Book contents
- A History of Canadian Fiction
- A History of Canadian Fiction
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Beginnings
- Chapter 2 From Romance towards Realism
- Chapter 3 Emerging into Realism
- Chapter 4 The Foundational Fifties
- Chapter 5 The Second Feminist Wave
- Chapter 6 The Flourishing of the Wests
- Chapter 7 Canada’s Second Century
- Chapter 8 Indigenous Voices
- Chapter 9 Naturalized Canadian Writers
- Chapter 10 Canadian Fiction in the Twenty-First Century
- Afterword
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Afterword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 July 2021
- A History of Canadian Fiction
- A History of Canadian Fiction
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Beginnings
- Chapter 2 From Romance towards Realism
- Chapter 3 Emerging into Realism
- Chapter 4 The Foundational Fifties
- Chapter 5 The Second Feminist Wave
- Chapter 6 The Flourishing of the Wests
- Chapter 7 Canada’s Second Century
- Chapter 8 Indigenous Voices
- Chapter 9 Naturalized Canadian Writers
- Chapter 10 Canadian Fiction in the Twenty-First Century
- Afterword
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
As recent fiction has been pointing out, Canada is a multicultural, multinational, and multiracial country which resists any simple or simplified definition. From its early stages, when the country was a colony paying service to far-off mother countries, it grew slowly into its own land, a growth mirrored in Canada’s maturing fiction. When early writers charted their ways into the landscape, they often looked abroad for their sources. Then they looked to their own country’s writers for further sources. From the mid-twentieth-century’s flinging off that colonial mentality, writers came to realize they were building on their own traditions and espousing their own understandings of the country and its inhabitants. With the emergence of Indigenous voices, then of naturalized Canadian authors, writers became an essential segment in a distinctive society. Canada now boasts of a multicultural group of writers unafraid of the country or of one another; they are not frightened of choosing their own settings, their own landscapes. They write as they want – on subjects they have the freedom to choose.
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- Information
- A History of Canadian Fiction , pp. 292 - 293Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021