THE SURVIVANCE IN THE LITERATURE OF THE FIRST NATIONS IN CANADA
The 18th International Baltic Conference on Canadian Studies (5 October 2018, Riga) International audience The article examines the way the writers of the First Nations in Canada deal with the issue of survivance which implies a collective resilience. It is based upon a comparison between the first...
Published in: | Baltic Journal of English Language, Literature and Culture |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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HAL CCSD
2019
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Online Access: | https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02950044 https://doi.org/10.22364/BJELLC.09.2019.06 |
Summary: | The 18th International Baltic Conference on Canadian Studies (5 October 2018, Riga) International audience The article examines the way the writers of the First Nations in Canada deal with the issue of survivance which implies a collective resilience. It is based upon a comparison between the first novel of Naomi Fontaine, Kuessipan (2011) and the poetry of Rita Mestokosho collected in How I see Life, Grandmother, Eshi Uapataman Nukum, Comment je perçois la vie, grand-mère (2011). Both writers belong to a tradition of littérature autochtone in Québec that has become more and more visible since the 1980s. If both writers share the paradigm of decoloniality, their aesthetics remains classical with the use of a minimalist style to express the beauty of the Innu way of life. |
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