Literary Criticism Native American
How Should I Read These?
Native Women Writers in Canada
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Initial publish date
- May 2001
- Category
- Native American, Women Authors, Canadian
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Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780802084019
- Publish Date
- May 2001
- List Price
- $49.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780802035196
- Publish Date
- May 2001
- List Price
- $91.00
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781442675896
- Publish Date
- Apr 2001
- List Price
- $91.00
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
One of the few books on contemporary Native writing in Canada, Helen Hoy's absorbing and provocative work raises and addresses questions around 'difference' and the locations of cultural insider and outsider in relation to texts by contemporary Native women prose writers in Canada. Drawing on post-colonial, feminist, post-structuralist and First Nations theory, it explores the problems involved in reading and teaching a variety of works by Native women writers from the perspective of a cultural outsider. In each chapter, Hoy examines a particular author and text in order to address some of the basic theoretical questions of reader location, cultural difference, and cultural appropriation, finally concluding that these Native authors have refused to be confined by identity categories such as 'woman' or 'Native,' and have themselves provided a critical voice guiding how their texts might be read and taught.
Hoy has written a thoughtful and original work, combining theoretical and textual analysis with insightful and witty personal and pedagogical narratives, as well as poetic and critical epigraphs - the latter of which function as counterpoint to the scholarly argument. The analysis is self-reflexive, making issues of difference and power ongoing subjects of investigation, which interact with the literary texts themselves, and which render the readings more clearly local, partial, and accountable. This highly imaginative volume will appeal to Canadianists, feminists, and the growing number of scholars in the field of Native Studies.
About the author
Helen Hoy is associate professor of English and women’s studies at the University of Guelph. In addition to teaching at the universities of Toronto, Manitoba, Lethbridge, Guelph, and Minnesota, she has served as chair of the Department of English at the University of Lethbridge (1989–90), and director of graduate studies for the Institute for Advanced Feminist Studies at the University of Minnesota (1991–93). She is the author of Modern English Canadian Prose (Gale, 1983), and coeditor, with Thomas King and Cheryl Calver, of The Native in Literature (ECW, 1987). She has published articles on Canadian fiction, including Hugh MacLennan, Gabrielle Roy, Robertson Davies, and Alice Munro, and on Native Canadian women writers, including Jeannette Armstrong, Maria Campbell, Beverly Hungry Wolf, and Lee Maracle. Currently, she is completing a book entitled, How Should I Eat These? Reading Native Women Writers in Canada.