Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration

Balisch, Loretta Faith. Thesis (Ph.D.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1995. English Language and Literature Bibliography: leaves 490-534. This dissertation contends that Canadian humour did not emerge suddenly with the work of Thomas Chandler Haliburton and then vanish until Stephen Leacock&#...

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Main Author: Balisch, Loretta Faith
Other Authors: Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/theses2/id/54986
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record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Digital Archives Initiative (DAI)
op_collection_id ftmemorialunivdc
language English
topic Canadian wit and humor--19th century--History and criticism
Canadian literature--19th century--History and criticism
spellingShingle Canadian wit and humor--19th century--History and criticism
Canadian literature--19th century--History and criticism
Balisch, Loretta Faith
Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
topic_facet Canadian wit and humor--19th century--History and criticism
Canadian literature--19th century--History and criticism
description Balisch, Loretta Faith. Thesis (Ph.D.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1995. English Language and Literature Bibliography: leaves 490-534. This dissertation contends that Canadian humour did not emerge suddenly with the work of Thomas Chandler Haliburton and then vanish until Stephen Leacock's work appeared. The humour that Canadians created in large quantities, both before Haliburton and after, has too frequently been disregarded. -- Some of the reasons for this disregard stem from the critical tenets of Canadian critics in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Others are to be found in the character of the humour itself. Nineteenth-century Canadian humour is rarely cosmopolitan; it is parochial, satiric and ironic by turns, often racy, sometimes even crude and racist. It mocks both Canada's colonial status and its literary establishment, and it depicts a country in flux rather than a unified nation. Incongruities stemming from the imposition of European literary and cultural conventions on the Canadian milieu provide material for metafictional parody. Critics generally have only recently begun to recognize the complex nature of various kinds of parody. -- This study investigates aspects of Canadian humour in selected newspapers, periodicals and books published between 1752 and 1912. It shows that from the beginning Canadians have published humour in the newspapers and that one of their concerns has been the quality of indigenous writing. The ironic narrative techniques that are still distinctive in Canadian literature make their appearance in this early humour as Canadians devise ways of writing about their own milieu while avoiding "regionalism." There is clear evidence of American influence on Canadian humour throughout the period, but a distinctive Canadian humorous perspective emerges in response to Canada's colonial status in the British Empire and its position relative to the U.S. -- The nationalist nature of Canadian criticism has led to rejection of many of the works by expatriate writers, but these works share many characteristic attitudes with those of writers who remained in Canada. Their subject matter may be quite different, but their ability to present several sides to every question and their ironic perspective are similar to those of other Canadian writers. -- Obviously, not all humour is literary humour-such humour is exceptional in the literature of every country. In Canada, even today, there is more literary humour than current criticism allows. And the belief that there was no significant Canadian humour between Haliburton and Leacock continues to dominate Canadian criticism. No doubt the works of Haliburton and Leacock do occupy the summit of nineteenth-century Canadian humour; but there is a whole mountain range of lesser elevation surrounding them. -- The study concludes that there is indeed a distinctive nineteenth-century Canadian humour, most of which is expressed in the short forms dictated by publication in newspapers and magazines. Robertson Davies reminds us that -- in attempting to form an estimate of Leacock's work, we must remember that he wrote in an era when magazines were many and all but the most highbrow welcomed short, funny pieces (31) . -- Leacock was writing within this well-established Canadian tradition of humour when he published Literary Lapses, Nonsense Novels and Sunshine Sketches of A Little Town. He is not the first Canadian to create humour after Haliburton, but he is the first to present it in a way that could be accepted by the Canadian literary establishment. After Leacock, humour gradually became more respectable in Canada, but that is the subject for another study.
author2 Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature
format Thesis
author Balisch, Loretta Faith
author_facet Balisch, Loretta Faith
author_sort Balisch, Loretta Faith
title Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
title_short Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
title_full Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
title_fullStr Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
title_full_unstemmed Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
title_sort scrub growth : canadian humour to 1912, an exploration
publishDate 1994
url http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/theses2/id/54986
op_coverage 19th Century
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.682,-59.682,-64.490,-64.490)
geographic Canada
Chandler
geographic_facet Canada
Chandler
genre Newfoundland studies
University of Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland studies
University of Newfoundland
op_source Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
op_relation Electronic Theses and Dissertations
(76.56 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Balisch_LorettaFaith.pdf
76245792
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/theses2/id/54986
op_rights The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
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spelling ftmemorialunivdc:oai:collections.mun.ca:theses2/54986 2023-05-15T17:23:30+02:00 Scrub growth : Canadian humour to 1912, an exploration Balisch, Loretta Faith Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature 19th Century 1994 vii, 535 leaves. Image/jpeg; Application/pdf http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/theses2/id/54986 Eng eng Electronic Theses and Dissertations (76.56 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Balisch_LorettaFaith.pdf 76245792 http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/theses2/id/54986 The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission. Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries Canadian wit and humor--19th century--History and criticism Canadian literature--19th century--History and criticism Text Electronic thesis or dissertation 1994 ftmemorialunivdc 2015-08-06T19:16:35Z Balisch, Loretta Faith. Thesis (Ph.D.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1995. English Language and Literature Bibliography: leaves 490-534. This dissertation contends that Canadian humour did not emerge suddenly with the work of Thomas Chandler Haliburton and then vanish until Stephen Leacock's work appeared. The humour that Canadians created in large quantities, both before Haliburton and after, has too frequently been disregarded. -- Some of the reasons for this disregard stem from the critical tenets of Canadian critics in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Others are to be found in the character of the humour itself. Nineteenth-century Canadian humour is rarely cosmopolitan; it is parochial, satiric and ironic by turns, often racy, sometimes even crude and racist. It mocks both Canada's colonial status and its literary establishment, and it depicts a country in flux rather than a unified nation. Incongruities stemming from the imposition of European literary and cultural conventions on the Canadian milieu provide material for metafictional parody. Critics generally have only recently begun to recognize the complex nature of various kinds of parody. -- This study investigates aspects of Canadian humour in selected newspapers, periodicals and books published between 1752 and 1912. It shows that from the beginning Canadians have published humour in the newspapers and that one of their concerns has been the quality of indigenous writing. The ironic narrative techniques that are still distinctive in Canadian literature make their appearance in this early humour as Canadians devise ways of writing about their own milieu while avoiding "regionalism." There is clear evidence of American influence on Canadian humour throughout the period, but a distinctive Canadian humorous perspective emerges in response to Canada's colonial status in the British Empire and its position relative to the U.S. -- The nationalist nature of Canadian criticism has led to rejection of many of the works by expatriate writers, but these works share many characteristic attitudes with those of writers who remained in Canada. Their subject matter may be quite different, but their ability to present several sides to every question and their ironic perspective are similar to those of other Canadian writers. -- Obviously, not all humour is literary humour-such humour is exceptional in the literature of every country. In Canada, even today, there is more literary humour than current criticism allows. And the belief that there was no significant Canadian humour between Haliburton and Leacock continues to dominate Canadian criticism. No doubt the works of Haliburton and Leacock do occupy the summit of nineteenth-century Canadian humour; but there is a whole mountain range of lesser elevation surrounding them. -- The study concludes that there is indeed a distinctive nineteenth-century Canadian humour, most of which is expressed in the short forms dictated by publication in newspapers and magazines. Robertson Davies reminds us that -- in attempting to form an estimate of Leacock's work, we must remember that he wrote in an era when magazines were many and all but the most highbrow welcomed short, funny pieces (31) . -- Leacock was writing within this well-established Canadian tradition of humour when he published Literary Lapses, Nonsense Novels and Sunshine Sketches of A Little Town. He is not the first Canadian to create humour after Haliburton, but he is the first to present it in a way that could be accepted by the Canadian literary establishment. After Leacock, humour gradually became more respectable in Canada, but that is the subject for another study. Thesis Newfoundland studies University of Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland: Digital Archives Initiative (DAI) Canada Chandler ENVELOPE(-59.682,-59.682,-64.490,-64.490)