Beyond the bon sauvage: Questioning Canada's postcoloniality in Nancy Huston's 'Plainsong' and Thomas King's 'Green Grass, Running Water' | | Posted on:2007-09-24 | Degree:M.A | Type:Thesis | | University:McGill University (Canada) | Candidate:Johnsen Holoch, Adele | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:2445390005977847 | Subject:Literature | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | This thesis approaches the question of Canada's postcoloniality through two novels, Nancy Huston's Plainsong and Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water. Published in 1993, both novels problematize a postcolonial articulation of marginality in Canada, suggesting that it reduces the complexities of otherness to binary divisions of center and margin, colonizer and colonized. While Plainsong imagines the restrictive consequences such a reading may have on the others with which it engages, Green Grass, Running Water pushes past those boundaries to affirm the complex nature of alterity in contemporary Canada. Through King's novel in particular, we are provided a new model for approaching and understanding the nuances of difference in a changing literary and political landscape. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | King's, Grass, Running | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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