| Referring to the theory of minor literature developed by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari in their work Kafka : pour une litterature mineure, this thesis investigates contemporary English writing in and about Quebec as a possible minor phenomenon. Motivated by the debate around the affirmation of a possible Anglo-Quebecois community, I investigate if such a literature has the elements to reterritorialize itself within Quebec as an Anglo-Quebecois literature. This thesis analyzes in total six works, three plays and three novels: David Fennario's Balconville, Vittorio Rossi's Paradise by the River, Ann Lambert's Very Heaven, Marianne Ackerman's Jump , Linda Leith's Birds of Passage, and Jeffrey Moore's Prisoner in a Red-Rose Chain. Therefore, the main objective of the thesis is to parallel Deleuze and Guattari's theory of minor literature with its three features, where minor works are written in a deterritorialized major language, demonstrate a political potential and are built upon a collective enunciation, to six "AngloQuebecois" works in order to see to what extent this corpus can be read as a minor literature.;KEY WORDS: Minor literature, minor writing, minorities, Quebec, Anglo-Quebec, AngloQuebecois literature, Anglophone. |