Some features and content are currently unavailable today due to maintenance at our service provider. Status updates

Studies in Canadian Literature
Études en littérature canadienne

Volume 48, Number 1, 2023 Special Issue: The Ruptured Commons Guest-edited by John Clement Ball and Asma Sayed

Table of contents (15 articles)

Introduction

  1. Past, Present, and Future Ruptures to the Commons

Articles

  1. “Somehow, a City”: Unsettling Urban Resilience Narratives
  2. Petrocolonialism, Ecosickness, and Toxic Politics in David Huebert’s “Chemical Valley” Stories
  3. Gun Island and Blaze Island: Improbability, Risk, and Eco-Cosmopolitanism in Two Recent Climate-Change Novels
  4. Public Health Disruptions in Susanna Moodie’s Roughing It in the Bush and Catharine Parr Traill’s The Backwoods of Canada
  5. Speculative Health Futures: Contemporary Canadian Health Policies and the Planetary Health Commons in Larissa Lai’s The Tiger Flu
  6. Visualizing the Canada-US Border: Comic Adaptations of Wayde Compton’s “The Blue Road” and Thomas King’s “Borders”
  7. The Gothic Genre and Indigenous Fiction: A Reading of Eden Robinson’s Monkey Beach and Patricia Grace’s Baby No-Eyes
  8. To Carry Pain, to Heal through Ceremony: Indigenous Women’s Standpoint in Indigenous Australian and Canadian Literatures
  9. Tsawalk: Rupturing Canada’s First World War Origin Story in Redpatch
  10. Eating Cake, Staying Quiet: The Rupture of Many Selves in Shyam Selvadurai’s The Hungry Ghosts
  11. Ruptured Relationships in a Patriarchal Commons: Mother-Daughter Conflict in Priscila Uppal’s Projection: Encounters with My Runaway Mother
  12. Revisionist Narratology in Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being
  13. “To Have a Body / Is a Cruel Joke”: The T.E. Lawrence Poems and Gwendolyn MacEwen’s Shameful Subversion of Cultural Singularity

Notes on Contributors

Back issues of Studies in Canadian Literature / Études en littérature canadienne