The Literary History of Canada
Abstract: 1. Its Modest Successes Donald Stephens Our literature is not yet one of the world’s great literatures, and may never ...
The Literary Relevance of Alexander Mackenzie
Abstract: S,IR ALEXANDER MACKENZIE has been given a formal wel- come into the confines of Canadian Literature by Victor Hopwood, whose ...
The Little Presses
Abstract: ?L HE ACTIVITY of the little press is an index to the vitality of the literary undergrou?n?d?. Most typically the ...
The Living Contour: The Whale Symbol in Melville and Pratt
Abstract: I.? TAKES A LIVELY EYE to catch leviathan in the act of swallowing his tail. Yet such agility seems necessary ...
The Long and the Short of It: Two Versions of “Who Has Seen the Wind”
Abstract: IN 1947 TWO SIGNIFICANTLY different versions of Who Has Seen the Wind were published. Little, Brown & Co.1 published an ...
The Long-Enduring Spring
Abstract: CRITICS OF CANADIAN LITERATURE seldom produce epi grams or obiter dicta and this fact makes all the more memorable a ...
The Loxodromic Curve: A Study of “Lunar Caustic” by Malcolm Lowry
Abstract: I began the Volcano in 1936, the same year having written, in New York, a novelette of about 100 pages ...
The Mainstream
Abstract: A.LONG WITH A NUMBER of other activities in Canada, literary criticism has picked up a great deal of momentum in ...
The Making of Jalna: A Reminiscence
Abstract: WHEN ? THINK about Mazo de la Roche at Clarkson, Ontario, I cannot disassociate her from my own adolescent background. ...
The Many Tongues of Mothertalk: Life Stories of Mary Kiyoshi Kiyooka
Abstract: CollaborationsWe have begun our work together by trying to understand whose text Mothertalk really is.1 The cover suggests that at ...