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First full-length investigation into Canadian literary medievalism
as a discrete phenomenon. The essays in this volume consider what
is original and distinctive about the manifestation of medievalism
in Canadian literature and its origins and its subsequent growth
and development: from the first novel published in Canada written
by a Canadian-born author, Julia Beckwith Hart's St Ursula's
Convent (1824), to the recent work of the best-selling novelist
Patrick DeWitt (Undermajordomo Minor, published in 2015). Topics
addressed include the strong strain of medievalist fantasy itself
in the work of the young-adult author Kit Pearson, and the longer
novels of Charles de Lint, Steven Erikson, and Guy Gavriel Kay; the
medievalist inclinations of Archibald Lampman and W.W. Campbell,
well-known nineteenth-century Canadian poets; and the often-studied
Wacousta by John Richardson, first published in 1832. Chapters also
cover early Canadian periodicals' engagement with orientalist
medievalism; and works by twentieth-century writers such as the
irrepressible Earle Birney, the witty and intellectual Robertson
Davies, and the fascinating and learned Margaret Atwood.
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