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Before the 1970s, Canada's Aboriginal peoples (First Nations, Inuit, and the Metis) were hugely underrepresented in Canadian literature. This was especially true of the Metis Nation, whose mixed First Nations and Euro-Canadian heritage presented myriad roadblocks to any forms of self-expression. Canadian literary canon either excluded Metis characters entirely or their roles were marginalized and stereotyped. Since the 1970s on though, spurred by the intellectual movements of the time, Metis authors like Maria Campbell, Beatrice Culleton Mosionier, or Lorraine Mayer have gained discursive…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Before the 1970s, Canada's Aboriginal peoples (First Nations, Inuit, and the Metis) were hugely underrepresented in Canadian literature. This was especially true of the Metis Nation, whose mixed First Nations and Euro-Canadian heritage presented myriad roadblocks to any forms of self-expression. Canadian literary canon either excluded Metis characters entirely or their roles were marginalized and stereotyped. Since the 1970s on though, spurred by the intellectual movements of the time, Metis authors like Maria Campbell, Beatrice Culleton Mosionier, or Lorraine Mayer have gained discursive control over their self-representation and launched their campaign for the inclusion of Metis voices in Canadian literature. Their literary prolificacy resulted in an ever increasingly growing number of Native life-writings emerging to fill this representational void and counterbalance the heavy weight of the strictly selective mainstream literature.
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Autorenporträt
Eszter Szenczi is a teacher and independent researcher of Hungarian origin who completed her doctoral studies in the field of Metis literature in Budapest. Her work has appeared in several publications and she has presented her research internationally. She currently lives and works in Ottawa with her family.