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Grounds for Telling It: Transnational Feminism and Canadian Women's Writing

Posted on:2012-11-24Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Universite de Montreal (Canada)Candidate:Beverley, AndreaFull Text:PDF
GTID:2455390008998418Subject:Literature
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This dissertation explores connections between contemporary Canadian women's writing and transnational feminism. The category of the transnational is increasingly important within Canadian literary criticism, but it is infrequently evoked in relation to feminism. Throughout this thesis, I develop a transnational feminist reading methodology that can be brought to bear on Canadian women's writing, even as the literature itself participates in and nuances transnational feminist mobilizations of concepts such as complicity, collaboration, silence, and difference. Furthermore, my transnational feminist reading strategy provides a method for the rehistoricization of certain texts and moments in Canadian women's writing that further allows scholars to trace a genealogy of anti-essentialist feminist expression in Canadian literature.;In all of these close textual readings, my dissertation asks how Canadian women writers represent, theorize, and critique the kinds of collaboration across differences that lie;at the heart of transnational feminist action. My research is therefore located at the crossroads of Canadian literature, contemporary feminist theory, and postcolonial and globalization studies. The vibrant field of transnational feminist theory is relevant to this disciplinary intersection and, furthermore, contemporary Canadian women's writing provides important interventions from which to imagine transnational feminist collaboration.;Keywords : Canadian literature, transnational feminism, collaboration, essentialism, women, race, Dionne Brand, Daphne Marlatt, Suzette Mayr, Telling It;To this end, I read texts by Daphne Marlatt, Dionne Brand, and Suzette Mayr, alongside Tessera, a collectively-edited journal, and conference proceedings from the 1988 Telling It conference; these texts speak to national and colonial critique, post-colonial and diasporic identities, and the potentials of feminist collaboration across various borders. In the first chapter, I situate my reading methodology by arguing for a transnational feminist understanding of Tessera, a bilingual feminist journal that began publishing in 1984. My second chapter examines the collectively-edited publication that emerged from Telling It in the context of North American feminist evocations of difference in recent decades. Notably, my research on Telling It benefits from rarely-accessed archival material that grounds my discussion of the gaps and silences of collective work. In my third chapter, I perform a close reading of Daphne Marlatt's 1979 multi-genre text "In the Month of Hungry Ghosts" as it explores the complex connections between colonialism, post-colonialism, complicity and globalization. The subject of my fourth chapter is the 1994 film Listening for Something..., a transnational feminist collaboration between Dionne Brand and Adrienne Rich. Finally, my fifth chapter discusses the place of the transnational in relation to the regional, the national -- and the monstrous in the context of Suzette Mayr's Venous Hum.
Keywords/Search Tags:Transnational, Canadian women's writing, Telling
PDF Full Text Request
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