIZED AGE
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"A monumental achievement." --Cecily Devereux, University of Alberta "A remarkable analysis of the multiple ways in which memory is shaped in and interrogated by Canadian literature and culture. This deep, varied and insightful collection of essays . . . brings together a fantastic range of insights into cultural memory that promise to fundamentally re-shape approaches to Canadian literary studies." --Imre Szeman, Canada Research Chair in Cultural Studies, University of Alberta "A vital and convincing defence of memory as a central concept and a persistent preoccupation in Canadian literature and culture." --Andrea Cabajsky, Université de Moncton
Les mer
Growth area in literary studies. The field of cultural memory has been expanding in recent years, opening up new lines of critical inquiry. Top scholarship. The volume editors and contributors are all among some of Canada's most eminent scholars of literatures. Ambitious, wide-ranging scope. From mainstream to alternative texts that reveal aspects of how Canadians as a nation use the past to inform the present. Colour illustrations. The collection is illustrated with a four-page colour insert, from Seth cartoons to unusual, little known visuals, giving unique artistic context to the essays. Thought-provoking introduction. The exceptionally well-written and insightful introduction provides a range of path-breaking insights into how Canadians use their past.
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Cynthia Sugars is Professor in the Department of Literature, University of Ottawa. Her research and teaching focus on the links between national identities and cultural narratives, in the broad range of ways that Canadians, past and present, make sense of themselves as members of a national community that is shaped by a multiplicity of contending perspectives. Eleanor Ty is Professor in the Department of English, Wilfrid Laurier University. She works on Asian North American Literature and Film and on Eighteenth Century British Literature.
Les mer
Growth area in literary studies. The field of cultural memory has been expanding in recent years, opening up new lines of critical inquiry. Top scholarship. The volume editors and contributors are all among some of Canada's most eminent scholars of literatures. Ambitious, wide-ranging scope. From mainstream to alternative texts that reveal aspects of how Canadians as a nation use the past to inform the present. Colour illustrations. The collection is illustrated with a four-page colour insert, from Seth cartoons to unusual, little known visuals, giving unique artistic context to the essays. Thought-provoking introduction. The exceptionally well-written and insightful introduction provides a range of path-breaking insights into how Canadians use their past.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199007592
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Oxford University Press, Canada; Oxford University Press, Canada
Vekt
762 gr
Høyde
232 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
38 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
512

Om bidragsyterne

Cynthia Sugars is Professor in the Department of Literature, University of Ottawa. Her research and teaching focus on the links between national identities and cultural narratives, in the broad range of ways that Canadians, past and present, make sense of themselves as members of a national community that is shaped by a multiplicity of contending perspectives. Eleanor Ty is Professor in the Department of English, Wilfrid Laurier University. She works on Asian North American Literature and Film and on Eighteenth Century British Literature.