Although the infant has been a consistent figure in literature (and, for many people, a significant figure in personal life), there’s been little attention focused on infants, or on their place in Canadian fiction, until now.
In this book, Sandra Sabatini examines Canadian fiction to trace the ideological charge behind the represented infant. Examining writers from L.M. Montgomery and Frederick Philip Grove to Thomas King and Terry Griggs, Sabatini compares women’s writing about babies with the way infants appear in texts by men over the course of a century. She discovers a range of changing attitudes toward babies. After being seen as a source of financial burden, social shame, or sentimental fantasy, infants have increasingly become a source of value and meaning.
The book challenges the perception of babies as passive objects of care and argues for a reading of the infant as a subject in itself. It also reflects upon how the representations of infancy in Canadian literature offer an intriguing portrait of how we imagine ourselves.
Sandra Sabatini is both a fiction writer and a scholar. She is the author of the award-winning collection of stories, The One with the News, and teaches at the University of Guelph. She is currently working on a novel.
Making Babies: Infants in Canadian Fiction is written with academic precision yet literary grace, as befits its subject. Sabatini is astonished that 'babies in literature' have been so ignored, even as the infant in the last Canadian century moved from the periphery of our lives to the centre. Let's have some voice appropriation, I say, and speak up for these wordless creatures. Read this remarkable, acute, perceptive book.
[A] critical study that, in its choice of texts, approach, and fundamental argument, presents a fresh and provocative reading of Canadian fiction in the twentieth century.
Sabatini's textual readings are detailed and engaging.
Making Babies: Infants in Canadian Fiction is an altogether exemplary work of literary criticism. Sabatini covers fertile new ground, makes a contribution to literary history, uses theory in a manner that illuminates the point at hand, avoids distortion of the literary texts on which her argument is based, provides fresh insights on those texts, and is splendidly lucid throughout. This is a very intelligent and engaging book, written with a clear passion for Canadian fiction and its long-forgotten babies. That Sandra Sabatini was the scholar finally to adopt these babies and allow them to be both seen and heard is our great luck.
This provocative and thoughtful volume is sure to spark further critical consideration of a hitherto overlooked literary figure.