North of Vinland

What happens when the romantic and imperialistic stories of Canada’s north become clearly outmoded and unsustainable? In North of Vinland, my collection of linked short stories and essays, I explore the transition from an older narrative mode to a newer, hybrid mode responsive to the demands of the...

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Main Author: Bachinger, Jacob Lee
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/
https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/1/thesis.pdf
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spelling ftmemorialuniv:oai:research.library.mun.ca:15492 2023-10-01T03:56:28+02:00 North of Vinland Bachinger, Jacob Lee 2022-04 application/pdf https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/ https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/1/thesis.pdf en eng Memorial University of Newfoundland https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/1/thesis.pdf Bachinger, Jacob Lee <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Bachinger=3AJacob_Lee=3A=3A.html> (2022) North of Vinland. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. thesis_license Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2022 ftmemorialuniv 2023-09-03T06:50:18Z What happens when the romantic and imperialistic stories of Canada’s north become clearly outmoded and unsustainable? In North of Vinland, my collection of linked short stories and essays, I explore the transition from an older narrative mode to a newer, hybrid mode responsive to the demands of the 21st century. In the short stories, I chart the difficult progress of a floundering grad student in Labrador. While living in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, he must learn to navigate his new home, find a stoic response to his acute depression, reclaim his troubled masculinity, and repair his relationship with his fiancé, Claire. As in any quest, help arrives in the form of a guide: Virgie McLean, a former trapper who remembers the old ways of “them days” and who quietly shapes the narrator’s understanding of the Big Land. In the essays, which are interwoven with the stories, I discuss Labrador’s explorers (such as Leonidas Hubbard, Mina Benson Hubbard, and William Cabot, among others). In examining the lives and legacies of these explorers, echoes emerge between the experiences of my narrator and the explorers who preceded him. Some, like William Cabot, suggest opportunities and possibilities; others, like Dillon Wallace, should be read as cautionary examples and problematic figures from an imperialistic history. In the contrapuntal relationship between the stories and the essays, a question emerges: are the elements found in narratives of exploration and frontiers (such as The Lure of the Labrador Wild) inescapable archetypes or can they be re-imagined, subverted, and re-written? North of Vinland attempts to answer this question by deploying a hybrid, multi-genre narrative that is ironic and self-aware. Thesis Happy Valley-Goose Bay Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository Cabot ENVELOPE(-54.600,-54.600,-63.383,-63.383) Dillon ENVELOPE(-108.935,-108.935,55.933,55.933)
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmemorialuniv
language English
description What happens when the romantic and imperialistic stories of Canada’s north become clearly outmoded and unsustainable? In North of Vinland, my collection of linked short stories and essays, I explore the transition from an older narrative mode to a newer, hybrid mode responsive to the demands of the 21st century. In the short stories, I chart the difficult progress of a floundering grad student in Labrador. While living in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, he must learn to navigate his new home, find a stoic response to his acute depression, reclaim his troubled masculinity, and repair his relationship with his fiancé, Claire. As in any quest, help arrives in the form of a guide: Virgie McLean, a former trapper who remembers the old ways of “them days” and who quietly shapes the narrator’s understanding of the Big Land. In the essays, which are interwoven with the stories, I discuss Labrador’s explorers (such as Leonidas Hubbard, Mina Benson Hubbard, and William Cabot, among others). In examining the lives and legacies of these explorers, echoes emerge between the experiences of my narrator and the explorers who preceded him. Some, like William Cabot, suggest opportunities and possibilities; others, like Dillon Wallace, should be read as cautionary examples and problematic figures from an imperialistic history. In the contrapuntal relationship between the stories and the essays, a question emerges: are the elements found in narratives of exploration and frontiers (such as The Lure of the Labrador Wild) inescapable archetypes or can they be re-imagined, subverted, and re-written? North of Vinland attempts to answer this question by deploying a hybrid, multi-genre narrative that is ironic and self-aware.
format Thesis
author Bachinger, Jacob Lee
spellingShingle Bachinger, Jacob Lee
North of Vinland
author_facet Bachinger, Jacob Lee
author_sort Bachinger, Jacob Lee
title North of Vinland
title_short North of Vinland
title_full North of Vinland
title_fullStr North of Vinland
title_full_unstemmed North of Vinland
title_sort north of vinland
publisher Memorial University of Newfoundland
publishDate 2022
url https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/
https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/1/thesis.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-54.600,-54.600,-63.383,-63.383)
ENVELOPE(-108.935,-108.935,55.933,55.933)
geographic Cabot
Dillon
geographic_facet Cabot
Dillon
genre Happy Valley-Goose Bay
genre_facet Happy Valley-Goose Bay
op_relation https://research.library.mun.ca/15492/1/thesis.pdf
Bachinger, Jacob Lee <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Bachinger=3AJacob_Lee=3A=3A.html> (2022) North of Vinland. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
op_rights thesis_license
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