Double-voicing the Canadian short story : Birdsell, Findley, Hodgins, King, MacLeod, Senior, Shields, Vanderhaeghe /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Kruk, Laurie, 1962- author.
Imprint:Ottawa : University of Ottawa Press, 2016.
Description:1 online resource.
Language:English
Series:Canadian literature collection
Canadian literature collection.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11383536
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780776623252
0776623257
9780776623269
0776623265
9780776623245
0776623249
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"Double-Voicing the Canadian Short Story is a comparative study of eight nationally and internationally-acclaimed Canadian short story writers in English: Sandra Birdsell, Timothy Findley, Jack Hodgins, Thomas King, Alistair MacLeod, Olive Senior, Carol Shields and Guy Vanderhaeghe. It addresses an important gap in contemporary Canadian literary criticism by focusing specifically on their short fiction. This book is the first work to address this cohort of authors in textual dialogue with one another. Drawing on narratological and formalist theory, including an interpretation of Bakhtin's important discussion of the "dialogical" nature of fiction, the author examines the multiple ways and means whereby this "double-voicing" manifests itself in the authors' stories. In the broadest sense, it operates at the level of theme, in representational or philosophical ironizing of dominant societal discourses and hegemonic values. This then opens up the question of who speaks--how is the "vision" conveyed by the "voice" of the story?--which the author terms thematics of focalization. This choice shapes the literary mode, or style, of the story, including the "double-voicing" created through irony, satire and parody. Finally, at the discursive or linguistic level, "double-voicing" appears in terms of the dialogizing of language itself. Neither programmatic nor reductive, the author's approach offers a thoughtful juxtaposition of select stories on themes of gender, mothers and sons, family storytelling, marriage, sexuality, and (the politics of) identity in order to show their distinctive "double-voicing" of these issues and relationships. As a multi-author study, its scope is broad and its readings 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."--
Other form:Kruk, Laurie, 1962- Double-voicing the Canadian short story.: Ottawa : University of Ottawa Press, [2016] ©2016 Canadian literature collection Canadian literature collection