New ebooks From Canadian Indies

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list price: $29.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Literary Criticism
published: May 2016
ISBN:9780776623245
publisher: University of Ottawa Press

Double-Voicing the Canadian Short Story

by Laurie Kruk

tagged: short stories, canadian
Description

Double-Voicing the Canadian Short Story is the first comparative study of eight internationally and nationally acclaimed writers of short fiction: Sandra Birdsell, Timothy Findley, Jack Hodgins, Thomas King, Alistair MacLeod, Olive Senior, Carol Shields and Guy Vanderhaeghe. With the 2013 Nobel Prize for Literature going to Alice Munro, the “master of the contemporary short story,” this art form is receiving the recognition that has been its due and—as this book demonstrates—Canadian writers have long excelled in it. From theme to choice of narrative perspective, from emphasis on irony, satire and parody to uncovering the multiple layers that make up contemporary Canadian English, the short story provides a powerful vehicle for a distinctively Canadian “double-voicing”. The stories discussed here are compelling reflections on our most intimate roles and relationships and Kruk offers a thoughtful juxtaposition of themes of gender, mothers and sons, family storytelling, otherness in Canada and the politics of identity to name but a few. As a multi-author study, Double-Voicing the Canadian Short Story is broad in scope and its readings are valuable to Canadian literature as a whole, making the book of interest to students of Canadian literature or the short story, and to readers of both.

About the Author

Laurie Kruk

Contributor Notes

Laurie Kruk is the author of The Voice is the Story: Conversations with Canadian Writers of Short Fiction (Mosaic, 2003), which features six of the eight authors included in Double-Voicing the Canadian Short Story. She is also a well-published poet: Theories of the World (Netherlandic, 1992), Loving the Alien (YSP, 2006) and My Mother Did Not Tell Stories (Demeter, 2012). Associate Professor at Nipissing University in North Bay, Ontario, she specializes in Canadian literature, Native literature, women’s writing and the short story.

Editorial Review

Kruk (...) celebrate[s] the achievements of short-story writers as well as the kind of national identity, based mainly on regional identification, that they helped to highlight. (...) Her conclusion reads like a celebration of both family and community, in all its variety, in a remote part of the country. And this is the main point of the book: to celebrate the achievements of short-story writers as well as the kind of national identity, based mainly on regional identification, that they helped to highlight.

— Issue #236
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